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2026 FIFA World Cup
24MAR

Svanberg scores 18 seconds off bench

2 min read
19:01UTC

Sweden beat Tunisia 5-1 to top Group F, with substitute Mattias Svanberg scoring 18 seconds after coming on, the second-fastest substitute goal in World Cup history.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

Sweden's 5-1 win and Svanberg's 18-second goal put Graham Potter's side top of Group F.

Sweden beat Tunisia 5-1 at Estadio BBVA in Monterrey on Monday 15 June to go top of Group F after one round 1. Viktor Gyokeres and Alexander Isak scored, with Yasin Ayari, a midfielder of Tunisian descent, adding a brace against the country of his heritage. Substitute Mattias Svanberg scored 18 seconds after coming on, the second-fastest substitute goal in World Cup history.

Graham Potter, the English manager appointed Sweden head coach in 2024 after spells at Brighton and Chelsea, opened his tournament with the most emphatic scoreline of the matchday. The margin matters in the 48-team field that opened this edition , where goal difference can decide the third-place places that send the best group runners-up through. A five-goal opening win gives Sweden a cushion that a single tight result would not, and hands Potter early validation in his first major tournament in charge.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Sweden beat Tunisia 5-1 on 15 June in Monterrey, with Viktor Gyokeres and Alexander Isak both scoring and Swedish substitute Mattias Svanberg netting just 18 seconds after coming on, the second-fastest substitute goal in World Cup history. Graham Potter, an English manager best known for work at Brighton and Chelsea, took charge of Sweden in 2024 and has organised the squad around a flexible 5-3-2 formation. Sweden lead Group F after the opening round, ahead of Morocco and Serbia in their group. The 5-1 win is encouraging but Tunisian analysts pointed out that Tunisia set up their defence in the wrong shape and were essentially out-prepared tactically. Sweden's next two group matches against tougher opponents will test whether the 5-1 was a reflection of their real quality or partly a gift from Tunisia's preparation error.

What could happen next?
  • Opportunity

    Sweden's goal difference advantage at the top of Group F gives them a meaningful buffer entering matchday two; a draw against Morocco and a win against Serbia would almost certainly secure top-two qualification.

First Reported In

Update #21 · Three records fall in one afternoon

ESPN· 17 Jun 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Svanberg scores 18 seconds off bench
Graham Potter's side opened with the matchday's most emphatic win and one of the quickest substitute goals the tournament has recorded.
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