There are moments in football that stop everything. Weeks where routines change, conversations shift, and entire nations move to the rhythm of a ball being kicked thousands of miles away. The FIFA World Cup 2026 will be one of those moments.
Bigger than anything that has come before it, this is a tournament built on scale. Forty-eight teams. One hundred and four matches. Three host nations. From the opening game in Mexico City on June 11 to the final in New York on July 19, football will stretch across an entire continent and dominate the global stage.
For a football nation like ours, that means one thing. A summer that belongs to the game.
This is not just a World Cup, it is a reimagining of it. For the first time, the tournament expands to 48 teams, bringing more nations, more stories, and more opportunity than ever before. Twelve groups of four will compete, with the top two and the best third-placed sides progressing into a newly expanded knockout phase. It creates tension from the very first match. Every point matters. Every goal could decide a nation’s fate.
And with more teams comes more unpredictability. New challengers, unfamiliar match-ups, and the kind of drama only football can produce.
The setting only adds to it.
This is a World Cup played across vast distances, from Canada down to Mexico, through some of the most iconic and diverse sporting cities in the world. One week could bring high altitude in Mexico City, the next the humidity of Miami or the heat of Texas. Conditions will vary sharply, forcing teams to adapt quickly, manage fatigue, and rely on the depth of their squads.
For supporters, it brings something different too. The spectacle of enormous stadiums, the energy of North American crowds, and the unique rhythm of matches played across multiple time zones. Some games will fall into late evenings, others will stretch into the early hours, but that is part of the experience. The World Cup does not fit into your schedule. You adjust to it.
And then there is England.
Every tournament brings hope, but this time it feels more grounded. Years of steady progress have transformed England from outsiders into genuine contenders. Semi-finals, finals, deep runs. The pattern is clear.
Now comes the question. Can they go one step further?






