Cape Verde, DR Congo, Egypt, Curaçao and others have turned the expanded 2026 World Cup into something more meaningful than a bigger tournament: a warning that football’s old hierarchy no longer feels safe.

There was a time when the World Cup made its social order clear almost immediately. The aristocrats arrived with stars, systems and expectation. The outsiders came with flags, noise and the knowledge that dignity might be the best available prize.
The 2026 World Cup has made that old arrangement look badly out of date.
Not because every underdog suddenly became a contender. Not because the game has become equal, or because history and wealth no longer matter. They do. But across the group stage in North America, one of football’s laziest labels has begun to lose its usefulness. “Minnow” was always a word that said more about the speaker than the team. This tournament has made it sound almost antique.
The World Cup That Rewrote the Hierarchy
Cape Verde are the obvious starting point, because some stories still demand to be told from the heart before the head gets involved.
A debutant nation of roughly half a million people reached the knockout stage without winning a match, which sounds like a technicality only until you look at the matches themselves. A goalless draw against Spain. A 2-2 draw against Uruguay. Another goalless draw against Saudi Arabia. Three nights of resistance, structure and nerve were enough to carry the Blue Sharks into a Round of 32 meeting with Argentina.
That is not a novelty act. It is tournament football done with discipline.
Cape Verde’s run carried the romance of the World Cup, but it also carried a harder message. Goalkeeper Vozinha, 40 years old and playing last season in Portugal’s second tier, became a symbol of defiance. Yet the team around him were not merely clinging on. They pressed when they could, suffered when they had to, and understood the emotional temperature of each match better than opponents with richer football histories.
DR Congo’s breakthrough carried a different kind of weight. Their only previous World Cup appearance, as Zaire in 1974, had long been remembered through humiliation. In Atlanta, 52 years later, they came from behind to beat Uzbekistan 3-1 and reach the knockout stage. Yoane Wissa’s goals were part of the story; so was the wider sense of a national team reclaiming its place in the tournament’s imagination.
Egypt, too, crossed a line they had never crossed before. They reached the World Cup knockout stage for the first time, and did so without the entire project being reduced to Mohamed Salah. Salah remains the headline figure, of course, but Egypt’s group stage showed a more balanced, more dynamic side under Hossam Hassan. That matters. Smaller football nations do not become more competitive simply by producing one superstar. They become more competitive when the team no longer depends entirely on him.
Then there was Curaçao, eliminated but unforgettable. Eloy Room’s 15 saves in the 0-0 draw with Ecuador gave the smallest nation ever to play at a World Cup its first point. It was not enough to extend their tournament, but it was enough to expose the poverty of the old language. A team can lose the group and still alter the conversation.
And Ecuador’s comeback victory over Germany was a reminder that the shift is not limited to debutants or sentimental favourites. Germany had already qualified, but Ecuador still needed to win. Falling behind in the second minute, they recovered to win 2-1 and reach the knockouts. That result did not make Ecuador a “small” nation suddenly punching above its weight. It showed a serious football country refusing to accept the role assigned to it.
How the Gap Has Closed
The shrinking gap in international football is not accidental. It is the result of a generation of quiet changes that are now visible on the biggest stage.
Better coaching has travelled. So have academy models, sports science, video analysis and recruitment networks. Players from nations once seen as peripheral are no longer arriving at World Cups as unknowns. Many are raised in elite European systems, hardened in competitive leagues and exposed to tactical ideas that used to be concentrated in a handful of football economies.
Morocco remain the clearest example of that blended modern identity. Their 2022 semi-final run was not a miracle; it was a signpost. Their squad reflects both diaspora recruitment and domestic investment, including the long-term work around the Mohammed VI academy. Japan, meanwhile, offer a different model: a successful domestic league, a recognisable national playing style, and a steady pipeline into Europe. They do not arrive as tourists. They arrive with method.
DR Congo’s squad speaks to another modern truth. Diaspora football is not a loophole; it is part of the game’s global reality. Players born, trained or polished elsewhere can still carry deep national meaning. The same applies across Africa, the Caribbean and parts of Asia. The old map of football strength was based largely on domestic structures. The new one is built through movement — of people, coaching, information and opportunity.
Analytics have also lowered the cost of competence. A well-organised side can now prepare with the kind of detail that once separated the elite from everyone else. Defensive distances, set-piece routines, pressing triggers, rest-defence structures: these are no longer the private language of the richest nations. When a supposedly smaller team survives pressure, it is rarely just courage. It is preparation.
That is why the “plucky underdog” framing often feels patronising. Cape Verde were brave, yes. Curaçao were heroic, yes. But bravery is not a game plan. These teams have shown tactical clarity, emotional control and a level of physical organisation that makes the old mismatch narrative harder to sustain.
Was the Expanded World Cup Actually a Success?
The 48-team World Cup was not welcomed universally, and some of the criticism was reasonable. More teams meant more matches, a longer tournament, more pressure on players and fears that the group stage would lose its edge. Critics worried about dilution, dead games and one-sided fixtures. Those concerns should not be dismissed simply because the tournament has produced good stories.
The format remains imperfect. Third-place qualification can be messy. Some teams have still been badly exposed. New Zealand’s campaign, which ended with one point after a heavy defeat by Belgium, showed that expansion is not a magic wand. Panama’s struggles and Jordan’s early elimination are reminders that the World Cup can still be brutal.
But the case against expansion has taken damage. The tournament has given us Cape Verde against Argentina, DR Congo against England, South Africa against Canada, Brazil against Japan and the Netherlands against Morocco. It has given more nations a reason to invest, more players a pathway to the biggest stage and more supporters a memory that will outlive the final.
Even Carlos Queiroz, while questioning whether a bigger World Cup risks devaluing qualification, admitted Ghana would learn from the experience of reaching the knockouts. Arsène Wenger’s argument before the tournament was that football had to open itself more fully to Africa and Asia if it wanted to be strong everywhere. The group stage has not settled that debate, but it has made the inclusive side of it harder to mock.
The best defence of expansion has not come from FIFA executives. It has come from players refusing to behave like guests.
Is This the End of the Football Minnow?
Perhaps “minnow” will survive as shorthand. Football loves shorthand. It loves hierarchy, memory, old shirts and old assumptions. But as an analytical term, it is close to useless now.
What does it mean when Cape Verde can hold Spain and Uruguay? What does it mean when Curaçao can frustrate Ecuador through a record goalkeeping performance? What does it mean when Egypt reach the knockouts with Salah not at full force, or when DR Congo turn a must-win match into a national restoration?
It means the floor has risen. The giants remain giants, but the space beneath them is more crowded, more educated and more dangerous. Future World Cups may still be won by Brazil, Argentina, France, Spain, Germany or another established power. The deep resources of the elite have not vanished. But the days when half the field could be quietly sorted into “serious teams” and “happy to be here” are fading.
The greatest legacy of the 2026 World Cup may not be found in the final. It may be found in the group-stage nights when the old vocabulary failed: when islands, debutants, returnees and outsiders played with the authority of teams who knew they belonged. Football has not become equal. But it has become less obedient. And that may be the most important change of all.
Great content! Keep up the good work!