The Blue Wave from tiny Curaçao is making World Cup history
The island nation will face Germany, Ecuador and Ivory Coast in group play after qualifying as a 156,000-person long shot.
- Curaçao, an island nation of about 156,000 residents in the Caribbean, became the smallest country by both population and land mass to qualify for the World Cup, advancing with a 3-0-3 record in qualifying's second round.
- The island transformed from Netherlands Antilles territory to autonomous constituent country in October 2010, establishing independent sporting identity; FIFA's 48-team tournament expansion created opportunities for smaller nations previously locked out of competition.
- Head coach Dick Advocaat, at 78, will become the oldest coach ever to manage a World Cup team; Curaçao's first match on June 14 against 10th-ranked Germany in Houston occurs in a city 15 times larger than the island.
- Defender Sherel Floranus said, 'We have made history...We are writing our own history, for this island,' while former coach Remko Bicentini called the qualification 'a very, very, very good moment' and 'a party for the whole Curaçao.'
- With odds of +250,000 at sportsbooks, Curaçao enters as the longest of long shots; fan leader Brenton Balentien's Blue Face movement since 2015 transformed the island's traditionally passive soccer culture into one that actively mobilizes supporters.
29 Articles
29 Articles
There will not be millions of people who encourage Curacao during the World Cup, because this island does not have that number of inhabitants.
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The Blue Wave from tiny Curaçao is making World Cup history
Curaçao has already crafted a story like none other in World Cup history. The tiny autonomous territory of about 156,000 residents is now the smallest, both in terms of population and land mass, to make it to soccer’s biggest stage.
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