Sports
Leicester’s Premier League win, 10 years later: How did they do it, and could a team repeat it?
Gathered around the TV at Jamie Vardy’s house in Melton Mowbray, all Christian Fuchs and his teammates could do was watch.
It was May 2016, and after 36 matches, Leicester City’s unlikely heroes were finally admitting to themselves they might achieve the unthinkable: winning the Premier League. They needed nearest challengers Tottenham Hotspur to draw or lose to Chelsea for them to seal the title. “I described it back then as the toughest 90 minutes I’ve never played because you know what’s on the line,” Fuchs, Leicester’s starting left back, tells ESPN.
As the full-time whistle went at Stamford Bridge, confirming Spurs’ 2-2 draw, pandemonium ensued. “I saw people being dragged around the floor by their feet, by their arms, people screaming, people crying,” Fuchs remembers. Vardy’s TV was smashed, and crates of beer were either being flung into the air or consumed at rapid rates. The reality of what Leicester had achieved, winning the league despite entering the season as 5000-1 outsiders, started to dawn on them.
For some players, it was a moment of validation. Danny Simpson, their starting right back, left the celebrations soon after the whistle. He went outside into a quiet corner of Vardy’s vast garden and cried. “You go through so much in football, and so much rejection, whether it’s being told you’re too small, clubs not wanting you,” Simpson says. “You’re constantly thinking you’re not good enough. It was just a relief, a weight off my shoulders.
“I was on my own — Vards has a massive garden so he probably couldn’t see me. But everyone was ringing friends and family, celebrating with each other. It was a wonderful moment.”
Ten years later, however, each player remembers that season differently. Center back Robert Huth, retired in 2019, says he gives the win little thought. Second-choice veteran goalkeeper Mark Schwarzer didn’t play a minute and doesn’t regard himself as a Premier League winner. Fuchs smiles as he remembers the camaraderie in the team, and the pizza nights where the dough spent more time in the air than on the table. Captain Wes Morgan’s elder son, Rio, is more concerned with Leicester’s Championship existence these days than memories of his dad lifting the coveted Premier League trophy.
“I’m not sure it was a fairy tale, but it was unbelievable, one of the most astonishing achievements in the game,” Morgan says. “It was footballing non-fiction, fiction.”
It all raises the question — for those protagonists at the forefront of this triumph, nearly a decade on, how do they reflect on the most unlikely success in English top-flight history? Was it everything they thought it would be? Well, it depends on who you talk to. Just don’t say the words “fairy tale.”
Achieving the unthinkable
The Leicester team that started the 2015-16 season had already completed one miracle. The previous season, they were bottom of the league in mid-April, but won seven of their remaining nine matches to survive. Despite this comeback, manager Nigel Pearson was unceremoniously fired, with Claudio Ranieri appointed as his replacement.
They made nine signings in the summer, including Japanese forward Okazaki from Mainz and unknown French midfielder N’Golo Kanté from Ligue 2. Huth — who had endured two injury-disrupted seasons — arrived on a permanent deal from Stoke having spent six months on loan in 2014-15, and Fuchs was brought in from Schalke.
The Foxes went under the radar at the start of the season, losing just one of their first nine matches, but things clicked once Ranieri started Simpson and Fuchs at fullback. Between Dec. 29 and Feb. 6, they didn’t concede a goal in the Premier League and climbed to the top of the tree.
Players generally ignored the outside talk of an unlikely title, but looking back, there were two matches where they started to dream. The first was a 2-0 win over Liverpool on Feb. 2 remembered for that long-range Jamie Vardy goal, so often the snapshot highlight used to immortalize that season. “I was directly behind him and remember shouting at him, ‘Why are you shooting?'” Okazaki says. “And then it flew in. And I was like, ‘Whoa!'”
But it was the next match on Feb. 6, in which they outplayed Manchester City at the Etihad Stadium, that stays in their minds even more. “We were down 1-0, ended up winning 3-1 and blew them off the park at the Etihad,” Schwarzer says. “I think then we knew we were the real deal.” From there to the end of the season, they kept grinding out results — a run including four back-to-back 1-0 victories — and the win over Southampton on April 3 secured a top-four finish. “We are in Champions League — dilly ding, dilly dong!” Ranieri said.
On May 2, Tottenham drew 2-2 at Stamford Bridge, and Leicester were crowned champions. “I knew there was a chance, that very moment, but why should freaking Leicester win the Premier League? It doesn’t make sense,” Fuchs says. At the start of the season Leicester were favorites for relegation; nine months later, they were celebrating their first top-flight title in their 132-year history, ultimately finishing 10 points ahead of second-placed Arsenal.
The team partied at Vardy’s. Okazaki laughs as he says that evening was the most he’d ever drunk, and was stunned when at brunch the following day, the celebrations continued with even more alcohol.
“It was an emotional moment, 100%. You’ve been grinding it out for so long in your career and it all seemed hopeless and then this happens. My goal was to just play one game in the Premier League,” Morgan says. “I spent three years in League One, and most of my career up to kind of 30 years old in the Championship. So to play one match was amazing, but to do this? Well, it’s just unbelievable.”
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The outside perception was that it was a sporting miracle. “Everyone calls it the fairy tale, but if you look at all the players, we’re all good players,” Huth says. “Sometimes I get annoyed because people say we were all misfits, but we had good careers. We had titles, international caps. It wasn’t a fluke.”
Others, though, aren’t too sure. “I mean, it’s iconic and it will never be repeated,” Schwarzer says. “I don’t think anyone really saw our group as potential Premier League winners. … I think it is a fairy tale. I really do.”
The players point to different reasons they won the league. On the field, simplicity was king. “Our tactics were very simple,” Fuchs says. “I’m very surprised that nobody figured it out. The tactics were simple as ‘protect the castle,’ which was our box, which was the goal. And then when you have the ball, find Jamie Vardy.” They had few injuries. “The gods were on our side with injuries,” Morgan says.
“Ranieri didn’t have a lot of tactics,” Okazaki adds. “It was defending, then counterattacking, and he always said to me in compact defense, ‘Don’t take risks. If you’re under pressure, play the long ball.'”
There was togetherness. “No one really sort of stood out in terms of, ‘I want to do it this way. I’ve got an ego.’ There were no a–holes,” Huth says. Fuchs adds: “Look, we were a bunch of rejects. You can compare it with an old Mercedes model that you know, it’s still nice to look at but it’s not really up to par anymore.
“… My goal was to go to England and I ended up at Leicester. That’s the background of the group. And knowing this and everybody knowing where they come from and knowing we may just have a couple more seasons playing at the highest level bonded us all.”
Then there were the midseason perks to keep the team motivated. “[The owner would] say, ‘If you win the next three or four matches, I’ll take you all to the casino and we’ll have a great night.'” Morgan said. “Just little things like that gave us an extra 5%.”
In August 2016, owner and chairman Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha surprised the 19 Premier League winners still at the club with “protonic blue” BMW i8s. While most players have gone on to sell the cars — “I don’t know if you’ve ever been in one, but they’re not the easiest to get in and out of,” Morgan says — goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel has kept his, as has Okazaki.
Yet with success comes inevitable interest, and barely weeks after the title was confirmed, the team started to be picked apart — with Kante joining Chelsea the catalyst. On the field, Leicester came back to earth. Nine months after they won the league, they were one point above the relegation zone and Ranieri was sacked. Assistant Craig Shakespeare took charge, and Leicester’s 2016-17 Champions League adventure finished in the quarterfinals against Atletico Madrid. “That was the moment the dream kind of died for me,” Simpson says. “We were still doing the unexpected, and doing things people couldn’t believe we were capable of. But when that finished, we were back to normality.” They’d finish the season in 12th, and that summer, starting midfielder Danny Drinkwater signed for Chelsea. The outstanding Riyad Mahrez left in 2018 for Manchester City.
Then, in October 2018, Leicester City were in mourning after the death of owner Srivaddhanaprabha and four others in a helicopter crash outside the King Power Stadium. “I look at it, my time with [Srivaddhanaprabha], and he just brought so much to my life,” Huth says. “I think the unique thing about Leicester was how close we were to each other,” Morgan says. “So the owner, you know, it really hurt us and hit us deep when his tragedy happened.”
Though the club experienced a bit of a revival under Brendan Rodgers, who led them to an FA Cup triumph in 2021, they were relegated to the Championship in 2023 and 2025, earning promotion in between.
Some of the 2016 group met again for Vardy’s final match in a Leicester shirt on May 18 against Ipswich Town. Vardy was the last one of the Premier League winners standing, with Marc Albrighton having retired in 2024. And in July, the Leicester City Masters team, featuring Morgan, Simpson, Huth, Drinkwater and Albrighton, won the Soccer 7s Series Masters Cup competition in Singapore. “We got butterflies before the final,” Simpson says. “But it was so nice to spend time with everyone again. … When we won the tournament we had a bit of a joke about how we used to be good at winning and lifting trophies.” But whole-team reunions seldom happen.
