World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
The final podium at MetLife Stadium hasn't even been set up yet, but Trump's Secret Service has already turned the scene into an iron fortress.
The podium for the final ceremony at MetLife Stadium hasn't been set up yet, but Trump's Secret Service has already turned the venue into an iron fortress.
According to a report from The Mirror, the presidential security team has entered "emergency mode," with their utmost vigilance focused on one thing only: booing.
The contingency plan is so absurdly detailed that it even nitpicks the match schedule, deliberately avoiding the appearance of teams from English-speaking countries. Anglo-Saxon fans need no translation for their insults, and the on-field microphones will cut raw, expletive-laden chants into the global broadcast signal.
A president set to hoist the World Cup trophy on finals night, whose team fears an awkward silence and, even more, the sudden roar from the crowd below. This fear stems entirely from sheer embarrassment.
Roll back the clock to the 2025 Club World Cup final. Chelsea lifted the trophy, a moment meant for the players' coronation, yet an unwilling extra lingered on the podium.
Trump's prolonged stay on the stage froze the atmosphere. Cameras from The Guardian and BILD locked onto the scene: Cole Palmer stood at a loss, and Reece James wore a look of pure confusion.
The unwritten rules of football are stricter than the offside line: the podium is an extension of the winners' locker room. Those handing over the trophy present it, shake hands, and step back. Heads of state at past World Cups knew to cede the spotlight to the protagonists.
Trump shattered that rule, turning someone else's crowning moment into his own campaign rally. The micro-expressions of the Chelsea players revealed the truth: this president has no sway in the football world.
With no influence, his only foundation to force his way onto the final podium was laid by FIFA President Gianni Infantino.
Infantino traded FIFA's independence as a token of allegiance, offering protection money to the White House. He personally visited the White House, placed the inaugural "FIFA Peace Award" into Trump's hands, and on Fox News laid his cards bare, describing their relationship as "always shoulder to shoulder."
Infantino, in exchange for security, visas, and tax exemptions for the 2026 North American World Cup, traded away FIFA's century-old legacy with the shrewdness of a transfer window agent.
Trump hasn't watched a single match of this World Cup in person, not even the US team's group stage opener, yet he's secured prime exposure for finals night.
Infantino got his political shield, Trump locked in global broadcast coverage, and football was reduced to mere turf in this trade.
In contrast, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum made a different choice.
She simply skipped the World Cup opening ceremony, didn't bother with polite excuses, and donated all her tickets to local fans (the specific recipients are pending confirmation).
On July 19 at MetLife Stadium, 82,000 seats won't lie.
Infantino will smilingly hand over the trophy, and Trump will hoist the World Cup. Secret Service agents can confiscate signs, mute microphones in certain sections, but they can't silence 82,000 mouths.