Libmonster ID: NG-2612

Summer 2026. North America. 48 teams. 104 matches. Millions of spectators on the stadiums and billions watching on screens. The World Cup is not just a tournament. It's a time machine that makes adults become boys again and children believe in miracles. Dreams. Everyone has their own. Some want to see Messi live, others want to play on the field themselves, and the third just wants to hug their son after the final whistle. The 2026 World Cup is a kaleidoscope of hopes, where generations intertwine.

Dreams of boys from the 90s who have become fathers

Those who are now 35-40 years old remember football before the era of endless money and VAR. They remember watching the 1998 World Cup at a pioneer camp. How they cheered for the Brazilian team with Ronaldo. How they cut out photos of Zidane and glued them to notebooks. Now they have their own children, a mortgage, and a job from 9 to 18. But when the World Cup starts, they turn back into that boy in a faded jersey.

His dream is simple: to show his son or daughter what he felt himself. To explain what offside is and why a penalty is a lottery. To sit next to them on the couch, pour a glass of juice with the World Cup logo, and watch match after match. And if they're lucky, to go to the tournament. To buy tickets for two matches, even if it means saving for half a year. Because this is not just football. This is passing the baton.

For many adults, the 2026 World Cup is their last chance to see the stars of their youth. Is Messi still playing? Ronaldo? Or is this their last championship? And this nostalgia makes every shot on goal an event of a lifetime.

Dreams of boys and girls who play soccer in the street

For a child who is just learning to score, the World Cup is a magical door. He sees on TV as Kylian Mbappé dribbles past three players and thinks, "I can do that too." He sticks player stickers in his album, asks his parents to buy boots like Vinicius, and draws goals on the asphalt. His dream is simple and naive: to get to the stadium. To see the player lift the trophy in person. Or at least score a goal during recess, imitating Haaland's celebration.

But there are also other children. Those who don't watch TV and play themselves. They are registered in a soccer section, get up at 7 AM for training, their knees are bruised, and their backpacks are dirty with uniform. For them, the World Cup is not entertainment, but a lesson. They watch how professionals move, how they open up, how they shoot. And they dream of one day stepping onto the same stadium. Not as a spectator. As a player. And though they are now 10 years old and the championship is still 10 years away, it doesn't matter. The dream lives on.

Dreams of those who have never been to a stadium

For millions of people in third-world countries, in small cities and villages, football is the only window to the big world. They don't have money for tickets, no chance to leave their village. But there is a black-and-white TV that catches the signal once every four years. They sit on the street in front of the only store with a generator and watch matches, holding their breath. Their dream is for their national team to just qualify for the World Cup. Not to win, but to play. Because that would mean: their country has been noticed. Their children will see their flag on the stands.

In 2026, Uzbekistan, Cape Verde, Curaçao, and Jordan will play for the first time. For these countries, qualifying for the World Cup is already a victory. Adults and children in these countries will cry with joy when their team steps onto the field. Even if they lose 0:5. Because the dream has come true.

Dreams of fathers and children who support different teams

The father supports Argentina because he saw Maradona in 1986. The son supports France because Mbappé is a god. It's a classic. And there is no tragedy in this. On the contrary, there is life. They sit in front of the TV, drink soda, argue, tease each other. If Argentina wins, the father teases the son, if France wins, the son celebrates. And then they wash the dishes together and discuss the best goal of the round. The World Cup brings them together, even when they support different teams.

But sometimes it's different. The father left the family, and the son stayed with his mother. Football is the only thread that connects the boy with his father. They call each other after every match, talk about football, not about how the father hasn't paid child support again. And for 90 minutes during the match, they are together again. The World Cup reconciles. The World Cup heals.

Dreams of those who build stadiums and sell popcorn

The World Cup is not just players and fans. It's builders who built stadiums in New York, Los Angeles, and Mexico City. They worked 12 hours a day to make sure the concrete didn't crack and the grass was perfect. Their dream is to show their children: "This stadium was built by your dad." And when the child sees the beautiful arenas on TV, he can say at school, "My dad worked there." Pride that can't be bought.

And the dreams of popcorn sellers, ticket sellers, volunteers. They will work during matches, won't see a single goal in person, because they need to check tickets and carry hot dogs. But they will be part of the celebration. And their children will wait for them after their shift to hug and ask, "Did Cristiano really smile?" And for this, it's worth working.

Dreams of those who can't walk

In every country, there are people with disabilities. For them, going to the stadium is a feat. But the organizers of the 2026 World Cup promise an accessible environment: ramps, special seats, sign language interpretation. For some, this is a chance to be on a football field for the first time in their lives. To hear the roar of the crowd, feel the vibration from the shot on goal. Their dream is to be like everyone else. And the World Cup gives them this opportunity.

And there are children who are bedridden. They watch football on TV, lying in a hospital bed. Players send them videos with wishes for a speedy recovery, sign jerseys and send them by mail. The dream of such a child is to live to the final, see the trophy being lifted, and make a wish. To get better.

Dreams of players who were children four years ago

For a player in 2026, the last World Cup in Qatar was the first sign. Some sat on the bench, while others watched on TV, still studying in an academy. Now they are stepping onto the field. Their dream is to score a goal and dedicate it to their mother, who drove them to training at 6 AM. Or to their father, who sold his car to buy boots. Every goal at the World Cup is a fulfilled dream not only for the player but for his entire family.

And there is also the dream of childhood: to win the World Cup. They live with this dream since they were five years old, when their father put a plastic trophy on the refrigerator and said, "When you grow up, bring me one like this." To lift the golden Nike above their head is to close the gestalt of their entire life.

Dreams of fans who travel across three oceans

To buy a ticket, take out a loan, fly to another continent, live in a hostel, eat sandwiches — all this for the sake of cheering for their team three times. For a fan, this is normal. His dream is not just to see a match but to become a part of it. To get in the camera, wave a huge flag, hug an Argentine stranger after your team wins in a penalty shootout.

And the children of such fans grow up with suitcases at the door. For them, the World Cup is a family tradition. To go as a family, watch, cheer, sing. Then show the photos in front of the stadium to your grandchildren. A simple dream, but invaluable.

Dreams of those who stay home

Not everyone has money for tickets and visas. But this doesn't mean their dreams don't come true. You can set up a fan zone on the couch at home, invite friends, buy a lot of chips and lemonade. You can make posters and hang them on the wall. You can write a post on social media and collect hundreds of likes. The dream of a home fan is for his team to win. For the neighbor above not to tap on the radiator when you shout "GOOOAL!" For the son to remember this championship for the rest of his life. And this comes true, even if you're not at the stadium.

Common dream: a world without war during the tournament

Conflicts subside during the days of the World Cup. Not everywhere, but in many places. Adults and children from warring countries can hug each other after a match. Because football unites more than politics. The common dream of all people on the planet is for the World Cup to be a celebration, not a cause for scandals. For no child to be afraid to go to the stadium. For every player, regardless of skin color, to be able to dance after a goal. This dream seems naive. But without it, the World Cup would just be a tournament.

The 2026 World Cup is not about who scores more goals. It's about how adults and children dream together. Sitting next to each other on the couch or standing on different stands. Dreaming, believing, hoping. And when the captain raises the trophy in the final, millions of people around the world will cry with joy. And this joy has no age.


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World Cup 2026 and the dreams of viewers // Abuja: Nigeria (ELIB.NG). Updated: 25.05.2026. URL: https://elib.ng/m/articles/view/World-Cup-2026-and-the-dreams-of-viewers (date of access: 26.05.2026).

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