Jovo Lukic made an immediate statement in Bosnia and Herzegovina’s 2026 FIFA World Cup opener. The 27-year-old striker won every aerial duel he contested against Canada and then rose to head his side into a 1-0 lead inside the first half hour at Toronto Stadium.
Squawka’s real-time tracking captured the dominance clearly. Lukic finished 9/9 in the air with a 100 percent success rate. That mark stands as the highest total of aerial duels won with a perfect record in any World Cup match since 2018.
The goal arrived in the 21st minute from a well-executed set piece. Ivan Basic swung in the corner from the right. Sead Kolasinac flicked it on at the near post. Lukic arrived with perfect timing, attacked the space, and directed a powerful header into the net from close range. His first World Cup goal.
The Bosnia players swarmed him near the corner flag. Supporters who traveled in numbers created pockets of blue and gold noise that cut through the larger home crowd. Canada’s players reset quickly, but the early concession forced adjustments they had hoped to avoid.
The Aerial Duels Record Since 2018
| Duels Won | Success Rate | Player | Opponent | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9 | 100% | Jovo Lukic | Canada | 2026 |
| 8 | 100% | Salif Sane | Japan | 2018 |
| 7 | 100% | Yussuf Poulsen | Peru | 2018 |
What stood out beyond the raw numbers was the consistency. Canada threw bodies at crosses and set pieces, yet Lukic kept winning the first contact or the second ball. His 190 cm frame helps, but the real edge came from reading trajectories and committing fully through contact. Every duel looked the same: he got there first and stayed strong.
Bosnia coach selected him to start up top with Edin Dzeko on the bench. The move paid off early. Lukic offered a focal point that stretched Canada’s back line and created space for runners behind. The header itself came from smart near-post movement rather than pure athleticism alone.
Most aerial duels contested in a World Cup game since 2018 whilst have a 100% success rate:
◉ 9/9 – Jovo Lukic vs. Canada (2026)
◎ 8/8 – Salif Sane vs. Japan (2018)
◎ 7/7 – Yussuf Poulsen vs. Peru (2018)And he scored with his head. ⚽️#FIFAWorldCup pic.twitter.com/FXe5cLzww9
— Squawka (@Squawka) June 12, 2026
Canada controlled more possession and generated chances through their front line, but the early goal changed the feel of the night. Bosnia sat compact, absorbed pressure in spells, and remained dangerous whenever the ball went forward or a set piece arrived. The Dragons looked organized and ready for the physical battle.
For Lukic personally the night carried extra weight. Born in Serbia, he has built his career through Serbian and Romanian leagues before earning regular Bosnia call-ups. At club level with Universitatea Cluj he has shown the same aerial strength week after week. Friday night in Toronto simply happened under the brightest lights yet. The first World Cup goal arrived at the perfect time for a player who has waited for this stage.
The match remained finely balanced after the opener. Canada pushed for a response before halftime and will look to use their home energy in the second period. Bosnia know one goal can change everything in a group stage match, but they also know they have the weapons to hurt teams on the counter and from dead balls.
Lukic’s display offered a reminder that set-piece quality and aerial dominance still decide tight games at the highest level. Nine duels, nine wins, one headed goal. Bosnia could not have asked for a stronger individual statement from their striker in the tournament’s opening match.
