World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
The final whistle blew, and no one spoke at the Lisbon Commerce Square. In the Betano fan zone in Vila Nova de Gaia, those thousands of fans didn't even have the energy to curse, wrapping themselves in green and red flags as they lowered their heads and filed out. 4.9 million people stared at the screens, with the average viewership locked at 3.3 million. Nearly half of Portugal was watching this World Cup debut, only to end up with a 1 1 draw.
The final whistle blew, and no one spoke in Lisbon's Commerce Square. In the Betano fan zone in Vila Nova de Gaia, those thousands of people didn't even have the energy to curse. Wrapped in green-and-red flags, they hung their heads and filed out. 4.9 million people stared at their screens, with the average viewership stuck at 3.3 million. Almost half of Portugal was watching this World Cup debut, only to get a 1-1 draw.
When João Neves slammed the ball into the net in the 6th minute, half the beer in the square spilled. But from then on, for 84 minutes, Portugal put the entire nation into a hypnotic trance. Everyone expected a massacre, but Portugal turned ball possession into counting rosary beads. The Democratic Republic of Congo's defense dropped deep, and their physical challenges were as hard as a moving concrete wall, cutting Portugal's attack line to shreds. The media called it "hypnotic possession," but it was basically tactical constipation. Pointless passes outside the box led to dominance without goals, turning what should have been a rout into a mud-wrestling match. To see a strong team's true colors, don't look at their first goal; look at their passing speed after being equalized. Portugal's speed laid their entire tactical game plan bare. The Congolese equalized before halftime. That kick tore through Portugal's defense and, in one go, flushed Lisbon's street celebrations down the drain.
In hindsight, the pre-match hype now looks like black comedy. Former national team player Éder and Lisbon officials sat in front, listening to thousands in the square chanting, "The cup is ours" (A taça é nossa). The 6th-minute goal gave them the illusion that this World Cup's script was already written. Then they spent more than a half being ground down by the Congolese muscle jungle. After the match, National Sports Information Commission President Manuel Queiroz came out to spin it, saying the draw lowered expectations, which was actually beneficial. The unspoken message was clear: the federation knew how badly they played and had to quickly cool down the fans, in case things got even uglier down the line and were impossible to manage.
A few days later, Portugal thrashed Uzbekistan 5-0, and the fan zones were once again filled with the sound of drums and joyful jumping. But five goals couldn't wash away the mud from that first game. Go back and watch the DRC fans celebrating that 1-1 draw—that wild joy of dragging a giant into the mud is the sharpest needle popping Portugal's championship fantasy.