The Magic of the Underdogs – World Cup Cinderella Stories Since 1986
Every World Cup gives us giants. Brazil, Germany, Argentina, Italy and France arrive carrying history, expectations and a cabinet full of trophies.
But every four years, another story quietly unfolds.
A team nobody expected.
A nation with a fraction of the population.
A squad with little history but enormous belief.
Those are the teams I remember the most.
1986 – Belgium surprises the world
Belgium squeezed into the knockout stage and stunned the mighty Soviet Union in a classic before eventually finishing fourth. It was the first reminder that belief can outrun reputation.
1990 – Cameroon changes African football forever
Roger Milla, at 38 years old, danced at corner flags and carried Cameroon to the quarterfinals after defeating defending champions Argentina. Africa was no longer just participating—it was competing.
1994 – Bulgaria's unbelievable summer
Led by Hristo Stoichkov, Bulgaria defeated Germany and reached the semifinals. For a nation of barely eight million, it remains one of football's greatest fairy tales.
1998 – Croatia's unforgettable debut
Playing in their first World Cup as an independent nation, Croatia demolished Germany 3-0 and finished third. Quite an introduction to the football world.
2002 – South Korea and Turkey rewrite history
South Korea rode the energy of an entire nation into the semifinals, while Turkey quietly claimed third place. Meanwhile, defending champions France went home without scoring a goal. Football has a wicked sense of humor.
2006 – Ukraine announces itself
In their very first World Cup appearance, Ukraine reached the quarterfinals behind the brilliance of Andriy Shevchenko.
2010 – Ghana comes within inches
Africa stood one penalty kick away from its first semifinalist before Luis Suárez's infamous handball, a missed penalty and heartbreak denied Ghana a place in history.
2014 – Costa Rica conquers the Group of Death
Drawn alongside England, Italy and Uruguay, Costa Rica not only survived—they topped the group and reached the quarterfinals, proving that football doesn't always read the script.
2018 – Croatia's dream run
Croatia defeated Denmark, Russia and England to reach the World Cup Final. They fell to France, but earned the admiration of the football world.
2022 – Morocco makes history
Morocco defeated Belgium, Spain and Portugal to become the first African nation ever to reach a World Cup semifinal. They united an entire continent and inspired millions across the globe.
2026 – Cape Verde captures the world's imagination
Every World Cup needs a team that reminds us why we fell in love with football. This year, that team is Cape Verde.
A tiny island nation of barely 600,000 people arrived with little expectation. Most assumed they would enjoy the occasion, exchange jerseys with the stars and quietly head home.
Instead, they became everyone's second favorite team.
They played fearless football, attacked without fear, defended with heart and refused to believe that history alone decides football matches.
Their journey ended in a thrilling 3-2 defeat to defending champions Argentina, but the scoreline tells only half the story. For long stretches, Cape Verde looked every bit the equal of one of the greatest football nations on earth.
They didn't leave with the trophy.
They left with something equally precious—the respect of the football world.
For me, Cape Verde are the Cinderella story of the 2026 World Cup. Not because they lifted the trophy, but because they reminded us that football isn't reserved for the richest leagues or the biggest countries.
Sometimes it's about a tiny nation daring to dream... and making millions of us dream along with them.
That's why I love the World Cup.
Every four years, another Cinderella puts on her boots, walks onto the biggest stage in football, and reminds the giants that this beautiful game belongs to everyone.


