World Cup: A Primer from Grandpa-I

(This series of short letters has been written as FIFA World Cup fever grips the world today. They are meant as a way of introducing my grandchildren to the game they have been watching with growing curiosity. The final letter in the series will appear after the tournament has concluded.

They are not intended as a technical guide, nor as a comprehensive history of football, but simply as a gentle attempt to explain why this game excites so many millions across the world.

In writing them, I have tried to follow the natural unfolding of the tournament itself—beginning with the basics of the game, moving through its history and structure, and finally pausing at its legends, unforgettable moments, and the enduring values that the game celebrates.

Each letter is meant to be read independently, but also as part of a larger journey that mirrors the tournament itself.

If they help young readers enjoy the World Cup with a little more understanding and imagination, they will have served their purpose well.)

Letter I: Meet the World’s Favourite Game

Dear Parth, Viyanka, and Veyd,

The world is gripped by a kind of fever these days—a fever that brings people into moments of intense excitement and deep emotion. People are glued to television screens across the globe. Streets in many countries erupt in celebration or silence. Newspapers, websites, and television channels focus endlessly on players, teams, and nations. The world is currently witnessing the FIFA World Cup.

So have you ever wondered why billions of people become so excited when football matches are being played in the USA, Canada, and Mexico—the host nations for this World Cup?

To understand that excitement, we first need to understand the game itself.

Football, in its simplest form, is very old. Children in many parts of the ancient world played games in which they kicked a ball made of cloth or leather. But the modern version of the game we know today began in England about 150 years ago, when people agreed on clear rules so that everyone could play in the same way.

Today, football is played almost everywhere in the world. It is simple to understand, but very difficult to master.

A football field is a large rectangle of grass. At each end stands a goal, protected by a net. The field is long enough to demand constant running, passing, and thinking from every player.

Each team has eleven players. One of them is the goalkeeper, who guards the goal and is the only player allowed to use hands—but only inside a marked area near the goal.

In front of the goalkeeper are the defenders, who try to stop the other team from scoring. Ahead of them are the midfielders, who link defence and attack. Closest to the opponent’s goal are the forwards, whose main task is to score.

Teams arrange themselves in patterns called formations, such as 4-4-2 or 4-3-3. These numbers simply describe how many defenders, midfielders, and forwards are on the field.

A goal is scored when the entire ball crosses the line inside the goal. The team with more goals wins.

If both teams score the same number of goals, the match is called a draw.

Football is exciting because goals are rare, and every moment can change the outcome.

The referee ensures that the rules are followed. When a rule is broken, the referee stops play with a whistle and may award a foul.

A yellow card is a warning. A red card means the player must leave the field immediately.

Sometimes a team is awarded a penalty kick, taken from a special spot close to the goal, with only the goalkeeper allowed to defend.

Football may look simple, but inside it lives teamwork, speed, planning, courage, and surprise.

That is why people call it the “beautiful game.”

With lots of love,

Dadu

Published by udaykumarvarma9834

Uday Kumar Varma, a Harvard-educated civil servant and former Secretary to Government of India, with over forty years of public service at the highest levels of government, has extensive knowledge, experience and expertise in the fields of media and entertainment, corporate affairs, administrative law and industrial and labour reform. He has served on the Central Administrative Tribunal and also briefly as Secretary General of ASSOCHAM.

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