The World Cup: A Primer from Grandpa-III

Letter III: Inside the Tournament—How the World Cup Works Today

Dear Parth, Viyanka, and Veyd,

The World Cup is not a single match. It is a long journey played over several weeks, where every stage slowly separates the strong from the stronger, until only one team remains.

The tournament you are watching is the biggest World Cup in history. For the first time, 48 countries have qualified to take part. More than 1,200 players have travelled from all over the world to represent their nations. Over 39 days, they will play 104 matches to decide who becomes the world champion.

The matches are being hosted across three countries—the United States, Canada, and Mexico. Stadiums in different cities are alive with colour, music, and cheering fans from every corner of the globe. It is like one giant festival of football spread across a continent.

To manage such a large tournament, the teams are first divided into 12 groups of four teams each. This is called the group stage.

In each group, every team plays three matches—one against each of the other teams. A win gives 3 points, a draw gives 1 point, and a loss gives no points. At the end of these matches, the teams are ranked according to their points.

The best teams from each group move forward. In this World Cup, some of the strongest third-placed teams may also get a chance to qualify. The teams that do not make it forward are eliminated and return home.

Once the group stage is over, the tournament changes completely. It becomes the knockout stage.

Here, there are no second chances. If you lose, you are out. If you win, you move ahead. Every match becomes a matter of survival.

The journey then moves step by step: first the Round of 32, then the Round of 16, followed by the quarter-finals, where only eight teams remain.

After that come the semi-finals, where four teams fight for a place in the final. The two winners of the semi-finals reach the final match, which decides the World Champion.

The two losing semi-finalists do not go to the final. Instead, they play one more match called the third-place playoff, which decides who finishes third and fourth.

If a knockout match is tied after 90 minutes, it goes into extra time. If it is still tied, it is decided by penalty kicks—one of the most exciting and tense moments in all of sport.

The World Cup is like a great mountain.

Forty-eight teams begin at the base. Some fall early, some climb steadily, and a few reach the highest slopes. But only one team reaches the summit and lifts the trophy.

And as we watch this journey unfold, it is worth remembering that somewhere in these stadiums, under these bright lights, football is not just being played.

It is being lived.

As the group matches end and the knockout rounds begin, the World Cup slowly changes its character. It is no longer only about rules, points, and progress. It becomes a stage for courage, surprise, and unforgettable moments created by individual players and teams.

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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