World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
The 78 year old old man was wiping away tears on the sidelines. What he was crying about was definitely not the score.
An 78-year-old man was wiping tears at the sideline. What he was crying about was never the score.
Curaçao had just pierced Germany's goal, 22-year-old Livano Comenencia slamming the ball into the net. It was the first World Cup goal in Curaçao's history. Dick Advocaat was crying on the bench at Houston's NRG Stadium. It was his second time tearing up that match; he had already gotten red-eyed when the national anthems played before the game.
The scoreboard read Germany 7, Curaçao 1. A heavy defeat. But the 78-year, 260-day-old coach no longer cared. Standing there, he was a living record: the oldest head coach at the 2026 World Cup. This record had been smashed three times in four days by three old men, pushed from 74 straight up to 78. The previous record, which had held for sixteen years, now looked like a joke.
At the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, Otto Rehhagel led Greece to face Argentina at 71 years and 317 days. That number was certified by Guinness and lay in the record books for a full sixteen years. Louis van Gaal took the Netherlands to Qatar in 2022 at 71 years and 123 days—one step short. Óscar Tabárez led Uruguay in 2018 at 71 years and 125 days, still one step short. The football world had tacitly accepted that this ceiling was welded shut.
On June 11, 2026, at the Azteca Stadium in Mexico City, the World Cup opener. 74-year-old Belgian Hugo Broos led out South Africa against hosts Mexico. South Africa received two red cards in the second half—Sithole in the 49th minute, Zwane in the 83rd—playing with ten men for nearly forty minutes, losing 0-2. But Broos, at 74 years and 62 days, carved his name into the record books. The oldest head coach in World Cup history: Rehhagel was officially surpassed.
But he hadn't even warmed the seat before someone snatched the crown.
Less than twenty-four hours later, Miroslav Koubek took the Czech Republic to face South Korea. 74 years and 284 days old, the old man made his World Cup coaching debut. The Czechs lost 1-2. Koubek knocked Broos off the "oldest head coach" throne. Strictly speaking, he took the "oldest debut head coach" title—a different dimension, but still using age as a weapon. Two septuagenarians played a game of pass the parcel within a single day.
On June 14 in Houston, the ceiling was ripped out by the roots.
Advocaat led Curaçao into NRG Stadium at 78 years and 260 days. He raised the bar for the oldest head coach by nearly four years in one go. A crushing, gaping margin, skipping any pretense of a minor update. Opposite him stood Julian Nagelsmann, 38 years and 326 days old, the former Bayern Munich prodigy turned current Germany boss—the youngest head coach at this World Cup.
The two stood on the same sideline with an age gap of 39 years and 299 days. The largest coaching age gap in World Cup history. The year Nagelsmann was born, 1987, Advocaat had already picked up the coaching reins.
Before the match, a reporter asked Nagelsmann if he wanted to keep coaching until he was Advocaat's age. He laughed: "No. I love this job, but I hope to be doing something else by then."
Advocaat's words at the press conference were tougher: "We have nothing to lose; the pressure is on Germany."
In the end, the Germans scored seven. After the match, Nagelsmann politely acknowledged: "Curaçao played better than many Germans expected. They played differently than before, they played with courage." Polite as it was, 7-1 is still 7-1. Competitive sports don't believe in tough talk.
But that Curaçao goal came from a 22-year-old, from a country with a population of about 160,000. 160,000 people—not even enough to fill the Bernabéu. Curaçao is the least populous nation in World Cup history. A 78-year-old Dutchman brought them here, and they still pierced Germany's goal.
The image of Advocaat wiping tears during the national anthem, and again after the goal, went viral on social media. In the midst of a 7-1 defeat, the old man was crying for history. After the game, he said: "The players know that even if you lose, you shouldn't hang your head. This is nothing to be ashamed of."
Broos didn't need tears; he needed three points. And he got them.
In the group stage match between South Africa and South Korea, South Africa had 31% possession, 14 shots with 4 on target, and an xG of 0.92. South Korea had 69% possession, 7 shots with 2 on target, and an xG of 0.84. With less than a third of the ball, South Africa got a goal and a win. The scorer was Tshepo Maseko. The Koreans turned 69% possession into prayer beads; their shooting efficiency was no match for South Africa's counter-attacking blunt force.
74-year, 75-day-old Broos pocketed another record with this win: the oldest head coach to win a match in World Cup history.
"This is probably my last World Cup," he revealed in a pre-match interview with Soccer Laduma. A man who said "last time" won a game he wasn't supposed to win at his last rodeo.
Koubek and Broos later met in Atlanta. On June 18, Czech Republic vs. South Africa, 1-1. For the first time in World Cup history, two septuagenarian managers faced off in the same match. The Czechs' Sadílek scored the earliest goal of this World Cup, and South Africa equalized with a penalty. The two crossed paths, each taking a point.
Koubek wasn't backing down afterward: "It's a shame; looking at the chances, we were closer to winning." He even added, "We should have scored at least two goals." Saying that after a draw lacked some conviction.
His fate wasn't as kind as Broos's. In the final group match, the Czechs were thrashed 0-3 by hosts Mexico and eliminated. In the post-match press conference, Koubek vented about the schedule, complaining that heavy traffic had exhausted his players and questioning why Mexico didn't have to run around. Post-match reports used his own words: stupid mistakes. No tears, just a return ticket home.
Broos advanced with South Africa as group runners-up, facing hosts Canada. He is set to become the oldest head coach in World Cup knockout-stage history. 74 years old, his last World Cup, in the knockout rounds.
As for Advocaat's 78 years and 260 days, it probably won't be touched anytime soon.
Sixteen years ago, people said the same about Rehhagel.
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