World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
With the 2026 World Cup kickoff imminent, Spain's fate hangs by a hamstring that hasn't fully healed. Eighteen year old Lamine Yamal has clawed his way back from a severe injury in April to the starting squad, with Barcelona and the national team calculating against each other over his 15 minutes of playing time. An Instagram photo of him wearing a face mask, an unfinished Ballon d'Or speech, and a Palestinian flag raised during the championship celebration—these fragments piece together the most soap opera like opening act of this World Cup.
A face mask.
Ines Garcia Santos hit send on Instagram. In the photo, Lamine Yamal lay on the bed in the Spanish national team's hotel, eyes closed, a white face mask plastered firmly across the upper half of his face from the bridge of his nose up. The caption was even simpler: "He's welcoming the World Cup perfectly, everyone don't worry about him."
June 12th. The turf at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta had barely been warmed up. Spain's opening match opponent was Cape Verde—an island nation with a population smaller than the Casa de Campo neighborhood in Madrid—and there were still three full days until kickoff.
Yet football pundits worldwide had already trained their magnifying glasses on that face mask.
Because the eighteen-year-old Barcelona prodigy had just concluded a four-way tug-of-war involving injury, time, Barcelona's medical team, and Spain's head coach, Luis de la Fuente.
Could he play? For how many minutes? At what percentage of his capacity? The answers to these three questions would directly determine whether Spain could survive Group H.
The other two names in Group H: South Africa, Uruguay.
The South American tank's form this year was like an old Uruguayan man who'd downed three espressos—Suarez was old enough to collect a pension, Nunez was still searching for his shooting boots, but that South American brand of grit and toughness was never Spain's preferred script.
So this hamstring issue wasn't just Lamine Yamal's hamstring issue.
It was the shoelace holding the entire bullfighting corps together around their waists.
Let's rewind time.
April 22nd. A match in the final stretch of La Liga—Yamal fell to the turf. The string at the back of his left thigh, responsible for propelling his entire body forward, had snapped a piece clean off.
Hamstring.
For an amateur player, a hamstring is just a muscle that feels "a bit sore from running too much today"; for a winger whose game relies on speed, it's his livelihood.
And for Yamal—considering his age, his style of play, the weight that left leg carried on the tactical boards of both Barcelona and Spain—to put it plainly, it was what he "lived on."
When the news first broke, no one took it too seriously. Eighteen, after all. Young. Youth brings resilience.
But what happened next made Barcelona's medical team scratch their heads.
The injury was more severe than expected. Recovery was slower than anticipated.
"His risk of recurrence is very high," a Spanish sports medicine specialist stated to the cameras. "We warned everyone."
April, May, June. Yamal disappeared from all squad lists. Barcelona's season ended hastily without him. The La Liga champions' celebration banner was missing the face that should have been front and center.
For fifty whole days, he played no official matches.
By normal logic, this type of injury requires: over eight weeks of recovery + three to four weeks of specialized training + two to three warm-up matches to find form.
But the script Yamal was handed was: fifty days, recover, then straight in.
How many times did he clash with Barcelona's medical team over this? No one knows.
But one thing was clear: He wasn't fighting alone.
Behind him stood Laporta, Flick, the entire Barcelona system, Yamal's countless commercial contracts, that face in Adidas's World Cup ad standing alongside Zidane, Messi, Dembele.
This money, these contracts, these endorsements, these expectations—combined, they weighed heavier than a single hamstring.
The national team side was even more anxious.
Luis de la Fuente—the veteran coach who led Spain to victory at Euro 2024—said something in a press conference that made every Spanish fan's heart skip a beat:
"I was very worried he might miss a month and a half, or even longer."
A month and a half.
Counting from April, that meant—early June. Around the opening match.
In other words, the worst-case scenario: Yamal misses the entire group stage.
By saying this, de la Fuente showed half his cards. Half was reassurance—"we're prepared for the worst"; the other half was pressure—"I need this kid back."
But the veteran coach also knew: Barcelona wasn't going to roll over.
Barcelona spent the whole spring playing defensive games with the Spanish national team. The reason was simple—if Yamal, carrying an injury, used up all his bullets at the World Cup, Barcelona's entire offensive system for the next season would collapse.
This wasn't about personal favors.
It was a clear-cut commercial transaction.
What everyone finally sat down and negotiated was a "gentle plan":
June 8th, the last pre-World Cup friendly against Peru—Yamal remains at the base camp in Chattanooga, Tennessee, and doesn't travel to Puebla, Mexico.
Why not go? Because the flight alone might set his hamstring back to square one.
June 11th, Yamal and Nico Williams appeared together on the training ground.
Who is Williams? The fast, Nigerian-Spanish winger who ran alongside Yamal at Euro 2024, Athletic Bilbao's attacking spearhead.
