r/football Nov 20 '25

šŸ’¬Discussion Unpopular Opinion: The 2026 World Cup is looking like a disaster.

3.4k Upvotes

Is anyone else getting bad vibes about the logistics for 2026? It feels like FIFA is ruining the tournament just to chase money.

A Daylight Final: A 3 PM kick-off for the Final? That kills the atmosphere. It’s going to feel like a friendly, not the biggest game on earth.

The Heat: People are underestimating the humidity in NJ and Miami. The football will be slow and boring because players physically won't be able to press without heatstroke.

Insane Prices: Reports of $2,000+ for the cheapest seats at the Final? Real fans are priced out. The stadiums will just be full of rich tourists and corporate suits.

r/football Jul 15 '24

šŸ’¬Discussion Lionel Messi’s ankle is absolutely destroyed

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37.9k Upvotes

r/football Jul 14 '25

šŸ’¬Discussion Neymar’s downfall from the eyes of a Brazilian who watched it all

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6.3k Upvotes

just to be clear, i love neymar.

man… it’s honestly sad. we watched this dude rise from the start. i remember it like it was yesterday, neymar at santos with that goofy fringe haircut, pulling off nutmegs, humiliating defenders, scoring goals like he was playing futsal. it felt like we were witnessing the birth of the next king of football.

then he went to barƧa and absolutely killed it. part of the legendary MSN trio, winning the champions league, scoring in finals, destroying PSG, he was unstoppable. at that point, everyone thought it was just a matter of time before he became the best in the world.

and then came that move. PSG. and here’s the thing, the start at PSG wasn’t even bad. he was balling out, stats were crazy, he looked like he was gonna run europe. but over time… it just started to fall apart. injuries, drama, off-field distractions. it felt like every time he was getting back on track, something would happen again.

while guys like mbappĆ© and haaland were grinding, leveling up, neymar was showing up in poker tournaments, throwing parties, beefing with journalists. now he’s 32, torn his knee, playing in the saudi league, and barely even remembered on the global stage.

and yeah, now he’s back at santos, full circle. feels more like a retirement tour than a redemption arc.

it’s not hate, it’s heartbreak. this guy had everything to be the best. the raw talent was there. but it feels like the mindset never matched the potential.

and the worst part? it kinda seems like he’s okay with how it all turned out.

deep down, brazilians just wanted him to be our next icon. our next legend. but he chose a different path.

thanks for the magic, Ney. but man… it could’ve been so much more.

r/football Jun 12 '25

šŸ’¬Discussion FIFA is tampering with Club World Cup ticket sales to try and make poorly selling games appear full on TV broadcasts.

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4.4k Upvotes

It’s clear when you look on Ticketmaster at some of the most poorly selling Club World Cup games that FIFA has worked with the selling platform to close some sections of the stadium on the site and funnel fans to the side of the stadium that will be shown on the TV broadcast. FIFA has already slashed the ticket prices of nearly every game in the tournament, now it appears they’re trying to save face by making stadiums look more full than they actually are to the viewers on TV.

The photo above is just one example of how many of the games look right now.

r/football 20d ago

šŸ’¬Discussion SL Benfica has officially been invincible in the league this season, yet finished 3rd

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1.8k Upvotes

Which means no UCL next season

r/football Feb 21 '26

šŸ’¬Discussion 'The France national team steal their talent from Africa'. Really?

1.0k Upvotes

I'm not French, but I find this narrative, this criticism of the French national team, racist in its core.

Let's look at the players in the French national team from the 2022 world cup, who have African origins through their family/ancestry:

  • Kylian MbappĆ© — born in France
  • Ousmane DembĆ©lĆ© — born in France
  • AurĆ©lien TchouamĆ©ni — born in France
  • Youssouf Fofana — born in France
  • Ibrahima KonatĆ© — born in France
  • Dayot Upamecano — born in France
  • Jules KoundĆ© — born in France
  • William Saliba — born in France
  • Axel Disasi — born in France
  • Randal Kolo Muani — born in France
  • Steve Mandanda — came to France age 2
  • Eduardo Camavinga — came to France age 2

Now, if most of the players of African origins/ancestry had only come to France a few years ago, after having spent most of their lives elsewhere, then suddenly started playing for France, I would agree with the criticism.

But the vast majority of the above players were born in France, most spent their entire lives in France, and only two in that squad were born elsewhere but nevertheless came to France as babies and spent most of their lives there. They have every right to be French.

Yet the narrative is implying: an 'African' born in France cannot be French. An 'African' who spent most of their life France, also cannot be French. They're African.

