FE Today Logo
Search date: 22-06-2026 Return to current date: Click here

How to handle Haaland gives Senegal plenty to ponder

Norway win would guarantee progress to last 32


June 22, 2026 00:00:00


NEW YORK, June 21 (Agencies): Senegal face a defensive conundrum as they prepare to play Norway and their prolific striker Erling Haaland at the World Cupon Tuesday (6:00 am as per BST).

Captain Kalidou Koulibaly returned from injury for Senegal's opening Group I game against France but was found wanting up against Kylian Mbappe and could be dropped as coach Pape Bouna Thiaw looks to counter the threat of Haaland at the New York/New Jersey Stadium.

Senegal have been touted as Africa's best hope at the World Cup but had their ?confidence knocked by a 3-1 loss to France in their opening game.

Norway, in contrast, made a winning start in their first World Cup game since 1998, with Haaland netting twice in a 4-1 victory over Iraq in Boston.

How best to deal with Haaland will have given Thiaw plenty to ponder, particularly whether to persist with Koulibaly or replace him with 20-year-old Mamadou Sarr.

When Koulibaly was suspended at the African Cup of Nations finals in Morocco, Sarr stepped in and impressed before joining Chelsea. At Stamford Bridge, however, he was usually named among the substitutes and his lack of game time over the last months counted against him when Thiaw finalised the line-up to face France.

The 35-year-old Koulibaly, who has won 104 caps, had played only eight minutes since suffering an injury in training at his Saudi club in April and was well off the pace as Mbappe scored twice to earn France ?a deserved victory. A win for Norway would guarantee them progress to the last 32, but their build-up has not been without concerns either.

Domestic media criticism of Martin Odegaard's performance against Iraq was batted away by his teammates ?in the build-up to the match, while coach Stale Solbakken has also said he was not happy with aspects of their performance against Iraq, particularly defence.

Norway, who had a 100 per cent qualification record ?but won only one of four World Cup warm-up friendlies, have kept a single clean sheet in their last eight matches and will be wary of the threat posed by Senegal forwards Nicolas Jackson and Sadio Mane. Norway will not be able to physically bully this Senegal defence in the way they did Iraq -- where they pumped it long for Erling Haaland and Alexander Sørloth to hold up play and take it from there.

What will work, though, is Haaland's clever movement off the ball. That last bit is what allowed Kylian Mbappé to escape Senegalese attention in the opener and Haaland will have taken note.

Sander Berge didn't hold back on the praise after the Iraq game when speaking about his teammate. "Erling is so efficient and deadly," he told FIFA. "At any moment, he can break through for us and score. He delivers all the time. He's ready for any challenges."

It's this quality of Haaland's that Norway will be leaning on in what promises to be a tight match against a side that many have tipped to go deep into the tournament.France may have blown Senegal out of the water in the second half of their opener when Michael Olise and Mbappé turned on the afterburners, but the first half had been all Senegal. Disciplined at the back and sharp upfront, Senegal had several chances to take the lead, not the least when Ismaïla Sarr smashed high from very close range in the closing stages of that half. Against a Norway side that looked nervous at times when Iraq flew forward, Senegal will be banking on their star forwards finding their shooting boots again.

Pathé Ciss touched upon this when speaking to FIFA after the opener. "In football, you can't play well for just one half," he said.


Share if you like