Senegal turned their final group stage match at BMO Field into a statement, running out 5-0 winners over a ten-man Iraq side that had little answer from the 13th minute onward. Habib Diarra opened the scoring inside four minutes, and though the first half remained tight at 1-0, the second period became a procession. Pape Gueye was the standout performer, netting twice in the space of twelve minutes to put the result beyond any doubt.

Key Moments
- 4′, H. Diarra breaks the deadlock for Senegal with a normal goal, setting the tone early at BMO Field.
- 13′, Iraq’s R. Sulaka is sent off for holding, reducing the visitors to ten men and fundamentally shaping the rest of the match.
- 56′, I. Sarr doubles Senegal’s lead early in the second half, capitalizing on Iraq’s stretched defensive shape.
- 59′, P. Gueye makes it 3-0 just three minutes later, turning the match into a rout.
- 71′, P. Gueye grabs his second of the afternoon to make it 4-0, capping a dominant personal display.
- 82′, I. Ndiaye rounds off the scoring at 5-0, completing a comprehensive win for Senegal.
Tactical Breakdown
Senegal controlled this match from the opening whistle, finishing with 69% possession, 590 total passes at 88% accuracy, and 28 shots to Iraq’s six. Their xG of 3.10 against Iraq’s 0.18 tells the full story: this was a one-sided contest even before Sulaka’s red card changed the arithmetic. Operating in a 4-3-3, Senegal’s front line pinned Iraq deep and created space through the halfspaces, with Ismaila Sarr and Habib Diarra causing problems from the start.
The red card at minute 13 effectively decided the tactical contest. Graham Arnold’s 4-2-3-1 was already under pressure with eleven men; down to ten and without a natural defensive adjustment, Iraq sat deeper but left themselves exposed on the counter. Senegal’s substitutions at the 57-minute mark, three changes in one go, refreshed the attacking unit at the right time and triggered a burst of three goals in the following 25 minutes. Pape Gueye, who came on or remained on through that spell, was the beneficiary and the driving force.
Iraq’s defensive shape simply could not cope for 90 minutes a man light. Their goalkeeper made seven saves and kept the scoreline from being worse in the first period, but the backline conceded five times and could generate almost nothing going forward: just one shot on target across the entire game, with an xG of 0.18. The early red card was not the sole reason for the defeat, but it removed any realistic chance of Iraq building something in midfield.
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Verdict
This result has no bearing on Senegal’s group standing in this particular group, as the standings table shows Mexico already clear at the top on nine points. Senegal’s 5-0 victory does, however, confirm they head into the knockout stages on the back of a significant confidence boost, with five goals scored and a clean sheet kept against a side reduced to ten men early. For Iraq, the tournament is over, and the manner of this defeat will raise hard questions for Graham Arnold heading into a rebuilding period.