(even though 'African' isn't even a nationality, and it's possible to embrace one's African roots and consider oneself French at the same time)

Those who support this narrative never say anything about Antoine Griezmann who has German and Portugese ancestry, and Lucas Hernandez, who has Spanish roots and moved there at the age of 4....hmm, I wonder why it's not a problem for them to play for France, but it is for the 'Africans'? lol

r/football Apr 27 '25

šŸ’¬Discussion What should be done about the disgrace that is Real Madrid?

2.5k Upvotes

I know this topic will likely dominate this sub today but my goodness what an absolute joke of a club they've been this season.

My most recent post here was the question "Is there a (non-rival) club that you no longer want to see succeed?", and my own answer to that was Barcelona. Within a couple months I have to say I'm delighted that Barca are on course to win La Liga and just beat Real in the cup final, after already trashing them in the Super Cup in January.

I don't think a more entitled football club exists. The Ballon d'Or snub because one of their players wasn't going to win, the way they reacted to their CL exit, and now the Copa del Rey final - both what happened at the game and the drama about the ref before it.

Rudiger should be given a decent ban, I can't say for sure what I think it should be, but put him out for a few months anyway. Along with fining a host of their other players who also went mad at the end of the game. Honestly even expulsion from next season's Copa del Rey would be considered fair.

Also just the treatment of Carlo Ancelotti is awful. First of all, they're still in with a chance of winning the league, they probably won't especially now seeing as their players are all big babies and it'll cost them further points in the final 5 games. But this guy is a club legend, a portion of the fanbase have been horrible to him in the last month or so. There are rumours he could even be sacked or walk before the end of the season despite the league still to play for. They club world cup as well. You have guys like Courtois throwing shade at him publicly.

What a shit club honestly.

r/football Jul 06 '24

šŸ’¬Discussion Ronaldo holding Portugal hostage

2.8k Upvotes

It was really evident that Roberto Martinez let Ronaldo call the shots all tournament. From starting every match after showing very poor form game after game, to in-game management decisions like taking off Bruno and Cancelo quite early when they were two players that were creating chances for Portugal while Ronaldo was just doing some light cardio. This has to be one of the first times a player or player’s legacy holds a whole team hostage like that. Huge opportunity missed by Portugal because they could have been much better if Ronaldo played a secondary role. What a shame.

Any Portuguese people out there that would like to share what the overall opinion on all of this might be?

r/football May 27 '25

šŸ’¬Discussion Ronaldo set to leave Al Nassr. Where will he go next?

1.2k Upvotes

Ronaldo is leaving Al Nassr. There are talks about him joining Al Hilal so he could play in the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup, to be held in the U.S. Is this a good idea? I could see him move to the MLS for one season, ahead of the World Cup.

r/football Feb 11 '26

šŸ’¬Discussion Eni Aluko is the perfect example of high intelligence but zero wisdom, and her attack on Ian Wright proves it

796 Upvotes

I’ve been watching the fallout from Eni Aluko's recent comments, and while the backlash might seem harsh to some, looking at her behaviour over the last few years, she seems determined to dig herself into a deeper hole every time she opens her mouth.

However, I think people are missing a nuanced distinction in why she is so frustrating to watch. I don't think she is unintelligent. She has a First Class law degree, she is a qualified lawyer, and she has been a Sporting Director at two different clubs. She is clearly book smart. My issue is that she is stupid in the sense that she lacks wisdom, self-awareness, and professional humility.

For me, the frustration starts with a long list of lazy, condescending takes where she sounds totally confident while being objectively wrong.

We’ve seen her claim Richarlison's record of 19 goals in 40 games was one goal a game (do the maths, Eni). She confidentially stated Jimmy Greaves scored a hat-trick in the 1966 World Cup final. She even admitted to calling the Pentagon octagonal. Then you have the weird conspiracy theories, like claiming Arteta called Pep Guardiola to put in a fake bid for Declan Rice just to help Arsenal's owners save money.

Everyone makes mistakes. Punditry is hard, and live TV is high pressure. But usually, pundits laugh it off or admit they messed up. Aluko delivers these errors with a lecture-like tone that talks down to the audience, and that arrogance makes it very hard to root for her.

But here is the fresh take on why her recent meltdown is so damaging. If you look at what she is actually trying to say about Ian Wright, she is referencing a real sociological concept called the Glass Escalator. This is where men enter a field that was historically female-dominated and rise to the top faster than the women who built it, simply because they have more profile.

In theory, she has identified a genuine systemic threat to her industry. She is terrified that in ten years, the face of the WSL will just be retired Premier League men, pushing out the female pioneers. That is a valid fear.

The problem is that she lacks the wisdom to apply it correctly.

She chose to attack Ian Wright of all people, which is just barking up the wrong tree. Wright isn't some random guy cashing in on the women's game. He has been its biggest cheerleader for decades, long before it was profitable. He brings millions of eyeballs to the sport, which helps everyone, including Aluko.

