Poland is not at this World Cup. The sentence took a long way to get written — Poland has qualified for the last two tournaments, has Robert Lewandowski, has a deep-ish squad of Serie A and Premier League players — but on March 31, 2026, at the Friends Arena in Stockholm, Sweden beat them 3-2 in a playoff, and that was that. Viktor Gyökeres poached the winner in the 84th minute from a goalmouth scramble. Lewandowski played the full ninety. He did not score.
The story of this absence is a story about timing. Lewandowski is 37 and has 89 international goals. He was supposed to get one more World Cup — three group-stage matches, maybe a Round of 16, a proper farewell in front of a country that has built its modern soccer identity around him. Instead he got Stockholm in the cold and a 94th-minute handshake line. Jan Urban, the Polish manager who took over in summer 2025, has been a steady hand in a federation that couldn't keep its coaches for long. He will get another cycle. Lewandowski, realistically, will not.
So why include Poland in a 2026 World Cup guide? Because the Polish-American community in DFW is real — Plano, Irving, parts of North Dallas — and they will still be watching this tournament, and they will still be eating pierogi on match days, just with someone else's flag pinned to the wall. Poland's absence is a story worth telling, in 2026, on the co-host's home soil.