Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 14
Curacao’s 7-1 World Cup Debut Rekindles 48-Team Expansion Debate
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 14

Curacao’s 7-1 World Cup Debut Rekindles 48-Team Expansion Debate

3 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jun 14

Summary

  • Curacao’s first World Cup match ended in a 7-1 loss to Germany, but Livano Comenencia scored the island’s first tournament goal and briefly leveled the game at 1-1.
  • That heavy defeat sharpened concerns that the expanded 48-team format will dilute quality and produce more one-sided matches, a criticism UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin has already voiced.
  • Curacao, Cape Verde and Uzbekistan pushed back in a joint statement, saying qualification itself is historic for smaller nations and rejecting the idea that their matches are “completely uninteresting.”
  • For Curacao, the emotional payoff was central: the 150,000-population nation celebrated a landmark moment that supporters argue shows what expansion can add even when the football is lopsided.

Insights

With 7-1 blowouts, has the 48-team World Cup sacrificed elite competition for the sake of global inclusion?
Is the World Cup's emotional payoff for small nations worth the financial risk for host city taxpayers?
Amid soaring travel costs and strict visa rules, can the 2026 World Cup truly be a global fan festival?