Match Details

Friendlies
Slovakia
1 1
Montenegro
51'
HT 1-1
R. Bozenik 4'
M. Osmajic 44'
Match Started
R. Bozenik 3'

Yellow Card

R. Bozenik 4'

Goal (Assist: M. Bero)

P. Pekarik H. Pavek 24'

Substitution

M. Osmajic 44'

Goal (Assist: S. Haksabanovic)

Half Time
B. Sekulic O. Gasevic 46'

Substitution

S. Loncar M. Simun 46'

Substitution

S. Milic N. Sipcic 46'

Substitution

M. Perovic M. Brnovic 46'

Substitution

Slovakia 4-3-3 Francesco Calzona

Jakub Surovčík 12
Surovčík
Adam Obert 16
Obert
Dávid Krčík 19
Krčík
Denis Vavro 3
Vavro
Peter Pekarík 2
Pekarík
Artur Gajdoš 18
Gajdoš
Ondrej Duda 8
Duda
Matúš Bero 21
Bero
Adrián Kaprálik 20
Kaprálik
Róbert Boženík 9
Boženík
Tomáš Suslov 7
Suslov

Starters

  • Jakub Surovčík12 Jakub Surovčík
  • Adam Obert16 Adam Obert
  • Dávid Krčík19 Dávid Krčík
  • Denis Vavro3 Denis Vavro
  • Peter Pekarík2 Peter Pekarík
  • Artur Gajdoš18 Artur Gajdoš
  • Ondrej Duda8 Ondrej Duda
  • Matúš Bero21 Matúš Bero
  • Adrián Kaprálik20 Adrián Kaprálik
  • Róbert Boženík9 Róbert Boženík
  • Tomáš Suslov7 Tomáš Suslov

Substitutes

  • Ľubomír Belko1 Ľubomír Belko
  • Martin Valjent4 Martin Valjent
  • Ľubomír Šatka5 Ľubomír Šatka
  • Peter Pokorný6 Peter Pokorný
  • László Bénes10 László Bénes
  • Roland Galčík11 Roland Galčík
  • Roman Čerepkai13 Roman Čerepkai
  • Mario Sauer14 Mario Sauer
  • Peter Kováčik22 Peter Kováčik
  • Dominik Takáč23 Dominik Takáč
  • Michal Faško24 Michal Faško
  • Krisztián Bari25 Krisztián Bari
  • Hugo Pavek26 Hugo Pavek

Montenegro 4-4-2 Robert Prosinečki

Mišo Dubljanić 27
Dubljanić
Marko Perović 24
Perović
Igor Vujačić 5
Vujačić
Stefan Milić 4
Milić
Adam Marušić 23
Marušić
Stefan Lončar 15
Lončar
Andrija Bulatovic 21
Bulatovic
Marko Janković 10
Janković
Sead Hakšabanović 25
Hakšabanović
Balša Sekulić 18
Sekulić
Milutin Osmajić 20
Osmajić

Starters

  • Mišo Dubljanić27 Mišo Dubljanić
  • Marko Perović24 Marko Perović
  • Igor Vujačić5 Igor Vujačić
  • Stefan Milić4 Stefan Milić
  • Adam Marušić23 Adam Marušić
  • Stefan Lončar15 Stefan Lončar
  • Andrija Bulatovic21 Andrija Bulatovic
  • Marko Janković10 Marko Janković
  • Sead Hakšabanović25 Sead Hakšabanović
  • Balša Sekulić18 Balša Sekulić
  • Milutin Osmajić20 Milutin Osmajić

Substitutes

  • Balša Popović1 Balša Popović
  • Milan Roganović2 Milan Roganović
  • Andrija Ražnatović3 Andrija Ražnatović
  • Slobodan Rubežić6 Slobodan Rubežić
  • Driton Camaj8 Driton Camaj
  • Andrej Kostić9 Andrej Kostić
  • Danijel Petković12 Danijel Petković
  • Benjamin Krijestarac13 Benjamin Krijestarac
  • Miloš Brnović14 Miloš Brnović
  • Ognjen Gašević16 Ognjen Gašević
  • Marko Simun17 Marko Simun
  • Nikola Šipčić19 Nikola Šipčić
  • Viktor Đukanović22 Viktor Đukanović

Loading chat...

Loading live analysis...

Share this Prediction

Match statistics are not available yet.

Head-to-Head Stats

Slovakia Wins 0
Draws 1
Montenegro Wins 0

Recent Matches

  • 2022-11-17 Montenegro 2 - 2 Slovakia

Recent form data is not available.