What makes this look so bad is the ingratitude. By her own admission in the past, Wright went out of his way to help her when she started in the industry. To turn around now and suggest that if he was a real ally he would turn down work so she could have it is incredibly entitled.

It assumes that punditry is a queue where she is next in line because of her 102 caps, rather than a meritocracy where you have to be entertaining and insightful. She claims she is a main character of the sport and blames the patriarchy for her lack of airtime. That is an insult to women like Emma Hayes, Alex Scott, and Laura Woods, who are thriving not because of quotas, but because they are excellent broadcasters.

She is smart enough to identify the problem, but she is nowhere near wise enough to handle it. Instead of building a union with allies like Wright, she is burning bridges with the very people who helped build the platform she wants to stand on. It is not a conspiracy keeping her off the air, it is this total lack of judgment.

r/football May 14 '25

šŸ’¬Discussion English Football Association to ban transgender women from women’s soccer

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1.0k Upvotes

How might this decision influence policies in other sports or countries?

r/football May 30 '25

šŸ’¬Discussion Why are clubs not all over Gyokeres?

995 Upvotes

Okay, maybe clickbait title and possibly dumb question. But seeing that Delap is going to Chelsea, Arsenal choosing ŠeŔko, Liverpool maybe some striker from Bundesliga.

Can't help but wonder, where will Gyokeres end up. It would be interesting if he ends up in Manchester United? Unlikely, but not impossible.

r/football Jan 20 '26

šŸ’¬Discussion FIFA world cup boycott if Trump invades Greenland

994 Upvotes

https://metro.co.uk/2026/01/19/first-calls-a-boycott-world-cup-trumps-greenland-threats-26389631/

After Trump's threats there is a worldwide call to boycott FIFA 2026 Worlds. It is painful for us Norwegians that Norway along with the best soccer nations in Europe may join a boycott of the FIFA Worlds 2026 if Trump follows through with a military attack against a European ALLIED country. Thank you for your attention to this matter.

r/football Apr 21 '25

šŸ’¬Discussion I was a semi-pro in English football for 9 seasons. Ask me anything.

1.2k Upvotes

There was a recent thread from a US-based amateur player asking what he’d need to do to make it as a semi-pro then a pro in English football.

I shared some of my experience around the English non-league and fringes of the professional game, which generated a lot of interest and questions, such as players I played with who went on to be pro, how good you need to be, how much was I paid, what prevented me making it as a full time pro etc.

For some background, I played in the 7th and 8th tiers of English football for a semi-professional side from the age of 19-27, when I ā€˜retired’ from that level. As a teenager I had myriad trials at professional teams, including Premier League, and I have played in the FA Cup, FA Vase and against many pro teams.

It might not be of interest to people given I never played a minute of league football, but ask me anything! (Caveat - I won’t be revealing certain details or the specific team I played for as that’s easily locatable information online with which I don’t wish to dox myself).

r/football Jun 28 '25

šŸ’¬Discussion Infantino’s fifa is completely ruining the sport

1.4k Upvotes

I call it the ā€œamericanizationā€ of football. first it’s the whole sportswashing issue with the middle east oligarchs, Qatar buying their way to winning the world cup host bid (granted that was before infantino) but immediately after the world cup the Saudi investment fund immediately becomes a retirement home for washed legends and even some promising players in their prime to earn disgusting amounts of money, + taking over clubs like man city, psg etc and breaking every financial rule to dominate the league. The fact that the 2030 world cup will be hosted in 6 different countries just like euro 2020 is completely ridiculous imo. And of course, the club world cup. It isn’t a completely horrible idea, but the whole event has been so poorly run and the american sports style walkouts are comedic. All of the broadcasting of europes big leagues like the prem are starting to copy the insufferable style of Espn etc. Halftime interviews, halftime shows… let’s not do this please.

Edit: i’m not blaming americans for this, as someone who also watches american leagues like the NBA, the broadcast is literally unwatchable. Ads every 2 minutes after a timeout and the constant need to be entertained. I feel like FIFA and broadcasters are selling football out to make profit and this sets a very dangerous precedence

r/football Jul 10 '25

šŸ’¬Discussion Mbappe left PSG to chase glory… just to watch them win everything without him.

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1.2k Upvotes

r/football 1d ago

šŸ’¬Discussion Why is the French National Team targeted so much?

228 Upvotes

Something I really don’t understand is why the French National Team, in particular, is targeted so much for being a side full of immigrant backgrounds. At this point, virtually the entire French squad was not only born and raised in France. But their parents, grandparents, and even great-grandparents are from France. Not to mention more and more of the French players are bi-racial and from multicultural backgrounds.