They did meet when Shakespeare died in August 2024 after being diagnosed with cancer. “It’s one of those sad things but it’s normally weddings, birthdays or funerals where we catch up,” Morgan says. “It’s sad. You spend so much time together working hard and sweating blood and tears for each other. But that’s how it goes, I guess.” “Shaky was a special man,” Simpson says. “When I first got to Leicester [in 2014] I wasn’t in the team, and Shaky was the guy who kept us on the straight and narrow. He understood me, and would always be checking in. He was a top man, but also a great coach.”
With 10 seasons worth of water under the bridge, the players remember that glorious season differently. Schwarzer was an unused sub 37 times that season in the league. “I don’t consider myself a Premier League winner,” Schwarzer says. “I had one of the best seats in the house, and I saw it, felt it and lived it. But in terms of the league I don’t feel remotely a Premier League winner. … I just feel very privileged to have been there.”
Huth retired in January 2019 after persistent foot and ankle injuries. “I don’t have anything in my house that reminds me of football,” Huth says. “I’ve got two kids, I’ve got a wife, and that’s just more important to me than having a shirt up or my medal.
“Now that I’m retired, the Premier League win doesn’t really matter, if that makes sense. At the time it was amazing; in terms of my life, it doesn’t really have an impact on you. I don’t want to sound miserable, but it’s just not as good as you imagine it will be.”
Okazaki is still heavily involved in the sport. He is co-founder of Basara Mainz — a team in the sixth division of Germany focused on providing a pathway for Japanese players. “We started 10 years ago and are now in the sixth division of Germany,” he says. “We try to give the Japan players a pyramid and opportunity. They have a great environment here. We help the players with their technical side, tactic side and mental side.” The realistic goal is to get promoted to the fourth division.
“The Premier League was a dream,” he adds. “People when they see me say, ‘You are a Leicester legend,’ and that makes me proud. In retirement, I understand it more. But look, I forget my career now, I look forward, and my dream is with Basara Mainz.”
Schwarzer works in the media, while Morgan is a scout for Nottingham Forest. Simpson retired in July 2024 but plays football with Drinkwater and a bunch of ex-Premier League pros in 10-a-side in Manchester on Tuesdays. “Whenever someone retires, we get them in the WhatsApp group,” Simpson says. He remains close with Drinkwater. “Drinks is living some life,” he laughs.
Fuchs is a coach at Charlotte FC. There was a time when he was toying with the idea of pursuing a career as a NFL kicker. “Needless to say, [those dreams] are gone. … [Charlotte FC head coach] Dean Smith asked me about that. ‘Didn’t you want to be a kicker at some point?’ I’m like, ‘Yeah, but now I’m your assistant coach. I have no time unless you give me some days off on the weekends when they are playing.” He still looks fondly back on the 2015-16 squad. “I think everybody that was in that team has some sort of fulfilment,” he says. “You realize it didn’t come from nowhere. Like Huthie said, it doesn’t just happen.”
Those who got a medal were also given a small replica Premier League trophy. Schwarzer shows his trophy to any interested visitors. Okazaki has his in his Basara office, but wants to transfer it all someday to his dream museum that he’ll open with Japan teammates Shinji Kagawa and Takashi Inui — his medal and trophy will sit alongside the BMW. Morgan has a cabinet dedicated to Leicester in a small trophy room in his house. Huth’s trophy is still unopened in the box, and his medal is in a safe-deposit box “somewhere.”

Shinji Okazaki’s Premier League winner’s medal and replica trophy in his office at Basara Mainz. Photo credit: Basara Mainz
Fuchs’ medal hangs by his dining table, along with a replica of the FA Cup he won in 2021. “I told my kids we need to add a couple [of medals] there,” Fuchs says. And for Simpson, both trophy and medal get regular outings. They’re reminders of the graft it took to achieve his dreams back in 2016. “My trophy’s on display, and my medals are in the safe,” Simpson says. “But sometimes when I get home from a few drinks, I put the medal on just to remind myself what it felt like.
“I felt like I had proved something to people, maybe even to myself, that I could achieve something. I wish I could go back to it and relive it again.”

How Leicester won the Premier League — and could it ever happen again?
If you’re hoping to see another club “pull a Leicester” anytime soon, I have some good and bad news for you. The bad news is, it’s terribly unlikely because Leicester pulling a Leicester was so unlikely; so many things had to go just right. The good news, however, is that there was nothing terribly unique about the recipe Leicester followed — underdogs try it every year. And hey, if it worked once, there’s nothing saying it can’t work again in our lifetimes, right?
At its heart, Leicester’s run came down to three things: lineup stability, perfect counterattacking personnel and some close-game magic (or, more specifically, a lack thereof from title rivals). Teams benefit from any of these items every year, but Leicester landed the trifecta.
Lineup stability
The thing about depth is, you never know you have it until it’s tested. Had it been tested, we may have found out that Leicester’s depth was rock solid in 2015-16. Young attacker Andrej Kramaric had a lovely career at Hoffenheim, but he couldn’t find a spot in Leicester’s 2015-16 lineup. Key substitute Jeffrey Schlupp would go on to make nearly 250 Premier League appearances with Crystal Palace. Teenage fullback Ben Chilwell would start 19 times for the English national team, and another teenager, winger and midseason acquisition Demarai Gray, would put up decent numbers for Everton a few years later. Plus, after narrowly surviving their first season back in the Premier League thanks to a late charge, Leicester had attempted to shell out some money for extra veterans such as forward Okazaki, midfielder Gokhan Inler and center back Yohan Benalouane that summer.
Only Okazaki would play much in 2015-16, because once new manager Ranieri locked in his starting lineup, he barely had to change it all season.
Goalkeeper Schmeichel and center back Morgan started all 38 league games, while Morgan’s batterymate Huth started 35. Vardy and Mahrez each started 36 games while combining for 41 goals and 17 assists. Midfielders Drinkwater (35 starts) and Kante (33) were mainstays. Even Okazaki (28) and fullbacks Fuchs (30) and Simpson (30) were rarely out of the lineup. When they were, deputies such as Leonardo Ulloa up front and Ritchie De Laet at fullback slotted in nicely. Injuries never really forced Ranieri to stray far from his preferred lineup, so he didn’t.
A genuinely awesome attack
Leicester’s decision to hire Ranieri was a bit of a left turn. As authors Simon Kuper and Stefan Szymanski wrote in “Soccernomics”: “In 2015, fresh from a disastrous spell with Greece that ended with defeat at home to the miniscule Faroe Islands, [Ranieri] joined Leicester City. At that point he had been a manager for twenty-nine years without any outstanding successes. ‘He was the perfect loser, with a capital L,’ says the Italian soccer writer Tommaso Pellizzari. ‘Everyone in Italy thought he was very nice, polite, kind, but please never call him to my team.'”
As much as anything, it almost seemed Ranieri was hired because he was the temperamental opposite of Pearson. Pep Guardiola’s possession-heavy ball and Jurgen Klopp’s gegenpressing were the emerging styles of the day, but Ranieri deployed an old-school, defense-first 4-4-2 formation with loads of counterattacking. Soccer was becoming more horizontal with its buildup play, but Ranieri only knew verticality. And instead of counter-pressing with vigor, Klopp-style, Leicester picked their spots.
Leicester’s ensuing success proved that when you have the right personnel — and that personnel never changes — you can make just about any playing style work whether it’s trendy or not. The Foxes were the most active and direct team in the Premier League, leading the league in ball recoveries, defensive interventions, counterattacking shots and xG, and a StatsPerform measure called direct speed, which measures how many meters per second the ball is pushed up the pitch when a team is in possession. They pressed selectively but effectively, forcing 11.1 high turnovers per game (second in the league), and when they bunkered in, they threw their collective bodies in front of shots, blocking 31.6% of opponents’ attempts (third). Goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel helped in this regard, too: While his save percentage was merely above-average, he was maybe the most active keeper in the league when it came to claiming the ball in the box.
Leicester attempted the most duels in the league (127.1 per game), and Mahrez and Vardy both ranked in the top five for duel attempts in the box. Mahrez was either going to draw contact or find Vardy running full speed. Mahrez led the league with 267 ground duels won and 45 fouls suffered in the attacking third (no one else had more than 32), and Vardy was first in xG (23.1) and second in goals (24, one behind Spurs’ Harry Kane).