Related News

  • Wilkinson spends night in airport but says Wales will be ready

    Wales head coach Rhian Wilkinson declares travel chaos won’t impact their Women’s World Cup qualifier in Montenegro. The squad faced a nightmare journey, arriving less than 23 hours before kick-off after electrical storms caused a diversion. Wilkinson and her staff even spent a night in an airport. Despite the ordeal, she confidently states: “There’s no excuses. We’ll be ready for the game.”


    READ MORE FROM BBC SPORT WALES

  • 2026-27 Nations League draw revealed as England, Wales discover daunting League A opponents

    England have been placed in a challenging 2026-27 Nations League group alongside Spain, Croatia, and Czechia, marking Thomas Tuchel’s first major tournament cycle since extending his contract.

    ​England’s return to the top tier of the Nations League will feature a high-stakes reunion with Spain, the team that denied them glory in the Euro 2024 final.

    Following their promotion under Lee Carsley, the Three Lions were placed in League A Group 3, where they will also contend with recurring rivals Croatia and a resilient Czechia side.

    This daunting draw coincides with the confirmation that Thomas Tuchel has extended his managerial deal until 2028, ensuring he will lead the squad through this competitive cycle following the 2026 World Cup.

    ​The tournament structure also presents a difficult task for Wales, who must navigate a group containing title-holders Portugal, Norway, and Denmark.

    Meanwhile, Scotland will face Switzerland and Slovenia in League B, while Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland prepare for tests against Hungary and Austria respectively.

    Fixtures are scheduled to commence in late September 2026, utilizing a revised international window format.

    Regarding the challenging path ahead, FA sources indicated that the schedule provides “belated revenge” opportunities as England seeks to re-establish dominance among Europe’s elite.

  • World Cup 2026: The giants and minnows in each group

    The 2026 FIFA World Cup draw established 12 groups for the record 48-team tournament hosted by the U.S., Mexico, and Canada, highlighting debuts for minnows like Curaçao and confirming defending champions Argentina’s path in Group J.

    The groups for the 2026 FIFA World Cup have been finalized following the draw ceremony held at the Kennedy Centre in Washington on Friday, according to a report from Malta Today.

    The expanded tournament will feature a record 48 teams competing in 104 games across 16 host cities in Canada, Mexico, and the United States, beginning in Mexico City on June 11 and concluding with the final in New York, New Jersey on July 19.

    The draw placed 42 already-qualified teams into 12 groups, reserving slots for the six remaining teams to be decided in the March play-offs.

    The field will include several World Cup debutants, most notably Cape Verde, Jordan, Uzbekistan, and Curaçao, with the Caribbean island nation of Curaçao becoming the smallest country by population size to ever qualify.

    All 11 of the world’s top-ranked teams have secured their places, but major footballing nation Italy is among the 22 countries left to compete in the play-offs for the final six berths, including four from the UEFA play-offs.

    The groups pit giants against minnows in several intriguing matchups. Group C features Brazil alongside Morocco, Scotland, and Haiti, while Group E sees Germany matched with Ivory Coast, Ecuador, and Curaçao. Group H includes Spain, Saudi Arabia, Uruguay, and Cape Verde.

    Defending champions Argentina, led by captain Lionel Messi, were drawn into Group J alongside Algeria, Austria, and Jordan.

    Messi is seeking to guide his nation to become the first team to win consecutive tournaments since Brazil did so in 1958 and 1962.

    Messi, who already holds the record for 26 World Cup games played, is also just three goals shy of Miroslav Klose’s career World Cup goals record.

    Host nation USA is set to compete in Group D against Paraguay and Australia.

    Attendance across the 16 venues is projected to exceed the record 3.59 million set when the US last hosted the tournament in 1994.

  • Spain and France handed tough World Cup draws

    The 2026 World Cup draw has produced challenging groups, with Spain facing Uruguay and France set to play Norway and Senegal. Co-hosts Mexico will kick off the tournament against South Africa, while the United States and Canada also learned their group stage opponents.

    Reigning champions Argentina begin their title defence against Algeria. Elsewhere, England will have a chance for revenge against Croatia in a repeat of their 2018 semi-final clash. The Three Lions are also grouped with Ghana and Panama in Group L.

  • Pochettino urges USMNT to treat World Cup games like finals

    Mauricio Pochettino has urged the USMNT to view every World Cup game as a final, regardless of recent friendly results against opponents like Australia and Paraguay. He emphasized that the World Cup’s intensity and stakes are far beyond those of friendly matches.

    Pochettino shared his personal experience of the tournament’s profound impact, encouraging players to ‘feel’ the importance of each match and understand the nation’s backing. He stressed the need for an urgent, ‘final’ mentality throughout the group stage.

    READ MORE FROM THE GUARDIAN

Scroll to Top