A supposedly meaningless defeat against Ecuador may have told Germany more than any comfortable win could. The match exposed a team without midfield authority, tempo or physical resistance, with too many famous names losing the ball as soon as football became uncomfortable. Musiala, Wirtz and Havertz looked fragile, Neuer looked late, and only a few exceptions suggested this side still remembers what a duel is.
Tag: football
FIFA has won. Football can sit somewhere else.
The empty seats at the 2026 World Cup are not a mystery. They are the visible result of a tournament priced, packaged and managed for maximum extraction rather than genuine supporter culture. FIFA may still make record money, and Gianni Infantino’s political machine may remain perfectly fed. But the gaps in the stands reveal something the attendance figures cannot hide: football’s richest event can still look strangely poorer without real fans.
Euro 2028 may be the Tournament that Saves Football’s Soul
The 2026 World Cup already feels like a tournament drowning in bureaucracy, border politics and institutional cowardice. Euro 2028 could be the antidote: close, reachable, fan-centred and rooted in football cultures that still understand the game as a public ritual, not a corporate asset. If UEFA keeps its promises, the tournament may remind Europe that football belongs to supporters before it belongs to executives, sponsors or airport officials. Quite rightly.
The World Cup sells the Names. The Knockouts will test the Bodies.
The 2026 World Cup will be full of famous names no longer playing at the sharpest edge of European football. Messi, Ronaldo, Neymar and others may still sell tickets, dominate weaker opponents and provide the tournament with its mythology. But the knockout stage is less sentimental. It does not reward memory, aura or golden contracts. It asks what is left when time, space and legs disappear.
Sports Journalism wants the World Cup Question, But Not the Answer
European football media keeps asking players whether they should speak about the FIFA World Cup 2026. But the real question is whether sports journalism itself has the courage to face what this tournament has become: a politically contaminated event shaped by war, exclusion, hostile entry conditions, security fears, absurd prices and a broken contract with the fans. The question is allowed. The debate is not.
Is Manuel Neuer the Answer, or the Symptom?
Germany is not really debating Manuel Neuer. Germany is debating whether its old certainty is still safer than its unfinished future. Neuer may still offer the world-class ceiling needed to win a World Cup, but at forty he also brings fragility, hierarchy problems and the risk of one decisive mistake. Baumann offers competence, not greatness. The question is whether Germany is choosing its best goalkeeper, or merely returning to the last answer that once worked.
FIFA did not fight the Black Market. It became the Dealer.
The 2026 World Cup should have been a football festival across three countries. Instead, FIFA’s own ticketing platform looks like an official resale casino with hospitality lounges attached. After comparing today’s obscene prices with my own tickets from Germany 2006 and Brazil 2014, the conclusion is simple: FIFA did not fight the black market. It became the dealer.
The Annual Green Bay Super Bowl Prophecy
Every spring, the NFL performs its little theatre of hope, and I perform my part with great dignity and no measurable restraint. The Green Bay Packers draft someone promising, sign someone intriguing, or merely produce a training-camp clip of mild beauty, and I enter the WhatsApp group with the only reasonable conclusion: Super Bowl. It is not delusion. The trophy is named after Vince Lombardi. We are simply asking for the family silver to be returned.
World Cup 2026 Tickets: If you still believe FIFA cares about Fans, you’re fooling Yourself
World Cup 2026 ticket prices aren’t a mistake. They are proof. Proof that FIFA no longer represents football fans, that national associations lack courage, and that we allowed it to happen. We complain, we outrage — and then we comply. This is not betrayal by FIFA alone. It’s collective failure, includng national associations and us, the fans.
World Cup 2026 Draw: The Day FIFA finally stopped Pretending
The World Cup 2026 draw didn’t just embarrass FIFA—it exposed a corrupt system that has completely rotted from within. Instead of a celebration of football, fans were served a political circus built on vanity, power, and Gianni Infantino’s shameless self-promotion. With a bloated 48-team format and a president who caters to dictators and dollars, the tournament has lost its soul. Unless the great football nations finally revolt, we’re not watching a World Cup—we’re watching the funeral of the sport we once loved.