The World Cup Rewritten: Week One
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The 2026 FIFA World Cup is five days in, and it's already defying expectations in almost every direction.
The most expanded World Cup in history — 48 teams, 12 groups, 72 group-stage games — is generating as much drama off the ball as on it. This episode breaks down the biggest storylines shaping the tournament's opening week.
South America entered with all the pride of football's most decorated continent. But Brazil drew 1-1 with Morocco, Ecuador lost 1-0 to Ivory Coast, and Paraguay were dismantled 4-1 by the United States — leaving the region without a single win from its opening matches. For a group of nations that has produced the majority of World Cup champions, the reckoning is real.
African sides, meanwhile, have been one of the early stories of the tournament. Ivory Coast defeated Ecuador, Morocco held Brazil, and Cape Verde — a nation of half a million people — drew with Spain. Africa's ten-team presence is making itself felt.
The co-hosts have arrived in style. The United States put on a dominant 4-1 performance against Paraguay, with Folarin Balogun and Christian Pulisic leading the charge. Mexico opened the tournament at the Estadio Azteca with a 2-0 win over South Africa, sending a message that the home nations mean business.
Then there's the refereeing conversation. FIFA launched an investigation after a VAR official was caught on live television making a hand gesture linked to white supremacist groups during Germany's match against Curaçao — a controversy that anti-discrimination groups say has no place at a global sporting event. On the technology side, FIFA promised this would be the most AI-driven, precision-officiated World Cup ever — but history suggests controversy never fully disappears, and the more accurate the tools become, the louder the reaction when mistakes still happen.
With Argentina yet to play, big matches in Groups I, J, K, and L just kicking off, and the race for third-place spots already tightening, the group stage has a long way to run. We dig into what to watch next — and whether the old football powers can find their footing before it's too late.