The Foxes were active but extremely organized — a Ranieri dream. When they regained possession, the formula was pretty simple: Get the ball to Drinkwater or Kante (who were probably the ones to win the ball in the first place), then pivot it to Mahrez, who will feed Vardy. It’s obviously too simple to say this was the only path for Leicester to score, but Mahrez and Vardy scored 61% of Leicester’s goals, while Mahrez, Vardy and Drinkwater had 53% of their assists and Drinkwater and Kante were second and third in the league, respectively, in ball recoveries. The ball moved very fast, and while the attack didn’t create a high volume of shots, anything it produced was pristine.
Leicester led the league in xG per shot (0.18), and only Arsenal was anywhere close. And despite the low overall shot volume, they attempted 91 shots worth at least 0.2 xG; Arsenal were the only other team that topped 77 such attempts.
Leicester had the second-worst pass completion rate in the Premier League (70.5%) but scored the third-most goals (68) while always keeping loads of bodies behind the ball. There was nothing unique about their attack, but you couldn’t have asked for better personnel for what Ranieri wanted to do.
Everyone else blew it
The Premier League was in an odd place in 2015-16. Liverpool fell apart under Brendan Rodgers (they would hire Jurgen Klopp in October while mired in 10th place), and Chelsea really fell apart under Jose Mourinho (the defending league champs were in 16th when he was fired in December). Manchester City were riding it out for one more season with Manuel Pellegrini before hiring Pep Guardiola (who was still with Bayern Munich), Manchester United were stagnant under Louis van Gaal, and any hope either club had of sneaking away with a title was done in by lineup instability.
This was therefore a good year for a usurper to rise, but Arsene Wenger’s Arsenal and Mauricio Pochettino’s young Tottenham Hotspur team were still in excellent positions. They couldn’t close the deal.
Granted, it only felt like every Leicester match was a 1-0 win — only seven of their 23 wins came with that scoreline — but it will surprise no one to learn that in matches decided by zero or one goals, Leicester were comfortably the best team in the league.

They weren’t really an outlier in this regard. In fact, for a league champion, they were below average. Their 12 draws were the second most for a champ in the Premier League era (behind Manchester United’s 13 in 1998-99), and of all the champions since 2015-16, only Manchester City’s close-game averages in 2020-21 (1.88 PPG) and 2022-23 (1.53) were worse than Leicester’s 1.93 that season.
It wasn’t that Leicester were abnormally good in tight games — it’s that the other contenders were abnormally bad. Arsenal led the league with a plus-19 goal differential after 40 minutes but were only plus-10 for the last 50 minutes and won only 20 of 27 games in which they led. Spurs won only 19 of 28 such games and averaged a dreadful 1.29 points per close game.
Leicester won 23 of 29 such games and took the title with 81 points, the sixth-lowest point total for a champion in the Premier League era. It wasn’t their fault that it only took 81 points to get it done, just as it wasn’t their fault that they didn’t suffer many injuries, or that no one could stop their seemingly rudimentary attack, or that no one else realized what kind of burgeoning talent Kante (added for €9 million in 2015), Mahrez (€500,000 in 2014) or Vardy (€1.2 million in 2012) possessed. Their title was a product of not only good fortune but also great talent identification and execution.
It might have been a once-in-a-lifetime run, but nothing they did was unreplicable. Teams like Atletico Madrid and RB Leipzig have enjoyed success with vertical attacks in the 2020s. And with the most direct attack in the league, Nottingham Forest was within shouting distance of first place into the spring just last season. The components were familiar, even if no one has conjured quite the same magic in the decade since this miraculous run.
Sports
Croatia’s Incredible Run Joins Top World Cup Moments List
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What comes to mind when you think of the top men’s FIFA World Cup moments?
It could be Diego Maradona carving through England’s defense for the Goal of the Century. Or, a legend like Pelé or Lionel Messi raising the trophy up high into the sky. Or something more controversial, like Cristiano Ronaldo’s wink after getting Wayne Rooney sent off.
Leading up to this summer, we’re counting down the most iconic, most controversial, most defining moments in tournament history. Check out today’s entry, but keep on reading as we count down to the BEST World Cup moment ever.
JUMP TO: 100-90 | 89-80 | 79-70 | 69-60 | 59-50 | Stay Tuned For More
No. 100: Pure Control, Pure Class, Pure Messi
In 2018, the pressure on Lionel Messi was building. Argentina‘s star captain had gone scoreless through two games, including a 3-0 loss to Croatia. He needed to do something against Nigeria. That’s when the Messi magic appeared.
Argentina went on to win the game and advance. An unbelievable first touch from Lionel Messi that saved Argentina. And while La Albiceleste were eliminated by eventual champions France in the round of 16, Messi’s sublime goal was perhaps the best of the tournament.
No. 99: Red Card for … Celebrating?!
Vincent Aboubakar made history for Cameroon when he scored a game-winning goal against Brazil in 2022, the first time an African country had defeated the five-time champions in a World Cup setting. The problem was that he was then sent off for excessive celebration.
The Indomitable Lions were still eliminated despite the win, with the Brazilians advancing to the knockout rounds. Nonetheless, it was punishment worth the moment of shirtless joy. It even seemed like the referee felt a bit bad for having to hand out that red card.
No. 98: Cuauhtémoc Blanco Leaps Into History
Trying to shake off around two defenders? You should think about trying this trademark move created by one of the greatest Mexican players to ever live. It was so nice, it’s known throughout the world as the “Cuauhtemiña.”
At the 1998 World Cup, Cuauhtémoc Blanco clamped the ball between his feet did his best impression of a kangaroo by hopping between two South Korean defenders. It may not have produced a goal, but the player from el barrio bravo de Tepito produced a move that has immediately leaped into the hearts and minds of soccer fans since.
No. 97: Klinsmann’s Roundhouse Flick
Long before he coached the United States men’s national team at the 2014 World Cup, Jürgen Klinsmann scored a ton of goals for Germany, including this stunner against South Korea.
Klinsmann, who four years earlier had helped his country win the World Cup for the third time, would turn what looked like a routine pass reception with his back to the goal into one of the most memorable goals of USA ‘94 with one swivel of his hips.
No. 96: This Free Kick Changed USA Soccer History
The U.S. men’s national team hadn’t made a splash at the World Cup in decades – but that all changed it the USA hosted the 1994 edition. It was thanks to a wonder-goal against Switzerland by the USA star Eric Wynalda.
Wynalda’s unstoppable, curling free kick just before the teams headed to the dressing rooms nearly blew the roof off the Silverdome in suburban Detroit. The match ended 1-1. That point, plus an upset win over Colombia a few days later, was enough to send the USA to the second round, where they took eventual champ Brazil to extra time before losing 1-0.
No. 95: One Of the Best Opening Goals Ever
In 2006, Germany legend Philipp Lahm scored one of the best opening goals to a World Cup ever. From a distance, Lahm (wearing a cast on his right arm following a recent injury) curled the ball perfectly into the top corner past Costa Rica keeper José Francisco Porras.
Of course, it was even sweeter as the Germans were hosting the tournament with high hopes of winning it all on home soil. The hosts fell in the semifinals but Lahm’s amazing technique and control on this goal in Munich will be one of the tournament’s highlights.
No. 94: A Volley For The Ages
Tim Cahill is arguably Australia’s best men’s soccer player ever and that’s due to his ability to score in big moments at the World Cup. That included this spectacular volley at the 2014 tournament in Brazil, where he showed his technique and ability against the Netherlands.
A looping long pass from one side to the Porto Alegre pitch to the other, Cahill one-timed the shot into the net at the perfect angle as the ball kissed the underside of the bar. A stellar goal followed by his trademark fighting-the-corner-flag celebration.
No. 93: This Rule Proved Too Cruel
A new rule was introduced in the 1998 World Cup round of 16: Golden Goal. Score in extra time, and it’s over.
Hosts France were deadlocked with Paraguay at 0-0 going into extra time in their round of 16 matchup at Lens. The ball found Laurent Blanc at the edge of the six-yard box, and he buried it to end the match at 1-0. France advanced; Paraguay was eliminated on the spot.
France went on to win it all, but it would be one of the final few countries to benefit from the cruel rule, as it was scrapped altogether six years later.
No. 92: First Back-to-Back Champs
It didn’t take long for the World Cup to have its first dynasty.
After lifting the trophy on home soil at the second-ever World Cup in 1934, Italy did it again at France 1938, stamping its legacy forever.
Italy might not be the most famous repeat World Cup champions of all time, but it will go down in history as the first.
No. 91: A Goal That Deserved A Happier Ending
Archie Gemmill’s wonder goal for Scotland in the 1978 FIFA World Cup would have sent them to the knockout stage if they hadn’t fallen short on goal difference against the Netherlands.
Gemmill had Scottish fans dreaming of an upset against one of the world’s best sides. In the 68th minute, the diminutive midfielder danced away from three Dutch defenders before lobbing a left-footed finish over the keeper Jan Jongbloed. With a two-goal lead, it seemed Scotland would advance.