Both of these guys had been broken by injuries this season, a key reason why Spain's two wings had fallen silent simultaneously. But the footage of them jogging, cutting, passing, and receiving on the training field brought a collective sigh of relief across the Spanish football world.
Mundo Deportivo published an article that very day: "Yamal returns to full training, can play World Cup opener at 100%."
Note the word: 100%.
In the medical world, no one uses the word "100%" for their own players. If you use it, it's either a genuine miracle or PR spin.
Based on subsequent events, it was close to a miracle, but not quite there yet.
Hence the face mask.
Chattanooga in June was stifling, like a steam room. In the Spanish team's hotel, Yamal lay on his bed, captured by his girlfriend's camera.
What was the essence of this photo?
It was a denial: "My guy is fine."
An implication: "He's well enough to put on a face mask."
A message: "To all the Barcelona and Spain fans commenting under my Instagram, please stop your hysterics."
But denial aside, the facts were—
De la Fuente made the call:
For the opener against Cape Verde, Yamal comes off the bench.
Fifteen to twenty minutes.
These fifteen to twenty minutes had to accomplish three tasks:
One, restart Yamal's hamstring in a real match situation, absolutely no re-injury; Two, allow Spain to pocket the three points against a minnow like Cape Verde with minimum effort; Three, get everyone—the team, the media, the fans, Barcelona's medical staff, Yamal himself—to reach a consensus that "we are protecting the prodigy."
A win-win-win.
No, a win-win-win-win.
It also conveniently gave a boost to Adidas's World Cup ad campaign—after all, that face standing alongside Zidane, Messi, and Dembele was under contract.
Someone might ask: why not just start him?
The answer lies in three words: fear of recurrence.
Barcelona was scared. The Spanish team was scared. Yamal himself was even more scared.
Eighteen years old. One step away from the Ballon d'Or.
He said on YouTube, "I believe I will win," only to see the 2025 trophy taken by Dembele, leaving him in second place.
This thin membrane needed a fully healed hamstring to be pierced.
If he started the opener, pushed hard, and his hamstring blew up again—
What about Barcelona next season? The next Champions League? Would his entire career be cast in shadow?
No one dared to gamble.
Hence the compromise solution of "15-20 minutes against Cape Verde."
Based on Spain's subsequent schedule, Yamal's playing time was designed as a beautiful upward curve:
June 15 vs. Cape Verde (substitute, 15-20 minutes); June 21 vs. Saudi Arabia (expected increase); June 26 vs. Uruguay (potential starter).
This curve—didn't it look like it was drawn up by Barcelona's medical team and Spain's coaching staff locked in a small, dark room?
It did.
Too much, in fact.
What were the other two teams in Group H doing right now?
South Africa—technically rough, relying on physicality and fighting spirit.
Uruguay—a mix of veterans and newcomers, Bielsa's high-octane style.
For Spain, the real tough match was never Cape Verde, but Uruguay.
That match was when Yamal truly needed to start.
That match was when both wings needed two flying madmen on the pitch simultaneously.
That match was just eleven days after the opener.
Eleven days.
From "lying in bed with a face mask" to "sprinting full tilt through Uruguay's muscular jungle"—the distance was far longer than most people imagined.
But don't forget another variable.
On the night Spain won Euro 2024, Yamal displayed a Palestinian flag during the celebrations.
This action caused an uproar back home in Spain.
Some praised him as a "true fighter," others criticized him for "doing the most unprofessional thing at the moment he should have been most focused."
Barcelona coach Flick's reaction was reportedly "complex feelings."
Spain's Prime Minister, however, publicly supported him.
Politics is a variable that never disappears just because an eighteen-year-old's hamstring heals.
It will follow him into the World Cup.
Follow him onto Instagram.
Follow him onto the front pages of L'Équipe, AS, Mundo Deportivo.
That mask wasn't just covering a face.
It covered the most complicated part of Spain's entire World Cup narrative.
Back to the face mask.
For the sake of an eighteen-year-old, Spain halted warm-up match rotations, altered the starting lineup plan, and even held back another hundred-million-euro winger, Williams—
All so he could come off the bench for fifteen minutes in the opener.
After those fifteen minutes, Spain's title defense would truly begin.
What will happen in those fifteen minutes?
Will Yamal tell the world "I'm back" with one dribble and one assist?
Or will his hamstring sound the alarm again in the seventh minute, Yamal clutching his face as he's helped off by the medical staff, the Spanish fans at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium falling silent in unison?
No one knows.
But one thing is certain.
On June 15th in Atlanta, the world's lenses will focus on an eighteen-year-old boy walking onto the field wearing a face mask.
And he, more than the Ballon d'Or, is closer to the true answer of this summer.