And the inaugural World Cup Round of 32? It delivered exactly what FIFA had hoped for: drama, surprises, heartache, and enough extra time and penalty shootouts to keep cardiologists employed for another generation.
The Expanded World Cup Is Working
Let's start here. The doomsayers said 48 teams would dilute the tournament. Instead, it has given us something precious: more stories.
Because without expansion, there is no Cabo Verde.
The tiny island nation that many casual fans couldn't find on a map took Argentina to extra time. They drew Spain. They made Lionel Messi and company sweat. Their goalkeeper, Vozinha, became an overnight folk hero. They reminded us that football isn't just played with tactical systems, billion-euro academies, and data analysts. Sometimes it's played with heart. And occasionally, heart is enough to make the giants wobble.
Cabo Verde may be going home, but they leave with something bigger than a Round of 16 ticket: they leave with everyone's respect.
So here we go, match by match:
Cabo Verde and the Beauty of the Impossible
Argentina are through.
But that's almost beside the point.
Because for 120 glorious minutes, a nation of just over half a million people looked the reigning world champions straight in the eye and refused to blink.
Cabo Verde didn't park the bus. They didn't show up simply to exchange shirts with Messi and ask for autographs. They came to play. To compete. To believe.
And for long stretches, they made Argentina look uncomfortable, ordinary, even vulnerable.Cabral's goal was applauded by Dibu Martinez himself. Then he promptly ran over to the stands for an amotional hug with his significant other. Unscripted. Genuine. Emotional.
This is why the World Cup matters.
Every four years, a tiny underdog nation gets to stand on the same field as a giant and say, "Why not us?"
Most of the time, Goliath survives.
This time, Goliath survived too.
But David left with something equally valuable: the admiration of an entire footballing world.
Argentina move on.
Cabo Verde go home.
Yet years from now, when people remember this tournament, they won't remember that Argentina won.
They'll remember that, for one magical night in Miami, a little island in the Atlantic made the world believe in impossible things again.
Auf Wiedersehen, Germany
And then there was Germany.
Another tournament, another early exit.
Paraguay sent the four-time world champions packing on penalties, and suddenly the questions become unavoidable. Was this merely a bad tournament? Or has Germany's decline from the relentless machine of 2014 become something more structural?
Either way: Auf Wiedersehen, Germany.
The Mannschaft used to arrive at World Cups with an air of inevitability. Lately, they arrive carrying baggage.
Tot ziens, Netherlands
The Dutch won't be joining us either.
Morocco followed up their magical 2022 run by knocking out another European heavyweight, proving that their success wasn't a one-off fairy tale but the result of years of investment and development.
So: Tot ziens, Oranje.
The Netherlands once again played lovely football in stretches and once again leave earlier than their talent suggests they should.
A familiar script.
Croatia and the Cruelty of Football
No team understands the cruelty of knockout football quite like Croatia.
A late equalizer, extra-time drama, and then the heartbreak of seeing a potential comeback erased by technology's cold precision. The margin was literally hair-thin!!!
Cheers to my friend (and guy a share a birthday with!) for the Portugal win. Come Monday, we may no longer be friends. At least not for a while. We-ve done this on and off after many El Classico 😏😁. We'll be fine...
Portugal survived. Croatia didn't.And with it, the end of the road for a terrific generation, chief among them, Luka Modrić.
What a player.
No World Cup trophy, but that somehow feels irrelevant. He leaves behind something more difficult to achieve: universal admiration.
The little magician from Zadar gave us two decade of elegance, intelligence, and resilience. Football will miss him.
Belgium's Annual Chaos Continues
If there were a trophy for "Most Entertainingly Dysfunctional Team," Belgium would be perennial favorites.
Just when you think they're done, they pull off another crazy comeback and survive. Their golden generation may be fading, but their capacity for drama remains elite.
Belgium don't do easy.
England: The Art of Looking Unconvincing and Advancing Anyway
Some teams dominate.
Some teams entertain.
England simply... advance.
Not elegantly. Not convincingly. But effectively. Harry Cane saved them again.
The Three Lions scraped through once again, joining the long tradition of tournament teams that somehow keep progressing despite never quite looking like genuine contenders. Brazil had a bit of that same energy this round as well, needing to dig deep against Japan rather than steamroll them.
Tournament football has a funny way of rewarding pragmatism over aesthetics.
Still, if you're an England supporter, you'd probably prefer fewer nail-biters.
Then again, where's the fun in that?
Spain Shift Into Another Gear
The group stage version of Spain was very good.
The Round of 32 version looked downright frightening.
Austria were dispatched with a level of comfort that bordered on disrespectful. The midfield controlled everything, the press suffocated, the attack flowed, and the defense once again looked impenetrable.
This is beginning to resemble a team that knows exactly when to peak.
And that's a dangerous thing.
Spain suddenly look like a side that can beat anyone, in any style, on any stage.