But it was to no avail as the Dutch scored minutes later, leaving the heartbroken Scots wondering what could have been. Instead, the Netherlands advanced on goal-difference and would go on to make a second consecutive World Cup final appearance.
No. 90: The Ultimate Team Goal
25 passes. Nine players. One iconic goal for Argentina.
At the 2006 World Cup (the first one in which Lionel Messi appeared), Argentina faced a stern test against Serbia in the group stage. It was one of those games where the underdogs knew they would have to be sharp on defense to keep a far more talented Argentina side at bay.
Except it didn’t work that way, and Argentina pounced from the get-go with an early goal in the sixth minute by Maxi Rodriguez. And that’s when the Albiceleste magic took over. In the 31st minute, a patient ballet of teamwork that involved a combination of on-target passes led to Hernán Crespo looping a ball to early-match substitute Esteban Cambiasso. Goal, Argentina.
Four more followed – including Messi’s first ever at a World Cup. But Cambiasso’s strike stood above all that day.
No. 89: A Controversial Goal Affects Three Teams
One of the toughest groups at the 2022 World Cup featured Germany (four-time champions), Spain (2010 champions), always talented Japan, and feisty Costa Rica. So you knew that this group was going to have some fireworks.
That happened on the final matchday. Germany facing Costa Rica and Japan taking on Spain with all four teams having hope of advancing.
At halftime of both matches, it seemed like Spain and Germany would advance, while Japan and Costa Rica would go home. But the script was then ripped apart. In the 51st minute of the Japan-Spain game, Kaoru Mitoma chases the ball down — it looks out. But he crosses it to Ao Tanaka, who scores off an improbable angle. VAR says the ball remained in play by the slimmest of margins. The goal stands.
Japan topped the group. Spain also advanced. Germany was eliminated despite beating Costa Rica. Joy and heartbreak all around.
No. 88: Three Yellow Cards And One Red-Faced Referee
Soccer is known for its simplicity of rules when compared to other major sports. And one of the most well-known rules is that when you get two yellow cards, that equates to a red card and therefore an automatic dismissal from the game.
Which is why an error by England official Graham Poll at the 2006 World Cup was so memorable. Poll had shown Croatia’s Josip Šimunić two yellow cards in the group-stage finale against Australia, but the player inexplicably stayed on. Only until a third card was shown to Šimunić that the defender actually left the pitch.
It was the last World Cup game Poll ever worked as he asked not to be considered for future tournaments on account of his unforgettable mistake.
No. 87: Matador Magic! A Star Rises For Mexico at France ’98
When your nickname is “El Matador,” you better have a killer instinct in front of the net. Luis Hernandez had that and then some as a star striker for Mexico at the 1998 World Cup.
By beating South Korea and tying Belgium in their first two group stage games at France ‘98, Mexico appeared well-positioned to progress to the knockout rounds. Still, advancing was not guaranteed. And with the Netherlands looming in their final first-round match, the nerves of El Tri fans were, understandably, frayed.
They stayed that way until almost the last kick of the ball. Mexico was losing 2-1 to the Dutch as the contest entered stoppage time. In the other Group E finale being played simultaneously, the Koreans and Belgians were tied. If El Tri lost and Belgium managed to score a late winner, they’d advance at Mexico’s expense.
Hernandez, with his trademark flowing blonde hairstyle, wasn’t about to leave anything to chance. Instead of relying on another result, the striker known as “El Matador” pounced on a botched clearance in the box by Dutch center back Jaap Stam and stabbed the ball into the net. The goal pulled Mexico level in the 94th minute. When the final whistle blew moments later, Mexico was en route to the round of 16.
No. 86: Hungary’s Record Scoreline
El Salvador was desperate to produce a respectable showing in just its second tournament appearance, having lost all three of their games and failing to score a goal at the 1970 event. But a lack of funding meant they took just 20 players, two short of the roster limit, and were the last team to arrive for competition. Add in an overly aggressive gameplan from young coach Mauricio “Pipo” Rodriguez, and the result was a 10-1 loss to Hungary in their opener. It remains the most lopsided scoreline in World Cup history.
The performance was so humiliating that when ES forward Luis Ramírez Zapata scored to make it 5-1, some of his teammates implored him to tone down his celebration, lest he make the Hungarians angry. Maybe he did; László Kiss came off the bench to score a seven-minute hat trick (also a record) and Hungary added two more goals before the final whistle to complete the rout.
No. 85: Bulgaria’s Superstar Takes Over Summer of ’94
Bulgaria were considered an afterthought. But one man made sure the world remembered them. At the 1994 World Cup, Hristo Stoichkov couldn’t be stopped. After converting two penalties against Greece, the Barcelona legend scored against Argentina to secure a place in the knockout round.
Then, the magic really started. In the Round of 16, Stoichkov bagged a 6th minute goal, as Bulgaria took down Mexico on penalties. Next came defending champions Germany. Trailing 1-0 in the 75th minute, he and Yordan Letchkov scored three minutes apart for the win.
Stoichkov and Bulgaria would ultimately lose in the semifinals, but it was truly an unforgettable run.
No. 84: No Era Penal
Mexico benefited from some good fortune just to make it to Brazil 2014 — if not for a late goal by their archrival United States versus Panama, El Tri would’ve failed to qualify out of CONCACAF — but there they were, just moments away from finally reaching the elusive quinto partido, or fifth game, at a World Cup.
Then their luck ran out. With just two minutes of the 90 to play, the Dutch made it 1-1 through Wesley Sneijder. Mexico captain Rafa Márquez was then whistled for tripping Arjen Robben inside the penalty box deep into second-half stoppage time.
Replays showed that Robben had theatrically embellished the contact, if there was any at all. It wasn’t a penalty.
That didn’t matter. VAR was still four years away from its World Cup debut. Without video review, the call on the field stood, Klaas-Jan Huntelaar scored from the spot, and Mexico were eliminated in the round of 16 for the sixth straight tournament.
No. 83: Sneijder Stands Tall in Dutch Rally
At 5-foot-7, Wesley Sneijder was never an imposing figure for the Netherlands. But he knew how to rise in big moments, such as his standout two-goal performance against Brazil in the 2010 World Cup quarterfinals.
The Brazilians were up early on Robinho’s goal in the quarterfinal match, playing about as sound as anyone else in the tournament. But then the Dutch took over. Sneijder first had a deep wide cross that seemingly floated forever and slipped past Brazil keeper Julio Cesar’s punchout before skimming off Felipe Melo’s head and into the net.
Then it was the diminutive dynamo who scored again to complete the comeback, sneaking through the penalty area and finding space for an improbable header. Even he couldn’t believe it, grasping his forehead in delight. But it’s the win that kept the Netherlands marching on and eventually reaching the final.
No. 82: No Option For Zaire In Loss To Brazil
Zaire’s qualification for the 1974 World Cup was a watershed moment for the country. They were the first team from sub-Saharan Africa to make it, and just the third from that continent overall.
But what should have been a joyous tournament for Zaire’s players turned sinister. After losing their opener 2-0 to Scotland, the players were informed that they wouldn’t be paid their World Cup bonuses. They intended to boycott their next match, against Yugoslavia, but relented after threats from the country’s president, dictator Mobutu Sese Seko.
Following a 9-0 loss — tied for the most one-sided scoreline in World Cup history — Mobutu told the team not to bother coming home if they lost to Brazil by more than four goals. So, down three late in the game, Zaire’s Mwepu Ilunga raced from the defensive wall and booted the ball down the field. He was yellow-carded for time-wasting, but it was worth it: Brazil didn’t score again, and the match finished 3-0. A lackluster but perhaps life-saving performance for a country who are now trying to qualify in 2026 – this time with hopes of a better outcome.
No. 81: South Korea Saves Mexico; Germany Hopes Dashed
“¡Coreano! Hermano! Ya eres mexicano!”
At the 2018 World Cup, this is how Son Heung-min and South Korea ousted the defending champions and helped out a very grateful Mexico squad.
Despite losing to Mexico in their opening match, 2014 tournament winners Germany liked their odds of reaching the knockout stage at the 2018 edition in Russia. All the Germans had to do was beat South Korea by two goals to guarantee a spot in the business end of the competition.
As expected, Die Mannschaft dominated the Taeguk Warriors through nearly 90 minutes, but the match was still scoreless. Germany was desperate and pushed as many players as possible forward. Then South Korea pounced on the opportunity as Kim Young-gwon first scored. It was then Son who sealed the whole group’s fate with a second goal as time wound down.
That meant Germany was out. Mexico, despite getting pummeled by group winners Sweden, were also advancing. A sigh of relief for El Tri fans, who gratefully serenaded Korean players and fans in Russia – and even held celebrations outside of South Korea’s diplomatic offices across Mexico.
