Serbia and Albania are set to face each other on the field for the first time in over a decade. The previous encounter between the two teams ended in chaos, with riot police having to intervene and the match being abandoned in the first half.
The two countries have been drawn together in World Cup qualifying Group K alongside England, Latvia and Andorra.
UEFA has a short list of 'prohibited clashes' between nations that cannot be drawn together for political reasons. For this draw, that meant Belarus could not draw Ukraine, Gibraltar could not draw Spain, and Kosovo would not be paired with either Serbia or Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Serbia and Albania drawn together ten years after brawl that led to match abandonmentHowever, Serbia and Albania are not part of that list despite a long, complex and largely difficult relationship after decades of political tensions.
Things came to a head on the football pitch in a Euro 2016 qualifier in 2014 after a drone flew over the pitch carrying a flag featuring Albanian national symbols. A melee between the two sets of players began after Serbia defender Stefan Mitrovic leapt to bring down the flag.
Numerous Serbian supporters entered the pitch during the tussle, which turned it into a brawl in which four Albanian players suffered minor injuries. Albania also claimed their players were attacked by stewards and riot police, which Serbian officials denied.
That led to the game being suspended by English referee Martin Atkinson and riot police being deployed around the perimeter of the pitch.
Get FourFourTwo Newsletter Contact me with news and offers from other Future brandsReceive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsorsBy submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.Half an hour later, the game was abandoned at 0-0, with UEFA initially awarding a 3-0 forfeit victory to Serbia but also docking them three points and imposing a two-game order to play behind closed doors. Both sides were fined €100,000.
The Court of Arbitration for Sport subsequently reversed the walkover win on appeal, awarding the 3-0 win to Albania instead. The rest of UEFA's punishments were upheld.
Serbian fans were denied permission to attend the reverse fixture in Albania the following year.
Serbia ran out 2-0 winners thanks to a pair of injury time goals, but the result proved immaterial to both sides as Albania claimed automatic qualification for Euro 2016 while Serbia fell short of even making the play-offs.
The exact dates for the 2026 World Cup qualification games are yet to be announced, but qualifying games will be played in March, June, September, October and November 2025.