The road only gets tougher from here, but for the first time in this tournament, it feels like La Roja have moved from "one of the favorites" to "the team everyone else wants to avoid."
The Rest of the Round of 32
A World Cup isn't won in the glamour fixtures alone.
Canada Keeps Making History
Canada's 1-0 win over South Africa won't make any all-time highlight reels, but that's the point. Tournament football is often about surviving, not sparkling.
The Canadians defended well, managed the game, and quietly marched into the Round of 16. There is something very un-Canadian about their growing ruthlessness. It's almost… European.
Brazil Win, But Don't Convince
Brazil beat Japan 2-1, but this wasn't vintage Seleção.
Japan led. Brazil wobbled. Then the yellow shirts did what the yellow shirts tend to do: they found another gear just in time.
The concern for Brazil is that this has happened a few times now. The aura remains, but the invincibility? Not so much.
France Are Beginning to Look Terrifying
Three goals against Sweden. Another brace for Mbappé. Another statement performance.
This French side has reached that dangerous phase where they appear to be operating in second gear while scoring at will. Depth everywhere, pace everywhere, and perhaps the most terrifying player on the planet leading the line.
France are no longer one of the favorites.
They may be the favorites.
Mexico's Party Continues
The co-hosts beat Ecuador 2-0 and now get the prize for their efforts: England.
The atmosphere in Mexico City for that one may register on the Richter scale.
England might have the better squad. They definitely won't have the crowd.
Good luck, lads.
The United States Are Dreaming Again
The United States beat Bosnia and Herzegovina 2-0 and, more importantly, looked like they belonged.
The crowds are massive. The confidence is growing. They even scored with one man down. The team appears organized and fearless.
Belgium await, which feels like one of those games that could either become an American sporting memory for the ages… or end in glorious heartbreak.
Either way, it's appointment television.
Switzerland Finally Win a Knockout Match
The Swiss waited 88 years for a World Cup knockout victory.
Eighty-eight.
Then they calmly beat Algeria 2-0.
Swiss football in a nutshell: no drama, no fuss, just quiet competence and an excellent watch collection.
Colombia and Ghana Deliver the Kind of Match We Love
One goal separated them.
One moment.
One lapse.
And Colombia are through.
Ghana bow out having once again contributed to the entertainment value of the World Cup, something they've been doing rather reliably since 2006.
What's Next?
The Round of 32 gave us exactly what the expanded format promised: more nations with a chance to dream, more stories, and just enough chaos to remind us why we love this sport.
But now comes the hard part.
The romance starts to fade.
The margins get thinner.
The contenders separate from the pretenders.
And somewhere out there, another giant is preparing to pack its bags.
The World Cup always does this.
It builds your hopes up… and then, eventually, breaks your heart.
My Predictions for the Round of 16
Now the real tournament begins.
Canada vs Morocco
Morocco have been here before. They know how to suffer, defend, and scrape a win. They play a dynamic style of football where the player with the ball always finds 3-4 teammates that move to an empty space ready to pounce. They will be too much for Canada.
Paraguay vs France
Paraguay's reward for eliminating Germany is… Mbappé. That's just cruel. End of story.
Brazil vs Norway
Norway can hurt anybody with their physicality and directness. Most people pick Brazil here. I'm going with power over flair. In my younger years I used to love Brazil. The Brazil of Socrates, Zico, Falcao, and later Ronaldinho. This Brazil is no longer that. Nowhere near. And the Haaland story continues. Messi and Mbappe need a golden boot contender.
Mexico vs England
This feels like the trap game of the round.
Mexico City. Host nation. Ferocious atmosphere. Altitude advantage.
And yet England keep scraping through. They will do so again, probably in extra time
Portugal vs Spain
Circle this one.
The Iberian Derby.
Portugal's experience against Spain's rhythm and youthful exuberance.
My heart says Spain.
My head also says Spain. Just not as loudly.
I hope I will survive the emotional rollercoaster, as I will be in Arlington to see it in person!
United States vs Belgium
Belgium are chaos incarnate. In theory, there is enough talent there to edge this one. But the US have the home field advantage and have been playing serious football. Balogun is a huge miss for them
I wouldn't be remotely surprised by penalties. Belgium to lose, mostly because they don't deserve to be advancing thus far.
Prediction: Belgium 2-1
Argentina vs Egypt
Egypt have already overachieved. Did not show much against Australia. Argentina have Messi.
That usually settles things.
And after the Cabo Verde cold shower, the Albiceleste will adjust.
Still looking for a ticket, here in Atlanta, if anyone offers...
Switzerland vs Colombia
The sneaky good game of the round.
Swiss organization versus Colombian flair.
I'm taking the South Americans.
And Then There Were Eight...
The expanded World Cup has given us underdogs, surprises, and more stories than we know what to do with.
But now comes the part where legends are made.
Or broken.
By late Tuesday, eight more nations will be gone.
And somewhere, another country's collective blood pressure will have reached medically inadvisable levels.
Wouldn't have it any other way.


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