Football, is a Game of chances, and there are only Two (2) possible outcomes in a World Cup; Win or Go Home without the trophy!
Football has never needed inventing when it comes to heartbreak, but on July 1, in Boston, Senegal handed the world a fresh case study in how to lose from a position of total control.
With two goals up and five minutes left on the clock and a place in the last 16 of the 2026 World Cup within reach, the mystery was unravelled. Goals from Habib Diarra and Ismaila Sarr had Senegal cruising until Belgium substitute Romelu Lukaku pulled one back in the 86th minute, and Youri Tielemans leveled it three minutes later. Extra time settled nothing until a controversial penalty, awarded after a VAR review, saw Tielemans convert in the 125th minute (reportedly the latest goal scored in World Cup history). Belgium won 3-2 and just like that, Senegal were sent packing.
If it feels familiar, it should. Blowing a commanding lead is one of football’s oldest tricks. North Korea led Portugal 3-0 in the 1966 quarter-final and lost 5-3. Arsenal were 4-0 up on Newcastle in February 2011 and had to settle for a 4-4 draw. Schalke clawed back from four goals down against Borussia Dortmund in 2017. Angola and Mali traded four goals apiece at the 2010 Africa Cup of Nations. Collapses aren’t new, and they aren’t uniquely African. They’re football.
So why does this one sting differently?
In all, this is a good case study, reflective of the continental sloppy football character, behaviour and overall mentality. Far beyond the pitch, this match reveals the structural, institutional and systemic weakness that has eaten deep into the continental football soul, for so long.
Because Senegal wasn’t alone. Ivory Coast fell to Norway. DR Congo fell to England. Three of the continent’s strongest sides, in a tournament where Africa had more representation than ever before, exited within days of each other in strikingly similar fashion: once in control, and then suddenly not.
That’s the part worth sitting with.
A Record Field, a Familiar Ending
Ten African nations qualified for this World Cup which is more than at any point in the tournament’s history, roughly a fifth of the expanded 48-team field. Nine of the ten made it out of the group stage, a genuinely historic achievement worth celebrating in its own right. But the round of 32 told an older story.
Morocco was the exception, edging past the Netherlands on penalties and then beating Canada to reach a quarter-final against France; with a chance to match or better the continent’s best-ever World Cup finish: the 2022 semi-final run. Everyone else who reached the knockouts and went out lost the same way: leads unprotected, closing minutes badly managed, composure missing exactly when it mattered most.
That’s the pattern that deserves scrutiny. Not a curse. Not bad luck. A pattern.
What Actually Keeps Happening
Strip away the mysticism and a few honest, repeatable problems show up match after match.
Concentration slips late. Whatever discipline holds for the first 70 minutes tends to loosen after it, and opponents have gotten very good at spotting the exact moment it happens.
In-game management lags. Substitutions arrive late, tactical adjustments arrive later, and by the time changes are made, the opponent already has the initiative.
Mentality wavers against bigger reputations. Leads that would be defended comfortably against lesser opposition get surrendered under the weight of a “bigger” name across the pitch.
Politics intrudes on preparation. Bonus disputes and federation dysfunction have an unfortunate habit of surfacing at exactly the moments players need to be thinking about nothing but football.
None of this is fate. It’s process and process can be fixed.
The Case Against the Curse
There is no curse, I honestly think. There is no ceiling written into African football by forces beyond anyone’s control. What there is, consistently, is a gap in structure: coaching depth, sports science, player-development pathways, and federations that treat football as football first and a source of patronage a distant second.
Morocco’s run in 2022, and its position again in this tournament, is proof that gap is closable and not evidence of an exception to a rule. It happened because of investment, planning, and a federation that largely got out of its own way. That’s a replicable model, not a miracle.
Ivory Coast, DR Congo, and Senegal are out, and the disappointment is real and earned. But the more useful response than mourning is asking what changes before the next tournament, rather than filing this one under something beyond anyone’s control. Ninety minutes is enough time to win a football match. It’s also enough time to lose one. The difference, most of the time, isn’t luck. It’s preparation.



