Austria are back on the biggest stage after 28 years away, and Ralf Rangnick has made it clear: this must be treated as a final. With Argentina and Algeria waiting in Group J, dropping points against Jordan would be a catastrophic start. The motivation is laser-focused — every press conference from the Austrian camp has hammered home the same message. They need to win, and they know it.
But the strongest argument for backing Austria here is not just their own readiness; it is what Jordan are missing. The Asian side arrive at their first-ever World Cup without their two most dangerous forwards. Yazan Al-Naimat, the top scorer and creator in qualifying, is out with an ACL injury. Ibrahim Sabra, the explosive wide attacker who offered depth and pace, tore ankle ligaments in training and was cut from the squad. That is not a marginal loss — it strips Jordan of their main penalty-box threat and their secondary dribbling outlet. The entire attacking burden now falls on Mousa Al-Taamari, who is a fine player but can be isolated when opponents double up. Ali Olwan and Odeh Fakhouri will have to step up, but their recent friendly results (1-4 vs Switzerland, 0-2 vs Colombia) show the difficulty of generating consistent danger against disciplined European defences.
Austria, by contrast, are nearly at full strength. David Alaba’s tightness against Tunisia was precautionary; he is expected to start and organise the build-up. Konrad Laimer’s red card in that same friendly does not carry over to the World Cup — he is available to press and cover the right side. Marcel Sabitzer has been the driving force in recent matches, scoring crucial goals against South Korea and Tunisia. The only notable absence is Christoph Baumgartner, but that is a single gap in an otherwise settled squad, while Jordan have lost two pillars of their attack. Rangnick has emphasised that selection is based on merit, not loyalty, and his starting eleven will be the strongest possible.
The form lines reinforce the gap. Austria’s last five matches include a dominant 5-1 win over Ghana and controlled 1-0 victories against South Korea and Tunisia. Even when not free-flowing, they find a way to win tight games. Jordan, meanwhile, conceded four to Switzerland, two to Colombia, and needed late equalisers to draw with Nigeria and Costa Rica. Their defensive structure can be stretched, and without Al-Naimat’s hold-up play, they may struggle to keep the ball when under sustained pressure.
The tactical picture is clear. Austria will press high, overload the midfield, and look to free Sabitzer between the lines. Jordan will likely sit deep, compacting the centre, and rely on Al-Taamari’s individual runs. But with fewer finishing options, those counters are less likely to end in goals. The market has priced Austria as a clear favourite, but the double attacking loss for Jordan makes the win probability even higher than those odds suggest. This is a case where the specific squad context — two front-line players missing for the underdog — gives the favourite an extra edge that is not fully recognised.




