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2026 FIFA World Cup
16JUL

Austria win first in 36 years; Jordan score

1 min read
10:33UTC

Austria beat Jordan 3-1 in San Francisco on 17 June for their first World Cup win since 1990, while debutants Jordan scored their first World Cup goal.

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Key takeaway

Austria beat Jordan 3-1 for their first World Cup win since 1990; Jordan scored their maiden tournament goal.

Austria beat Jordan 3-1 in San Francisco on 17 June for their first World Cup win in 36 years, since 1990 1. Jordan, playing their first World Cup, scored their maiden tournament goal through Ali Olwan. Marko Arnautovic sealed the result with a stoppage-time penalty that made him Austria's oldest World Cup scorer.

The fixture added two more entries to a round already thick with milestones . Austria's came in victory; Jordan's, like DR Congo's and Uzbekistan's, came in defeat, the pattern that defined the round. For Jordan the goal is the line their debut will be remembered by, a marker of arrival on the sport's biggest stage even as the scoreline went against them. Austria, meanwhile, finally have a World Cup win to show a generation that had never seen one.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Austria, a European country of around nine million people, had not won a World Cup match since 1990, a gap of 36 years. On 17 June in San Francisco, they beat Jordan 3-1, ending that drought. Jordan, an Arab country in the Middle East, were playing in their first-ever World Cup. Their player Ali Olwan scored Jordan's first-ever World Cup goal during the match, despite losing. Austria's Marko Arnautovic scored a late penalty and became the oldest Austrian player to score at a World Cup. Both the Austria win and the Jordan debut goal are part of a pattern this tournament has produced: historic firsts falling in matches between nations who would not have qualified under the old 32-team format.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Austria's reappearance at a World Cup reflects the UEFA allocation increase: Europe received 16 berths in 2026 against 13 in 2022. Austria qualified through the UEFA Nations League play-off path, meaning they did not need to win their qualifying group outright. The expanded routes give mid-tier European nations like Austria access they would not have had under the 32-team format.

Jordan's debut qualification followed the Asian Football Confederation's expanded allocation (eight and a half berths in 2026 vs four and a half in 2022). Jordan advanced through AFC's third round and then a play-off, a route that did not exist at the same scale before the format change.

What could happen next?
  • Meaning

    Austria's Group J win puts them level on three points with Argentina after matchday two, setting up a significant third group match to determine which side tops the group.

First Reported In

Update #22 · Firsts and lasts: a record-day collision

Yahoo Sports· 18 Jun 2026
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