Qatar have played exactly three World Cup matches in their history, and they lost all three. In 2022, as hosts, they became the first host nation ever eliminated in the group stage with zero points — a storyline that sat heavily over the entire tournament they'd spent 12 years and an estimated $220 billion preparing to stage. By the time Argentina won it in Lusail, the home team had been home for two weeks.
What's happened since has been quietly one of the more interesting rebuild stories in international football. Félix Sánchez, the coach who'd been with the Qatari setup for a decade, left. Bartolomé Márquez lasted a cycle. Julen Lopetegui — former Real Madrid and Spain manager, Wolves, more recently West Ham — took over in 2025 with a mandate to professionalize the operation and get the team ready for a World Cup where, for the first time, they'd arrived through genuine qualification rather than as hosts. Then Qatar won the 2024 Asian Cup, backing up their 2023 title, and suddenly the conversation changed.
They are not going to win Group L. They might win a match — and if they do, it's the most significant result in Qatari football history. The player who decides whether that happens is Akram Afif. Watch him.
Week 1 Update: A 1-1 draw with Bosnia & Herzegovina — and Qatar have their first-ever World Cup point. After going winless and pointless as 2022 hosts, that single point feels like a breakthrough. The monkey is off the back. Whether it becomes something more depends on what comes next, but nobody's laughing at Al-Annabi today.
Matchday 2 Update: They're laughing again. A 5-0 hammering by Canada — the kind of scoreline that brings back every 2022 ghost at once. Qatar's one hard-earned point from the opener now looks like a high-water mark. Afif was anonymous, the defense was overwhelmed from the first whistle, and the dream of a first-ever World Cup win feels further away than it did a week ago. One match left to salvage something. Anything.
Matchday 3 Update: A 1-3 loss to Bosnia. Qatar are eliminated — 1 point from 3 matches, one draw and two heavy defeats. The team that qualified through genuine merit this time finished exactly where 2022 left off: bottom of the group, winless, heading home early. Back-to-back Asian Cup titles mean nothing here.