No. 80: Did He Really Mean To Score That Goal?
The old saying is that you can make your own luck. And this memorable goal by Maicon, which defied odds and angles, is an example of that.
In the summer of 2010, the Brazilian right-back was at his absolute peak. A Treble-winning elite defender for Inter Milan and a stalwart for his country at the summer’s World Cup. And it was against North Korea that Maicon produced his signature moment continues to be debated.
As Maicon barreled down the flank and into the 18-yard box and caught up to a pinpoint pass by Elano, he powered a shot that whizzed behind keeper Ri Myong-guk and into the net on the tightest of angles. It seemed that Maicon was trying to actually cross to Luis Fabiano, but instead did the job himself. A celebration followed that seemed more relief than joy, and one of the best “Did he mean to do that?” moments in soccer lore was born.
No. 79: USA’s Pulisic Delivers a Winner
The United States men’s national team faced immense pressure to make it out of a tough Group B at the 2022 FIFA World Cup after failing to qualify for Russia 2018. The problem? It only managed two points after its matchups with Wales and England.
With the U.S. in desperate need of three points in its final group stage match against Iran, Christian Pulisic put his body on the line to get his team on the board, diving in front of a cross to beat the two defenders marking him and colliding with Iran goalkeeper Alireza Beiranvand in the process.
This goal sent the U.S. through — and gave Christian Pulisic his World Cup moment. In the 2022 World Cup Group Stage, the United States needed a win to advance. In the 38th minute, Weston McKennie sent in a cross
Pulisic was forced off as a result of the collision, but his goal ended up being the difference for the U.S. as it advanced to the round of 16 with a 1-0 win and three much-needed points.
No. 78: Richarlison’s Wonder Goal
Brazil entered the 2022 FIFA World Cup as one of the favorites to go the distance, and that hype only got louder after Richarlison’s master class in the Seleção’s group stage opener against Serbia.
After failing to score in the first half, Richarlison scored a second-half brace, and his second goal will go down as one of the most skillful goals in World Cup history. Richarlison volleyed a cross from Vinicius Junior in the air to himself and scored with an acrobatic scissor kick.
Brazil would ultimately bow out of the tournament in the quarterfinals, but it made its mark on the tournament thanks to Richarlison.
No. 77: Don’t Count Out Dempsey and the USA
At the 2014 World Cup in Brazil, the soccer gods did the United States no favors. A group stage that included tournament heavyweights Germany, a Cristiano Ronaldo-led Portugal squad, and Ghana (the team that had ousted the USA in two straight World Cups).
Pundits had written off the USA even before the team reached the tournament, thinking there would be no way coach Jurgen Klinnsman’s squad would survive a tough group.
Against Ghana, Clint Dempsey scored the fastest World Cup goal in USA history. Ghana equalized before John Brooks rose to the occasion and netted a header for the dramatic game-winner. Against Portugal, Jermaine Jones smashed a stunner that was mooted after Ronaldo’s last-second equalizer. A loss to Germany still saw the USA advance into the knockout stage thanks to a goal differential over Portugal.
With tough-as-nails playmakers such as Dempsey, Jones and keeper Tim Howard, this USA squad proved a lot of folk wrong.
No. 76: Sunday Oliseh’s screamer vs. Spain
There’s something to be said for sheer power.
Pretty passing sequences and deftly placed shots are nice and all, but sometimes you don’t want to watch the lock get picked — you want to see a ball hit with enough force to blow the entire house down.
That’s what Sunday Oliseh gave us in Nigeria’s first match of the 1998 World Cup. The defensive midfielder wasn’t known for scoring — he managed only one other goal in 53 international appearances — but he knew what to do when a Spain clearance fell to him 30 yards from goal with about 12 minutes remaining in the game.
Fernando Hierro and Raul scored for Spain on either side of halftime, but Nigeria equalized twice. With time running short, Hierro cleared a Super Eagles throw-in deep in his own end. Oliseh caught it on the half-volley and thundered a low strike just inside the post past stunned La Roja backstop Andoni Zubizarreta.
The kick couldn’t have been more ferocious. Not only was it enough to give Nigeria the win, but it also helped propel them to the top of Group D. Spain, meanwhile, failed to survive the group stage.
Talk about a powerful shot.
No. 75: Van Bronckhorst’s Blast
Giovanni van Bronckhorst wasn’t known as a scorer throughout his long and decorated international career for the Netherlands, for good reason.
In 106 appearances with the Oranje, the outside back managed just six goals. And at age 35 in 2010, many wondered if the veteran would even crack Dutch coach Bert van Marwijk’s final 23-man roster for the tournament in South Africa.
Van Bronckhorst didn’t just make it, he was named captain. And in the semifinal against Uruguay, he opened the scoring with an audacious, 40-yard, left-footed strike that grazed diving La Celeste keeper Fernando Muslera’s fingertips and kissed the inside of the far post before settling into the net.
The only World Cup goal Van Bronckhorst ever scored helped send his country to the title match for the third time, and it remains among the most spectacular in tournament history.
No. 74: Five Goals in One Game! Salenko Makes History
You’ve heard of a hat trick. But what about a Salenko?
When you score five goals in a single game, you’re worthy of having the feat named after you. At the 1994 World Cup, Russian striker Oleg Salenko found the net five times in a 6-1, group stage victory over Cameroon.
The win wasn’t enough to help the Russians reach the knockout stage, but Salenko’s record-setting day did go a long way toward him becoming the only player in World Cup history to win the Golden Boot as top scorer despite only participating in the first round.
Salenko also scored from the penalty spot against Sweden to finish USA ‘94 with six goals, the same number as Bulgarian striker Hristo Stoichkov, with whom he shared the award. Not bad for a guy who played in four fewer matches.
No. 73: Rivaldo’s Oscar-Worthy Diving Performance
We all know soccer stars have a penchant for the dramatic. But Brazilian legend Rivaldo may take the Oscar for an all-time acting performance for his inexplicable dive at the 2002 World Cup.
During a group stage match, Turkiye’s Hakan Ünsal, annoyed that Rivaldo was taking his sweet time preparing to take a corner kick, booted the ball off the Brazilian’s legs. Rivaldo collapsed and began rolling on the turf holding not his thigh — but his face.
Ünsal was shown a red card and the ridicule against Rivaldo began. In an era before social media, the video went viral and shown over sports and news and late-night shows alike across the globe. Rivaldo was fined (but not suspended) by FIFA but he also got the last laugh — Brazil won its fifth (and its most recent) World Cup title.
No 72: Rooney’s Red and Ronaldo’s Wink
A heated moment at the world’s biggest stage between two World Cup heavyweights involved a pair of Manchester United superstar teammates.
Cristiano Ronaldo and Wayne Rooney were among the faces of global soccer at the 2006 World Cup. So, when England and Portugal were pitted in the quarterfinals, the world knew sparks would fly.
In the second half, Rooney stamped on Portugal’s Ricardo Carvalho and the referee reached for red. Ronaldo had been pleading to the ref that his Man United teammate should be sent off, and that’s when the cameras caught it: a sly, almost celebratory wink toward the Portugal bench right after Rooney’s dismissal.
Portugal would survive on penalties as Ronaldo scores the decider. England’s dream of a World Cup title ends. And that wink — love it or hate it — becomes a defining, unforgettable and controversial moments in World Cup history.
No 71: Kuwait’s Princely Protest
On a list of most bizarre World Cup moments, this would have to be near the top.
At the 1982 event in Spain, first time qualifier Kuwait had just gone 4-1 down to France with 10 minutes left in their group stage match.
Inside the stadium, Kuwaiti Prince Fahad Al-Ahmed Al-Jaber Al-Sabah took exception, contending that a whistle from the crowd sounded before Les Bleus scored their fourth goal, causing Kuwait’s players to stop defending thinking Soviet referee Myroslav Stupar had halted the game.
The Prince strode onto the field and threatened to pull his country’s players off of it if the ref didn’t reverse his decision — which he did! But France scored again anyway to restore the lopsided victory. The Prince was later fined by FIFA, and Stupar never worked a World Cup match again.
Kuwait were eliminated in their final first round match, a 1-0 loss to England. They haven’t been back to a World Cup since.
No. 70: The ‘Saudi Maradona’
Diego Maradona wasn’t the only player to dribble through an entire team and score at a World Cup. And if we’re being fair, the incredible solo goal Saeed Al-Owairan managed to pull off for Saudi Arabia at USA ‘94 was every bit as pretty.
Al-Owairan’s run and finish didn’t come in the knockout stage, as Maradona’s slalom had eight years earlier. It didn’t come against England or any other former champion. It began deeper in his own half, though, and he beat one more would-be defenders. And while the Argentine legend picked the lock by calmly rolling the ball home after rounding keeper Peter Shilton, Al-Owairan blasted the door down with a ferocious shot past Belgian netminder Michel Preud’homme.
