World CupBrazil -- Japan17:00World CupGermany -- Paraguay20:30World CupNetherlands -- Morocco01:00World CupIvory Coast -- Norway17:00World CupFrance -- Sweden21:00World CupMexico -- Ecuador01:00World CupEngland -- Congo DR16:00World CupBelgium -- Senegal20:00World CupUSA -- Bosnia & Herzegovina00:00World CupSpain -- Austria19:00World CupPortugal -- Croatia23:00World CupSwitzerland -- Algeria03:00World CupAustralia -- Egypt18:00World CupArgentina -- Cape Verde Islands22:00World CupBrazil -- Japan17:00World CupGermany -- Paraguay20:30World CupNetherlands -- Morocco01:00World CupIvory Coast -- Norway17:00World CupFrance -- Sweden21:00World CupMexico -- Ecuador01:00World CupEngland -- Congo DR16:00World CupBelgium -- Senegal20:00World CupUSA -- Bosnia & Herzegovina00:00World CupSpain -- Austria19:00World CupPortugal -- Croatia23:00World CupSwitzerland -- Algeria03:00World CupAustralia -- Egypt18:00World CupArgentina -- Cape Verde Islands22:00
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Football

A World Cup remembered through a child’s first football obsession

A BBC Football first-person essay reflects on how watching a World Cup with an almost six-year-old child can renew the wonder of the tournament, from stickers and highlights to shared family memories.

A World Cup remembered through a child’s first football obsession
Image credit: bbc.com

The BBC piece is a personal reflection on experiencing a first shared World Cup with the writer’s almost six-year-old child. Its central point is not a match result, but the renewed joy of seeing football through a young fan’s curiosity.

The essay contrasts adult World Cup memories with a child’s fresh excitement: sticker books, flags, player names, garden kickabouts and morning highlight routines. It frames the tournament as something that can connect generations, even as viewing habits and football culture change.

Several famous names appear in the piece, including Lionel Messi, Kylian Mbappe, Erling Haaland, Harry Kane and Jude Bellingham, but they serve mainly as markers of the child’s growing football imagination rather than as the basis for a news report. Any specific match reference, including the mention of a Messi hat-trick, should be checked separately before being treated as a verified sporting fact.

The strongest editorial angle is the emotional one: World Cups are often remembered less as a list of fixtures than as family moments, childhood rituals and shared routines. The essay also includes a personal note about the writer’s grandfather, linking football stickers to memory, loss and continuity.

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