World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
The scoreboard in Houston is stuck at 1 1.
Houston's scoreboard was stubbornly stuck at 1-1.
Portugal, valued at €1.0055 billion, failed to swallow the Democratic Republic of Congo, worth €143.9 million, in their group stage opener. A sevenfold disparity in value was flattened over 90 minutes. The 41-year-old Ronaldo stepped onto the pitch for his sixth World Cup debut. The script for the title contender jammed from the first whistle.
Portugal's attacking lineup looked intimidating. Bruno Fernandes orchestrated from midfield; Leão sprinted down the wings. They had crushed opponents 9-1 in qualifiers and defeated Chile in friendlies. But in the actual match, this squad plunged straight into DR Congo's 5-4-1 meat grinder.
DR Congo cared nothing for possession. They parked the bus directly on the six-yard line, not even leaving a rearview mirror.
Portugal’s possession stats looked impressive, but all came from drowsy passing in the midfield and backline. They twirled the ball like prayer beads, yet couldn't conjure a lethal strike in the box. Leão picked up the ball on the wing, looked up, and found two or three black jerseys constantly planted in front of him. Fernandes's signature through balls were all intercepted by DR Congo's defensive midfielders at the top of the arc, their efforts looking like passing drills for the opposition.
The mixed zone after the match yielded little substance. DR Congo's coach stuck strictly to tactical analysis, with no extra embellishment. Ronaldo and the Portuguese coaching staff's responses were limited to routine clichés. The coach of Colombia, Portugal's group rival, when facing the media ahead of their next match, avoided any direct assessment of DR Congo's defensive structure.
Everyone was calculating; nobody showed their hand.
DR Congo's ability to take a point from Houston came down to tactical discipline. This team had waited 52 years to touch the World Cup finals pitch again. The last time they appeared was in 1974 as Zaire. That was the first sub-Saharan African team to feature in the World Cup, but back then in Germany, they essentially served as cannon fodder.
A 52-year cycle has fundamentally changed the character of African teams.
In the old days, they relied on raw physicality and brute force to smash against walls. Now, it's replaced by seamless tactical discipline. Their total squad value of €143.9 million doesn't rank in the World Cup, and their FIFA ranking outside the top 40 looks like underdog territory. Yet these players, through suffocating inter-line compression, dragged a European giant into the mud. No rolling-on-the-ground tackles, no rash yellow or red cards—just pure positional grinding.
On the other pitch in Group K, Colombia defeated Uzbekistan 3-1.
In their second group stage match, DR Congo travels to Guadalajara to face the knife-edge of South American technical football. Whether their 5-4-1 bus can withstand that level of penetration is anyone's guess. What is known is that the Colombians' eyes when looking at DR Congo now are certainly different from how they viewed Uzbekistan before the tournament.