The goal was meaningful, too. Not only did Al-Owairan’s unforgettable strike give Saudi Arabia a 1-0 win, it also sealed their passage to the second round — the only time the country has survived group play.
No. 69: The Goal that Saved Germany
This goal gave Germany hope — at least for one more game.
On the brink of elimination in the group stage at Russia 2018, defending champions Germany were awarded a free kick from just outside the box in the 95th minute. Kroos lined the ball up from a difficult angle and curled the ball into the top left corner of the goal. Germany lives to see another day.
Unfortunately for Germany, it only delayed the inevitable. Days later, Germany lost to South Korea and crashed out of the group. A masterpiece in a World Cup that ultimately slipped away.
No. 68: Soccer in the USA, Changed Forever
In 1994, the United States hosted the World Cup, marking just the second time ever a North American country had hosted the tournament.
Across stadiums known for Super Bowls and college football games, more than 3.5 million people attended the tournament with an average of nearly 69,000 spectators per match. It’s still the most attended World Cup of all-time.
The USA would lose in the Round of 16 to eventual champion Brazil, but the landscape of American soccer was forever changed.
A new men’s professional league, Major League Soccer, would be founded two years after the tournament. Stateside soccer fans began to wake up early on the weekends and follow the heroics of European teams and leagues. Soccer truly became part of the sports mindset in this country.
Now it’s 2026 and the World Cup is returning to the U.S., co-hosted alongside Mexico and Canada. In many ways, it’s a bookend for the growth of the sport here in the country. But in others, it’s the beginning of a new chapter, with this generation now getting to see up close and personal the greatest sporting event in their own backyard.
No. 67: Argentina Sends Mexico Home TWICE!
Losing to the same opponent in the same stage in consecutive World Cups can definitely leave fans salty. Which is why a lot of Mexico fans don’t have much love for Argentina.
In 2006, Mexican fans could be forgiven for thinking that maybe this was the year their team would advance to the quarterfinals for the first time away from home soil.
Argentina and Maxi Rodriguez had other ideas. With the game tied 1-1 and halfway through the first additional 15-minute period, Rodriguez volleyed a curling shot past the outstretched glove of goalkeeper Oswaldo Sanchez and into the side netting. The supernaturally beautiful strike was enough to send Argentina into the last eight. To nobody’s surprise, it was also named the goal of the tournament.
Four years later and with the legendary Diego Maradona in charge, Carlos Tevez became the hero (or the culprit) in Argentina’s round-of-16 win over Mexico with a long-range golazo in a 3-1 win in which he scored twice.
Same opponent. Same round. Two unforgettable goals. Mexico’s quest of reaching a quarterfinal at a non-hosted World Cup continues to this day. Will that change this summer?
No. 66: David Villa Fuels Spain’s First World Cup
There was a time when Spain memorized the soccer world its midfield mastery, playmaking prowess and incredible chemistry. It led to a golden era for La Roja in which the team won three major titles – the 2008 Euro, the 2010 World Cup, and the 2012 Euro – in a span of four years.
The 2010 squad in South Africa was incredibly special and one man provided the scoring prowess that its trademark possession-based system (often labeled as tiki-taka) to make it all click.
David Villa scored five of Spain’s eight goals at the tournament, and added one assist. He finished as the joint top goalscorer of the tournament along with Thomas Muller, but the German star won the Golden Shoe due to having more assists. No matter. David Villa lifted the hardware that mattered. Villa remains Spain’s top goalscorer.
No. 65: Diego Forlán’s Mastery of the Infamous ‘Jabulani’ Ball
The beauty of each World Cup is how each edition weaves in the traditions and characteristics of the host nations. That’s especially true when the official ball is unveiled.
At the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, the Jabulani ball was noted for some of its aerodynamic quirks when in flight. Decorated with African-inspired designs with the name from a Zulu phrase of “be happy,” it symbolized South Africa’s culture and remains among the most iconic World Cup balls.
It was also hard for some of the players to control it. It floated and dipped and knuckled in all sorts of ways. But one player is arguably synonymous with the ball — Diego Forlán.
The Uruguayan striker helped his team reach the World Cup semifinals, the deepest run they since winning its second title in 1950. And while Uruguay failed to reach the final, it was the third-place match against Germany that Forlán scored the goal of the tournament.
Five goals overall. Golden Ball winner. In a World Cup featuring a unique ball, Diego Forlán mastered the one thing no one else could.
No. 64: The Best Team Ever … To NOT Win a World Cup?
The Brazil national football team of 1982 were absolute artists. Led by the elegance of Zico, the intelligence of Sócrates, and the rhythm of Falcão, this team moved like music — fluid, fearless, and beautiful. Every pass had purpose, every attack felt inevitable.
Nonetheless, the ultimate objective of winning a World Cup (and one without the legendary Pelé) ultimately fell short during that summer in Spain. But this team will be remembered for being as talented – if not more – than teams that have won the whole thing.
Brazil steamrolled its group stage competition against the USSR, Scotland and New Zealand by an aggregate total of 10 goals to 2. In the second phase of the tournament, the Brazilians dominated its fierce rivals Argentina (led by Maradona) before losing an epic 3-2 thriller to eventual champions Italy.
No. 63: The Best Team Ever … To NOT Win a World Cup?
The pressure was on the host nation in the opening match of the 2010 World Cup. South Africa had both the privilege and responsibility of hosting the tournament’s first game on African soil, but fans across the continent feared the worst.
There were questions about whether the team affectionally known as Bafana Bafana — which got an automatic berth as the home team — could compete with the best in the sport. South Africa had won just one of its six outings over its two previous World Cup appearances, in 1998 and 2002, and the country had failed to qualify for the 2006 event. In other words, the pressure was on. So when Siphiwe Tshabalala hit a long-range missile past Mexican goalkeeper Oscar Perez and into the very top corner of the net in front of a packed stadium in Johannesburg, the entire continent erupted.
It turned out to be the high point for the hosts, who conceded a late equalizer to El Tri and eventually became just one of two home sides not to qualify for the knockout stage (Qatar also failed in 2022). But Tshabalala’s effort will forever live on.
No. 62: Beckham Bends It to Save England
David Beckham’s time at the 1998 FIFA World Cup will forever be overshadowed by the red card he received in England’s Round of 16 matchup with Argentina — so much so that many forget that he was actually the Three Lions’ saving grace in the group stage of the tournament.
In 1998, Beckham was on the cusp of soccer superstardom and just becoming a global icon we now know him for. With England facing elimination in its final group stage match against Colombia, England coach Glenn Hoddle gave into the pressure to play Beckham after sitting his young star in the first two group stage matches.
Beckham proved himself to his skeptic coach by scoring his first international goal for England and doubling England’s lead over Colombia. England went on to win the match 2-0 and advanced as the runner-up in Group G behind Romania. And that ubiquitous term “Bend it like Beckham” began to filtrate across the world.
No. 61: Biggest Robbery Ever? USA Not Awarded A Handball
The United States men’s national team could have made the 2002 FIFA World Cup final.
In fact, they should have at least made the semifinals. And yet, they didn’t. Why? An obvious handball that wasn’t called in the quarterfinal against Germany. Arguably the most controversial moment involving the USA at any World Cup tournament.
In 2002, the USA was primed for a run at the tourney co-hosted by South Korea and Japan. Led by a young core that included emerging talented duo Landon Donovan and Brian McBride, the USA defeated Portugal 3-2 and finished runner-up to group winners South Korea.
In the Round of 16, they recorded a 2-0 victory over rivals Mexico behind goals from McBride and Donovan. Next, it was on to the quarterfinal against powerhouse Germany. Michael Ballack got the Germans out to an early 1-0 lead in the 39th minute. The Americans responded with several attacking plays to start the second half.
– What if … the USA had been awarded THAT handball?
But in the 50th minute, everything changed. Off a corner kick by Donovan, the ball landed to a wide-open Gregg Berhalter, who took a shot at goal from just a few yards out. German keeper Oliver Kahn was able to barely save the shot, but the ball would bounce off midfielder Torsten Fring’ arm. Immediately, USA players began clamoring for a handball, and when the replay was shown — it was clear as day.

German midfielder Torsten Frings wasn’t called for a handball on this play.
However, referee Hugh Dallas didn’t call it. And with VAR not yet in existence, the call was irreversible. Had it been called, the USA would have been awarded a penalty kick, and Frings would have been sent off, and the Stars and Stripes would have kept the momentum against a 10-man German side.
Germany survived and eventually made it to the final, where they would fall to Brazil. As for the Americans? It remains the biggest “what if” moment in its soccer history.
