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Bosnia & Herzegovina

Zmajevi — the Dragons, back at the big tournament for the first time since 2014

Group
B
Region
UEFA
World Cup Appearances
2
Code
BA

The Story

Bosnia & Herzegovina's last World Cup was 2014 in Brazil — Pjanić and Džeko and a country that had been independent for less than 20 years showing up at the biggest tournament on earth for the first time. They lost two, won one, went home. For twelve years since then, the country has watched everyone else qualify and wondered when the Dragons were coming back.

The answer, finally, is now. And the way it happened was exactly the kind of story Bosnia exports best: two playoff legs decided on penalties, against Wales and then against Italy, in March of this year. Four-time world champions Italy, out. Bosnia, in. The Sarajevo streets stayed loud for a week.

Sergej Barbarez — a former national team captain, also a former professional poker player (yes, really) — took over as manager in April 2024 and rebuilt the team around a 40-year-old Edin Džeko and a group of hungry next-generation attackers led by Ermedin Demirović and Kerim Alajbegović. Miralem Pjanić retired in December. This is not the 2014 team. It's the generation that grew up watching 2014.

Group B — Canada, Switzerland, Qatar, Bosnia — is winnable. The Dragons will travel, they will sing sevdalinka in whatever hotel bar will have them, and they will be one of the great neutrals' stories of the group stage. Back where they belong.

3 Players to Know

Edin Džeko

He is 40 years old, the all-time leading scorer for his country (72 goals in 146 caps), and the last active member of the 2014 'golden generation' that carried Bosnia to their first-ever World Cup in Brazil. He left Serie A for the German second division to stay sharp for this summer, and he became the oldest scorer in 2. Bundesliga history in the process. Dalić, Koeman, everyone who has faced him says the same thing: Džeko in the box is still Džeko in the box.

Sead Kolašinac

The Atalanta left-back with the silhouette of a rugby flanker and the temperament to match. Famously intervened to stop an armed carjacking of his Arsenal teammate Mesut Özil in London in 2019. One of the Bundesliga's best attacking fullbacks for most of the 2010s. Returns to his third World Cup cycle as the elder presence in a defense that will need to absorb a lot against Switzerland and Canada.

Ermedin Demirović

Stuttgart's Bosnian-born forward who does the work Džeko no longer has to — pressing the first center-back, chasing the long diagonal, occupying two defenders so the captain can finish. Barbarez rebuilt the attack around this partnership after taking over in 2024, and it's the reason Bosnia beat Wales and Italy on penalties. Not a household name yet. Will be by July.

The Food

Signature Dish

Ćevapi is the argument Bosnians, Serbs, and Croats will never settle — but in Sarajevo it's ten small grilled finger-sausages of minced beef and lamb, tucked into a warm somun flatbread with raw chopped onion and a spoonful of kajmak (thick clotted cream that shouldn't work on meat but does). Add burek, a coiled filo pie of lamb or cheese eaten standing up at a buregdžinica. Then sarma (stuffed cabbage rolls in winter), and bosanska kahva — Bosnian coffee, served in a bakreno džezva (copper pot) with a rahat lokum cube, sipped slowly, never hurried. The coffee ritual is the country.

Where to Eat in DFW

Balkan Garden Bistro in Grapevine — same call as our Croatia and Serbia pages, and we know it. There's exactly one authentic Balkan kitchen at this end of Dallas, and this family-run bistro is it. Order the ćevapi plate and the burek; the owner will ask if you've had bosanska kahva before and make it the right way if you haven't. For groceries and proper Balkan bread, Eddie's EuroMart in Garland is the only real option in North Texas.

The Music

A soundtrack for the matches, the pregame, and the afterparty.

Fan Culture

Bosnian support is unmistakable — blue kits, gold fleur-de-lis, and the word "Zmajevi" (Dragons) painted on banners twelve feet wide. They sing sevdalinka, the old Ottoman-era love laments of the Balkans, then switch to modern turbo-folk and back again without warning. You'll hear the gusle (a one-string fiddle) at pre-match gatherings and you'll smell cigarettes — a lot of cigarettes — because European football without tobacco is not a real thing yet to this crowd. They have waited twelve years for this. They will not be quiet.
Fun Fact

Bosnia knocked four-time champions Italy out of the 2026 World Cup on penalties in the March playoff — their second-ever qualification as an independent nation, and the kind of scalp that gets replayed on state television for a decade.

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