World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
The U.S. National Weather Service has a lightning safety guideline: if lightning strikes within about 13 kilometers of a venue, it is recommended that everyone immediately go indoors. Most professional leagues enforce it as a hard rule—get inside, no exceptions, no appeal process, the radar decides.
The U.S. National Weather Service has a lightning safety guideline: if lightning strikes within approximately 13 kilometers of a venue, it recommends that everyone immediately go indoors. Most professional leagues enforce this as a hard rule—get indoors, no exceptions, no appeal channels, and radar has the final say.
On the afternoon of June 13th, this guideline precisely cut short Portugal's last bit of time on the grass before the World Cup. Training was open to the media for just fifteen minutes. Thirteen players jogged on the turf, while Bruno Fernandes and Cristiano Ronaldo did a few flexibility drills. Then Florida's cumulonimbus clouds came crashing down. Record journalist David Novo was on site. The moment the thunderstorm triggered the safety protocol, photojournalists were shoved into cars to take cover from the lightning, and the players retreated to the locker room. Training was abruptly cut off.
Fifteen minutes. That was Portugal's first full exposure to outdoor turf after landing in the United States.
They arrived in Palm Beach on Friday, setting up base at North County District Park. Saturday morning, the sun was shining brightly, and Rúben Dias, João Félix, Pedro Neto, and Francisco Trincão took a swim in the Atlantic Ocean. L'Équipe captured footage of them entering the water—calm sea, perfect water temperature. By evening, the thunderstorm rolled in. The four players were stuck indoors, watching lightning strike the palm trees one after another. The originally scheduled press conference with Matheus Nunes was canceled by the football federation directly. All training and media activities on Sunday were wiped out entirely. On Monday morning, the coaching staff squeezed in another session before dark, standing on the outdoor turf for about ten minutes before the rain came again.
From their arrival on Friday to the opening match kickoff on June 17th, Portugal's entire effective training time on outdoor turf barely added up to a full day. For the 2016 European Championship winners Portugal, with Ronaldo still on the team and Bruno Fernandes and Rúben Dias having taken over, this team—beneath the southern U.S. cumulonimbus clouds—saw their turf adaptation period compressed to a matter of hours.
On June 16th, the Palm Beach Post reported that a low-pressure system was forming over the Gulf of Mexico, designated as "Potential Tropical Cyclone One." Meteorological agencies predicted it would be named by the weekend. Houston's NRG Stadium, the venue for Portugal's opening match, was precisely in the most vulnerable area for heavy rain and flash flooding. From Palm Beach to Houston, the straight-line distance is over 1,500 kilometers. The cyclone had followed the team for that entire distance.
Martínez's coaching staff crammed the players into the hotel gym for activation sessions while monitoring satellite images from the National Hurricane Center to calculate Houston's weather window. Conditioning built on treadmills isn't enough to sustain a World Cup-intensity match. Modern football's preparation systems are fine-tuned to an extreme—so fine-tuned that, faced with a lightning ban within a 13-kilometer range, their margin for error is as low as that of an amateur team. The grass outside was soaked, and there was no choice.
Beyond the natural disaster, there was the friction unique to a top-tier national team. After Ronaldo and his teammates checked into the Four Seasons Hotel in Palm Beach, they were turned away by security when trying to train on a private beach. The Mirror reported that too many people were on site, news had leaked, and the beach was swarming with onlookers who had rushed over. Security intervened, and the Portuguese team had to relocate their training to the hotel's pool area. A forward who has played in six World Cups couldn't find a single piece of open turf in his own hotel to properly touch a ball.
FIFA's disciplinary committee still had an old score to settle. During the qualifier against Ireland, Ronaldo received a straight red card for an elbow, and FIFA handed down a three-match ban. One match has been served, with the remaining two suspended for one year. If he commits another act of violence during the probation period, the suspension takes immediate effect. From the first minute in Houston, every physical duel he engages in comes with an additional layer of risk.
On June 17th, at Houston's NRG Stadium. The tropical cyclone officially received its name that day: Arthur. Portugal 1-1 DR Congo.
João Neves scored in the 6th minute, and Yoane Wissa headed in the equalizer in the 5th minute of first-half stoppage time. DR Congo earned their first-ever World Cup point. Portugal had 75% possession, but of their seven shots on goal, only one was on target. The expected goals data was even colder: Portugal 0.65, DR Congo 0.87. Possession was played out like a rosary, but all the truly dangerous shots came from the opponent.
Six days later, on the same pitch. Portugal 5-0 Uzbekistan.
Arthur was gone. The grass was dry. That top-tier European team rediscovered the thrill of overwhelming their opponents.
But that 0.87 xG doesn't lie. Florida's cumulonimbus clouds had already stripped them bare.