Anfield Index
·18 Juni 2026
Sweden facing Alexander Isak injury scare ahead of World Cup clash

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Yahoo sportsAnfield Index
·18 Juni 2026

Alexander Isak has reminded everyone why Sweden still look dangerous at this World Cup. In a commanding 5-1 win over Tunisia, the Liverpool striker scored once, provided two assists and delivered the kind of all-round centre-forward display that can change the mood around both player and nation.
For Sweden, it was exactly the kind of performance they needed. Yasin Ayari opened the scoring before Isak doubled the lead, driving at the Tunisian defence, shifting the ball onto his right foot and finishing with control from the edge of the box.
Tunisia responded through Omar Rekik before half-time, but Sweden’s authority returned after the interval. Isak pressed high, won possession and created the third goal for Viktor Gyokeres, giving Sweden the breathing space their performance deserved.
For Liverpool supporters, this was a significant watch. Isak scored only four goals for Liverpool last season, a return that reflected a campaign of limited rhythm rather than a lack of quality. He started just 13 times in 22 appearances and rarely looked fully settled into a consistent run.

Photo: IMAGO
Yet for Sweden, the sharpness has returned. He has now scored twice in his last three international appearances, including a warm-up goal against Norway, and his performance against Tunisia had the feel of a forward slowly rediscovering timing and confidence.
His second assist came from a clever flick-on from a free-kick, allowing Mattias Svanberg to score. Ayari then added his second of the match to complete a convincing Swedish victory.
Sweden’s next test comes against the Netherlands on Saturday, a match that could see Isak face Liverpool teammates Virgil van Dijk, Cody Gakpo and Ryan Gravenberch.
That prospect now carries uncertainty after reports that Isak trained individually on Wednesday. According to Sweden Herald, the 26-year-old was placed on a separate programme three days before the Group F meeting.
“One player is training individually, and that’s Alexander Isak. He is following an individual program as part of extra recovery after the match,” says the national team’s press officer, Petra Thorén, as quoted by Sweden Herald. “He will be out on the field some of the time and the rest in the gym.”
That wording suggests caution rather than panic, but it is still a situation worth monitoring. Isak was substituted in the 90th minute against Tunisia, the first time he has reached the end of a match since October, when he played for Sweden against Kosovo.
For Liverpool, Isak’s World Cup form matters because it offers clues about where he stands physically and mentally. The goal was important, the assists were useful, but the movement, pressing and confidence may matter more.
Sweden will hope this is simply managed recovery. Liverpool will hope it is nothing more than that. For Isak, the Netherlands match now feels like another test, not only of form, but of durability.







