No. 60: Senegal Roars Into the Limelight
In the 2002 FIFA World Cup, Senegal came with little to no expectations. But, after a shocking win against defending champions France, The Lions of Teranga wrote a Cinderella story like no other.
France, also the reigning European titleholders at the time, probably had a more talented team than the one they fielded during their triumphant run to the trophy four years prior. They were significantly more experienced. Senegal, by contrast, were participating in their first World Cup.
The former French colony took a 30th minute lead on a goal by the wonderfully-named Papa Bouba Diop, who shot the ball while in a seated position. Senegal rode the momentum generated by their tournament-opening victory all the way to the quarterfinals.
As for Les Bleus? Not only did France also fail to win either of their next two games, they exited the competition after the group stage without having managed a single goal.
No. 59: David Luiz Caps Off Goal With Karate-Kick Celebration
When Brazil hosted the 2014 World Cup, the whole event felt like one never-ending party. And the host team, fully aware of the pressures and expectations on their shoulders, needed to put on a show.
The quarterfinals saw Brazil take on South American rivals Colombia, a squad that became one of the darlings of the tournament behind star midfielder James Rodriguez. But the Brazilians weren’t going to back down. And one of its most vocal leaders, defender David Luiz, ensured they’d keep the run going with a stunning second-half free-kick goal from 40 yards out that effectively sealed the game.
Equally memorable as his knuckle-balling goal that befuddled Colombia keeper David Ospina was Luiz’s celebration, not to mention his signature locks of bouncing curly hair. As the goal sailed into the net, Luiz feverishly ran and karate-kicked the corner flag as his teammates joyously mobbed him.
A moment that felt like Brazil’s last hurrah of the tournament. Captain Thiago Silva would be forced to miss the semifinal match against Germany for yellow card accumulation. Superstar Neymar suffered a devastating back injury that also kept him out of the semifinal. How did that turn out? We’ll get to that soon enough.
No. 58: An Unlikely Hero in France’s 2018 Run
During the 2018 Round of 16, France was trailing Argentina by a goal and were in danger of being eliminated.
After letting an early lead slip away, Les Bleus needed to keep up with La Albiceleste’s firepower and an unassuming hero stepped up.
Just before the hour mark, French defender Lucas Hernandez sent over a cross that took a pair of bounces before landing in front of teammate Benjamin Pavard, who had never scored an international goal up to this point in his career.
Pavard would hit a half-volley with his right foot, which created a top-spin effect that sent the ball swerving into the top-left corner, far beyond reach of Argentinian goalkeeper Franco Armani.
The goal would flip the momentum back on France’s side as a then 19-year-old Kylian Mbappe scored twice in a four-minute span to give his country the lead and eventually a 4-3 victory.
Pavard’s goal would later be voted as the goal of the tournament as France went on to defeat Uruguay, Belgium, and Croatia to lift the nation’s second World Cup Trophy.
No. 57: 16 Yellow Cards and 4 Reds? The ‘Battle of Nuremberg’
No match in World Cup history has seen more cards given out.
Portugal and Netherlands turned this 2006 Round of 16 clash into a record-breaking foul fest. By the time the final whistle blew, referees had shown 16 yellow cards and 4 reds, both World Cup records that still stand today.
A 21-year-old Cristiano Ronaldo left early due to injury in tears. Luis Figo connected with a headbutt. Players argued, pushed, and collided for 90 minutes.
In the midst of all the chaos, Maniche scored the lone goal in the 23rd. Portugal won 1-0 and advanced. But the scoreline was almost an afterthought.
The “Battle of Nuremberg” remains the most ill-tempered match the World Cup has ever seen.
No. 56: Italy Upset By North Korea at 1966 World Cup
The most unlikely World Cup upset is not Saudi Arabia defeating Argentina in Qatar in 2022.
That honor actually belongs to North Korea, who stunned Italy during the 1966 World Cup in England, the only country other than Brazil with multiple world titles to that point.
The newcomers’ prospects looked grim after a 3-0 loss to the Soviet Union and a 1-1 draw with Chile, leaving them as massive underdogs for their final group match in Middlesbrough.
However, the unthinkable happened when Pak Doo-ik scored just before halftime. North Korea’s defense held firm, securing a 1-0 victory that eliminated the Italians and made North Korea the first Asian team to reach the knockout stage.
They nearly repeated the miracle in the quarterfinals, racing to a 3-0 lead against Portugal before eventually collapsing in a 5-3 loss.
North Korea didn’t qualify again for 44 years and is still chasing its second tournament win.
No. 55: Saudi Arabia’s Upset Over Argentina Stunned the World
We all remember how the 2022 World Cup ended, with Lionel Messi lifting the trophy for Argentina after the insane win over France in the final at Qatar’s Lusail Stadium.
But do you recall how Argentina’s World Cup campaign started at that very same stadium only weeks before?
What was supposed to be a routine group-stage opener against a less heralded Saudi Arabian side turned into one of the most memorable upsets ever at the World Cup. Messi even had his team up by a goal early thanks to a penalty, but two second-half goals saw the Saudis rally and get the win. Salem Al Dawsari’s eventual game-winner was one of the tournament’s most memorable goals, and included his iconic celebration flip.
The result was a wakeup call for one of the tournament favorites. One that they would bounce back and eventually make their way to the final.
As for the Saudis? They became overnight legends with the country even declaring a holiday for their Green Falcon heroes.
No. 54: Ronaldinho’s Fantastic Free Kick
Whether it was a calculated masterpiece or a fortunate fluke, Ronaldinho’s epic 50-yard free kick against England in the 2002 quarterfinals remains one of the World Cup’s best goals in the tournament’s history.
After Michael Owen and Rivaldo traded first-half goals, Brazil earned a set piece deep in midfield five minutes after the break.
Expecting a routine cross, England goalkeeper David Seaman drifted off his line. Instead, Ronaldinho lofted a daring strike that sailed over the backpedaling keeper and tucked neatly under the crossbar.
The goal secured a 2–1 lead that Brazil never relinquished, sending one step closer toward their record fifth world title.
Regardless of whether it was intended to be a shot or cross, the audacity of the strike solidified Ronaldinho’s legend in football history.
No. 53: Never Doubt Cristiano Ronaldo
On the second day of the 2018 World Cup, Cristiano Ronaldo delivered a performance for the ages, netting a legendary hat trick to rescue a 3–3 draw against rivals Spain.
This clash of titans became an instant classic, fueled entirely by Ronaldo’s individual brilliance. He opened the scoring early with a composed penalty and restored Portugal’s lead before halftime with a powerful strike that slipped through David de Gea’s grasp.
After Spain surged ahead 3–2, the stage was set for a final act of heroics. In the dying minutes, Portugal earned a free kick at the edge of the box.
With the world watching, Ronaldo curled a sublime, dipping shot around the wall and into the top corner. De Gea didn’t even move.
This stunning equalizer completed his hat trick, making him the oldest player to score three goals in a World Cup match and cementing this masterclass as an all-time tournament highlight.
No. 52: When Ronaldo Became King
The 2006 World Cup in Germany served as the ultimate stage for Ronaldo Nazário to cement his status as football’s premier “O Fenômeno.”
Entering the tournament just behind the legendary Gerd Müller’s long-standing record of 14 goals, the Brazilian striker carried the weight of historical expectation on his shoulders.
The record-breaking moment arrived in the Round of 16 against Ghana.
In typical R9 fashion, he timed a clinical run to perfection, immobilized the goalkeeper with a signature step-over, and slotted the ball into the net.
This 15th career World Cup goal officially moved him past Müller, establishing a new benchmark that would stand for eight years.
While Miroslav Klose eventually surpassed this total in 2014, Ronaldo’s achievement remains a pinnacle of sporting excellence.
It wasn’t just about the volume of goals, but the artistry and dominance he displayed across three different tournaments cemented his legacy as one of the greatest strikers to ever step foot on the pitch.
No. 51: Croatia’s Insane Run
For generations, the World Cup final was an exclusive club. Between 1978 and 2014, every championship match featured previous finalists, with no new nation reaching the ultimate stage since 1974.
In 2018, Croatia decided to crash the party.
Led by Luka Modrić, they defied the “usual suspects” narrative to become the second-smallest nation ever to reach the final.
While their path through Denmark, Russia, and England was arguably smoother than France’s gauntlet against powerhouses like Argentina and Belgium, their ascent wasn’t a total fluke as Croatia previously secured a third-place finish in 1998.
Ultimately, France claimed the trophy in a 4-2 thriller, but by ending a 44-year drought for first-time finalists, the “Vatreni” proved that the sports world’s most prestigious stage was no longer reserved solely for the traditional powers.
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Continue to check back every day for more top moments as we count down to the 2026 FIFA World Cup, starting on June 11.
Sports
Stephen A. Smith makes brutal gaffe while talking about the Golden State Warriors
For years, Stephen A. Smith’s many football blunders have been easy enough to explain away.
