FIFA World Cup: As the FIFA World Cup 2026 approaches, three of football’s most decorated nations find themselves united by a common ambition but driven by different motivations. For Brazil and Spain, the tournament offers an opportunity to relive memories of eras when they ruled world football. For Argentina, the challenge is even greater: defending the crown and breaking a jinx that has haunted champions for more than six decades.
No nation embodies World Cup success quite like Brazil. The five-time champions were the undisputed standard-bearers of international football for much of the late 20th century and early 2000s. Between 1994 and 2006, Brazil reached three World Cup finals, winning two titles and producing some of the sport’s most iconic teams.
However, the years that followed brought repeated disappointments. The painful 7-1 semifinal defeat to Germany in 2014, quarterfinal exits in 2018 and 2022, and an inability to translate individual talent into collective success have left Brazilian fans waiting for a return to their golden age.