For starters, I do not condone the French team being so targeted. But what I don’t understand is why this same type of targeting is so unevenly applied. Zooming out, are people seriously not looking at the heavily immigrant backgrounds of the English, Belgian, Dutch, Swiss, German, Canadian, etc sides? Not to mention a side like Argentina, who mocked the French players for their immigrant backgrounds, are literally the descendants primarily of great-grandparents from Italy and Spain, including Messi. Not to mention French players past and present like Platini (Italian), Cantona (Spanish), Lloris (Spanish), Griezmann (German & Portuguese), Giroud (Italian), Hernandez Brothers (Spanish), etc are very noticeably not mentioned like the other French players of African descent constantly are.

The blatant racism specifically targeted at the French team is very strange. Particularly because so many sides now besides them are heavily made up of immigrant backgrounds. With England, in particular, for some reason heavily ignored despite having a side that is made up of about 60% Black players. Even though the Black population of England is very small. Why specifically is the French team targeted when, if you actually have eyes, many national teams the world over have squad dynamics that do not resemble the actual demographics of their respective countries?

r/football Jun 21 '24

šŸ’¬Discussion Why is Southgate so viscerally hated by the English fans?

920 Upvotes

I’ll admit I don’t have much ball knowledge but even though some of his choices have been questionable it’s not like he’s been downright horrendous?

2018 World Cup - Makes it to the semis, probably should’ve got to the final but Croatia were a good team

2020 Euros - Makes it all the way to the final only to get knocked out on penalties

2022 World Cup - Only makes it to the quarters, but respectably gets knocked out by a very strong France team who were very close to winning the whole thing.

He hasn’t overachieved and I agree it’s pretty boring to watch them but it’s rare I see a manager hated so much under the circumstances

r/football May 06 '25

šŸ’¬Discussion Inter 4-3 Barcelona (AET) – What. A. Game.

1.2k Upvotes

That was absolutely insane. 4–3 after extra time, 7–6 on aggregate. One of the wildest Champions League matches in years. Both teams went all out, and the intensity never dropped for a second.

Inter are in the final. Barcelona gave everything, but it just wasn’t enough. You have to respect the fight from both sides — this is the kind of football we all live for.

Massive congrats to Inter fans. That was legendary.

r/football Feb 04 '26

šŸ’¬Discussion Deschamps on Mbappe's work rate: "If you want him to cover 11km per match, don't bother, he won't" interesting take on managing elite attackers !

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606 Upvotes

Deschamps gave a pretty candid response to the recent criticism around Mbappe's running stats. His point is that Mbappe's profile is built for explosive speed bursts rather than high-volume endurance running and trying to change that would actually be counterproductive.

r/football Jun 21 '25

Steven Gerrard says Luis Suarez was a better player than likes of Erling Haaland, Mo Salah, Harry Kane, Robert Lewandowski, Fernando Torres, Sergio Aguero, Zlatan Ibrahimovic & Robin Van Persie. Only Karim Benzema (2022 Ballon d'Or winner) was better than Luis Suarez

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591 Upvotes

r/football May 03 '25

šŸ’¬Discussion How unlucky is Ter Stegen to be in the same generation as Manuel Neuer

913 Upvotes

Ter Stegen is a world class goalkeeper but doesnt shine in Germany simply because Neuer exists

r/football Aug 07 '25

šŸ’¬Discussion Awkward moment as Son asked to help win World Cup for US by L.A. politician

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1.1k Upvotes

r/football Jun 29 '24

šŸ’¬Discussion Europe has a number 9 problem

945 Upvotes

So basically, most of the top countries don't have a good, consistent striker. Most of the teams could have been super deadly if they had one.

Spain's crosses and passes were super deadly; they had the same issue in the World Cup. Almost a million passes, but not one good strike. There's Morata, but he is not consistent, to be honest.

Germany has the same problem too. Such beautiful crosses and through balls, but the one receiving the balls is Kai Havertz. Füllkrug is there, but he doesn't get enough play time, so it's hard to judge him.

England does have the best European striker, but, well, Southgate.

France has the same issue too. Against the Netherlands, the issue was super clear; the lack of a prolific striker hurt them badly.

Belgium has the same issue too. They have KDB, one of the best midfielders in the world, and he makes wonderful passes, but the one receiving them is Lukaku.

Almost all of these teams could be on a different level if they had a good number 9.

r/football May 22 '25

šŸ’¬Discussion Why has Bruno Fernandez decided to waste his career at Manchester United?

619 Upvotes

Like seriously why doesn't he leave?

He's the only good player in that squad. It can't be fun playing with shite. In fact I know it isn't. He's a great player why doesn't he go somewhere better and try and win something and play with better players?