He’s not an NFL guy (remember when he said the three key players for a game were three guys who weren’t playing in the game?)
Stephen A. Smith falsely claimed the Warriors haven’t made the playoffs since 2022, but Golden State reached the second round in both 2023 and 2025. (Jerome Miron/Imagn Images)
He’s definitely not a college football guy (remember when he called Jalen Milroe Jalen “Milroy” multiple times and then read the wrong stat line after a College Football Playoff game?).
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ESPN forces him into those conversations because First Take has to talk football, and Smith knows that football is the most popular sport in the country and he needs to be seen as an authority (even though he isn’t).
But Monday’s latest mistake is a lot tougher to excuse, because this time Smith wasn’t talking about the NFL or college football. He was talking about the Golden State Warriors, one of the defining NBA dynasties of the last decade.
In other words, he was talking about the sport and the league that’s supposed to be his bread and butter.
JALEN BRUNSON’S SISTER BLASTS ESPN AFTER STEPHEN A SMITH KNICKS RANT: ‘UTTERLY RIDICULOUS’
While discussing whether Steve Kerr has coached his last game with Golden State, Smith confidently stated the Warriors “haven’t been back to the playoffs since that championship in 2022.”

Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr looks on during a game against the Sacramento Kings. (Robert Edwards/Imagn Images)
That’s not even close to true. Not only did Golden State make the playoffs last season, but they also reached the postseason in 2023. Last year, the Warriors made the playoffs, beat the Rockets in seven games and advanced to the second round before losing to the Timberwolves. In 2023, they beat the Sacramento Kings in the first round and before losing to the Lakers in the Western Conference semifinals.
So, Smith wouldn’t even have been right if he said they haven’t won a playoff series since 2022. But he didn’t say that. He said they didn’t make the playoffs in any of the past four years, except they did it twice.
Yikes.
This is not an obscure piece of NBA trivia that Smith could be easily forgiven for not knowing. Perhaps he was too busy playing solitaire on his phone and just missed two of the past three NBA postseasons. That’s a tough look for the guy who fancies himself as the No. 1 NBA analyst in the country.
And it’s a terrible look for ESPN, as they keep selling Smith as one of the faces of their NBA coverage.
Stephen A. Smith made a brutal gaffe while talking Warriors playoff history
If Smith made this kind of mistake while talking about the NFL, nobody would be shocked. At this point, sports fans practically expect him to butcher football analysis. It’s almost endearing that a guy with the ego of Smith can be so consistently wrong while also delivering every “fact” with the utmost confidence. It’s part of the Stephen A. experience.
But this one hits differently because the NBA is where he’s supposed to at least know the basics. This is where Smith prides himself as being an authority figure.

Stephen A. Smith incorrectly stated the Golden State Warriors haven’t made the playoffs since their 2022 championship, despite the team reaching the postseason twice since then. (Candice Ward/Imagn Images)
And yet he couldn’t keep the recent playoff history of the Warriors straight. The team whose head coach is in the news every other week. The team that has won four championships since 2014. Arguably one of the most important franchises in the NBA over the past 15 years.
Yes, Golden State missed the playoffs in 2024 after getting bounced in the Play-In Tournament (although they won 46 games that season). And yes, it fell short again this season. But that’s a lot different from acting like Steve Kerr has spent four years wandering the basketball wilderness since winning that 2022 title.
He hasn’t. In fact, the team is 175-153 in the past four regular seasons.
The Warriors made the second round in 2023. They made the second round again in 2025.
Before burying Steve Kerr on national television, maybe Stephen A. Smith could take 10 seconds to confirm whether the Warriors were actually, you know, in the playoffs.
Sports
Greg Olsen on Travis Kelce returning to Chiefs for 14th season: ‘League is better off with him playing’
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Travis Kelce will enter year 14 in the NFL when he steps foot on the gridiron with his beloved Kansas City Chiefs in Week 1, which a close friend and fellow tight end said is a good thing for the league.
After recent seasons, the question of whether Kelce, a future Pro Football Hall of Famer, still wants to play football has come up. Each time, including this offseason, the 11-time Pro Bowler and four-time All-Pro has answered the bell with a resounding yes.
Greg Olsen, whom Kelce works alongside with their Tight End University summit each offseason, spoke to the Chiefs star recently. He told Fox News Digital that he still sees that fire inside Kelce when he talked about strapping the pads on for 2026 – a season in which he will turn 37.
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Travis Kelce (87) of the Kansas City looks on during an NFL Football game against the San Francisco 49ers at Levi’s Stadium on Oct. 20, 2024 in Santa Clara, California. (Michael Owens/Getty Images)
“I think just getting to know Travis and just how much he loves playing the game and how much he loves to compete and obviously the career that he’s had as far as first-ballot Hall of Famers – he’s as close to a lock as you’ll find – especially considering the tight end position takes some guys a little bit longer even though they’re super deserving. I think the league is great to have him,” Olsen said. “I think the Chiefs are smart to want him back.
“I got to spend some time with him a couple weeks ago, and he’s super excited for a fresh season, for the team, for himself.”
The Chiefs reached an acceptable deal with Kelce, whose contract was up after this past season. Now that he’s in place for 2026, as well as a reunion with Eric Bieniemy as offensive coordinator, the Chiefs are focused on the health of quarterback Patrick Mahomes, who needed ACL surgery after injuring it during a loss to the Los Angeles Chargers.
GREG OLSEN’S ADVICE FOR NFL DRAFT FIRST-ROUND PICKS ON HANDLING HIGH EXPECTATIONS
“It’s one of the best tight end-quarterback combinations of all time,” Olsen added, acknowledging one of the league’s best duos in recent memory. “So, I’m happy for [Kelce] just as a friend, as a fan of football.”
While it may be a nuisance for Kelce to continuously hear about retirement, Olsen also understands that Kelce has had the opportunity not many can say they do during a grueling football career – walking away on your own terms.
Olsen wants that for his friend in the end, whenever that may be.
“I’d love to see him go out when he wants to be done,” Olsen explained. “Very few guys are able to earn that right throughout their NFL career to say, ‘You know what? I’m done when I say I’m done.’ That’s not typically how it goes. Very few guys have that swan song, perfect ending, walking off under the confetti and the Super Bowl. That’s a dream scenario everyone hopes will be them.

Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce (87) greets fans as he arrives prior to training camp at Missouri Western State University on July 28, 2023 in St. Joseph, Missouri. (Jay Biggerstaff/USA TODAY Sports)
“But if there is a guy who deserves his career to end the right way because of everything he’s stood for, everything he’s done, how hard he’s worked, the success he’s had, individually and collectively, Trav’s at the top of that list.”
Olsen, who serves as an NFL analyst for Fox Sports, is excited for the prospect of covering more games featuring Kelce and the Chiefs, as he wants to enjoy the remainder of his career.
And that’s a career defined by three Super Bowl titles, and more than enough accolades to end up with a bronze bust in Canton one day.
“I never thought I’d see a day where people started saying, ‘Is anyone better than Tony Gonzalez?’ Then, Gronk comes along and that conversation. When it’s all said and done, Travis might be at the top of that list, which 10 years ago sounded crazy that anyone would surpass some of those guys. His career is second to none, and the league is better off with him playing,” Olsen ended.

Broadcaster Greg Olsen looks on before the game between the Seattle Seahawks and the San Francisco 49ers at Lumen Field in Seattle, Washington, on Sept. 7, 2025. (Steph Chambers/Getty Images)
INSIDE THE FRONT OFFICE MIND
While Olsen enjoyed 14 years in the NFL, his next chapter of the game is providing keen analysis for FOX Sports broadcasts during the year.
To help him do that in the offseason while looking at the NFL Draft and free agency pickups by each franchise, Olsen has been using NFL IQ, the new interactive hub created by the league and Amazon Web Services powered by Amazon Quick.
Ahead of the draft, NFL IQ transformed raw data from the NFL Combine and team needs, free agency moves made and more for this hub that provides fans access to key insights and puts them in the shoes of front office decision makers. Whether it’s the casual fan or a top analyst like Olsen, NFL IQ is an easy-to-use way to deepen football knowledge, especially at a crucial roster-building time like the draft is.
“This is the most educated fan base in NFL history, and I think that’s a good thing,” Olsen said.

General shot of NFL IQ, the new interactive hub from the league and Amazon Web Services, powered by Amazon Quick. (NFL IQ)
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“Fans actually have a way to access the exact same data, the exact same information that the teams and everyone are using for their own interest, whether it’s something casual or for people who really want to dive into the nitty gritty.
“I think it’s a really fun set of tools for the wide array of people who touch the NFL space. I know firsthand as a fan, and now a professional in the industry, it’s a huge part of my interaction of the game.”
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