A bonus mid-week episode previewing the FIFA World Cup 2026 in North America. I’ll be talking about all the teams, the favourites, the underdogs, the wild cards, the dark horse teams, England’s chances, plus various issues and controversies both on and off the pitch. Comments are welcome! This is a bonus episode, and you will get another normal episode (no football) on Monday.
Get the episode PDF with all my notes 👇
Vocabulary & Phrases I Explained During the Episode
- Highly decorated — having won lots of trophies, awards or honours.
- Decorated (Christmas tree sense) — covered with ornaments or decorations.
- Silverware — trophies and awards won in football.
- Trophy cabinet — a figurative way of referring to all the trophies someone has won.
- Pressing / to press — applying pressure to opponents immediately when they have the ball in order to regain possession.
- Play deep — operate far up the pitch (in an attacking sense) or in a deeper position depending on context.
- Squad depth / depth — the quality of reserve players available beyond the starting eleven.
- Seasoned — experienced; a seasoned veteran is someone with lots of experience.
- Dark horse — a team that is not expected to win but secretly has a good chance.
- Thrash / get thrashed — beat a team very heavily.
- Minnows — small, unfancied teams in a competition.
- Brace for — prepare for; get ready for.
- Pedigree — proven quality, class or history of success.
- Strength in depth — having high-quality replacements throughout the squad.
- Play deep (pitch-position sense) — move far up the pitch in attack.
- Plug-and-play talent — players who can be inserted into the team without reducing quality.
- Shed (e.g. shed defensive volatility) — get rid of; cast off.
- Volatility — inconsistency; lack of stability.
- Hamper — hold back; hinder; disadvantage.
- Stacked roster — a squad packed with talented players.
- Roster — the group of players available for selection.
- Wild card — an unpredictable team that could surprise everyone.
- The last dance — a final opportunity before retirement or the end of an era.
- Middle-tier teams — teams between the elite and the minnows.
- Time wasting — deliberately slowing the game down.
- Shithousery — cynical, annoying, borderline-cheating behaviour in football.
- Gamesmanship — trying to gain an advantage through questionable tactics.
- Goal kick — when the goalkeeper restarts play from the goal area.
- Crack down on — take stronger action to stop something.
- Minor knock — a small injury.
- Momentum — the feeling that a team is moving positively and gaining advantage.
- Remit — the scope of someone’s authority or responsibilities.
- Advantage rule — allowing play to continue after a foul if it benefits the fouled team.
- Aerial superiority — strength in the air (headers, set pieces, etc.).
- Battle-hardened — toughened by difficult experiences.
- Spine of the team — the key players running through the centre of the side.
- Defensive lapses — moments when defenders make mistakes or lose concentration.
- Neck and neck — at the same level; evenly matched.
- Flair — creativity and style.
- Tactical overhaul — a major change in strategy.
- Compact 4–4–2 — a tightly organised tactical formation.
- Clean sheet — conceding no goals.
- Defensive resilience — the ability to resist attacks and stay strong defensively.
- Volatile side — a team that is unpredictable and inconsistent.
- Counterattack — attacking quickly after winning possession.
- Exceed expectations — perform better than people predicted.
- Underdog — a team not expected to succeed.
- Play the spoiler role — ruin another team’s chances even if you are unlikely to progress yourself.