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Should You Feel Bad About Rooting Against the US in the World Cup?

June 11, 2026 | FlaglerLive | 4 Comments

President Donald Trump appears at a FIFA Club World Cup 2025 match at New Jersey’s MetLife Stadium on July 13, 2025, with FIFA president Gianni Infantino standing to the right.
President Donald Trump appears at a FIFA Club World Cup 2025 match at New Jersey’s MetLife Stadium on July 13, 2025, with FIFA president Gianni Infantino standing to the right. (Eva Marie Uzcategui/FIFA via Getty Images)

By Adam Kadlac

The 2026 World Cup promises to be the planet’s most-watched sporting event. It’s also poised to generate its fair share of controversy.

Taking into account the history of corruption in FIFA, the sport’s governing body, it would be hard to blame anyone who decided to ignore this year’s competition.

However, some viewers of this summer’s tournament may face an additional dilemma.

Political tensions are high in the U.S., where most of the tournament’s matches will be played. The Trump administration is historically unpopular, and its critics are already concerned about sportswashing: when governments use the spectacle of athletic competition to burnish their image and distract the public.

As I point out in my 2022 book, “The Ethics of Sports Fandom,” fans who are critical of their country’s behavior sometimes feel ambivalent about rooting for their national sports teams – and may even feel compelled to root against them.

After all, it’s one thing to pull for your national team when patriotism feels uncomplicated. It’s quite another when you aren’t feeling very proud to be an American.

The Cold War made it easy for many Americans to rally behind the 1980 U.S men’s hockey team in its victory over the Soviet Union in the “Miracle on Ice.” But what do you do when you don’t see your country as the “good guys”?

Patriotism doesn’t mean blind loyalty

Some fans might double down on their patriotic commitments during the tournament. They’ll use the occasion to champion America in all things, whether it’s the country’s battles in the Middle East or its national team taking on Paraguay at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles.

Sports have a way of fueling nationalistic passions, and I fully expect plenty of people who don’t care much about soccer to channel their patriotic sentiments into the tournament.

However, rooting for your country’s national soccer team doesn’t mean that you endorse everything your country does, any more than wanting a friend to get a promotion at work requires you to support all of their behavior. As the philosopher Eamonn Callan has argued, a proper love of country requires citizens to be clear-eyed about its faults. The true patriot highlights problems and works to correct them, independent of how much they want the national team to win their next match.

By the same token, I think a deep love of country can coexist with ambivalent feelings about how the national team performs on the field. If patriots can disapprove of their country’s military adventurism – either because they see it as flatly unjust or because it casts their country in an unfavorable light on the international stage – there is nothing fundamentally unpatriotic about not wanting the U.S. to do well in the World Cup.

Other fans might invoke the mantra that it’s important to simply keep politics out of sports – that the games should be a refuge from the controversies that plague so many other aspects of civic life.

But as I argue in my book, fully separating politics and sports is almost impossible. It requires fans to view athletes as nothing more than bodies who exist to perform on the field. It means team executives and owners do little more than sign paychecks. And it ignores the reality that sports are woven into the social, economic and political life of communities.

Outcomes don’t change a thing

For fans who choose to watch, then, my suggestion is to view the action on the field as you would any other sporting event.

Root for whomever you want to win, for more or less any reason that moves you.

Because for all the political significance attached to the World Cup, the winner or loser of any given contest has essentially no broader political significance. The problems that existed before the tournament will still demand attention when it is over, no matter who happens to win.

Success or failure on the pitch isn’t likely to bring about meaningful political change. After all, whether a government has the right legislative agenda or approach to foreign policy is totally divorced from its national soccer team’s ability to score goals.

Viewed in this way, rooting for your country’s national soccer team doesn’t imply blind loyalty to your country or ignorance of its flaws. It simply means that you want the athletes who represent your country to win the game they are playing on that particular day.

Athletes have long been able to navigate this ambivalence. You’ll regularly hear them trying to separate a love of their country and its people from support of problematic regimes.

When Iranian soccer player Mehdi Taremi refused to celebrate a goal in a January 2026 Greek Super League match, he embraced precisely such a position. Thousands of people had been killed during protests of the Iranian regime, and the moment called for a different reaction.

“There are problems between the people and the government,” he said. “The people are always with us, and that’s why we are with them.” For Teremi, publicly celebrating as an Iranian citizen abroad felt too much like endorsing the current regime, something he had no desire to do. If the athletes who wear their national colors can maintain such nuanced views, surely fans can, too.

Young Middle Eastern man wearing a green, dry-fit shirt and a backpack.
Mehdi Taremi arrives at an Iran national soccer team practice in Antalya, Turkey, ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup.
Sinan Ozmus/Anadolu via Getty Images

Of course, nuance can be difficult in today’s political climate, and the rhetoric around the World Cup likely won’t change that. When the U.S. men’s hockey team won gold at the Olympics back in February, Donald Trump attempted to turn it into a personal political victory by inviting the team to his State of the Union address.

“Our country is winning again,” Trump said, devoting nearly six minutes of his speech to the team’s victory.

The outlook for the U.S. men in this year’s World Cup is not quite as bright, but chances are good that someone will try to co-opt their success or failure for political purposes. Fans don’t have to fall into the trap.The Conversation

Adam Kadlac is Teaching Professor of Philosophy at Wake Forest University.

The Conversation arose out of deep-seated concerns for the fading quality of our public discourse and recognition of the vital role that academic experts could play in the public arena. Information has always been essential to democracy. It’s a societal good, like clean water. But many now find it difficult to put their trust in the media and experts who have spent years researching a topic. Instead, they listen to those who have the loudest voices. Those uninformed views are amplified by social media networks that reward those who spark outrage instead of insight or thoughtful discussion. The Conversation seeks to be part of the solution to this problem, to raise up the voices of true experts and to make their knowledge available to everyone. The Conversation publishes nightly at 9 p.m. on FlaglerLive.
See the Full Conversation Archives
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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. JimboXYZ says

    June 11, 2026 at 9:34 pm

    Nope, it’s just a game or few in the grand scheme of things. If they make a run, fine, hope the best for them, cheer them on. Would anyone bet on them if they had only one bet to make with all their worldly possessions on the line ? And that’s what the World Cup has become as well, just more games to bet on.

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  2. Laurel says

    June 12, 2026 at 9:29 am

    I’m not a sports fan, so I won’t watch.

    I feel sort of bad for these athletes who give their all to play, but they are judged by their country.

    If you love soccer, watch and enjoy. What’s annoying is, Trump has to place himself in the spotlight of everything. Look at the picture at the beginning of the article, it’s all about him, not about the sport. If you can ignore, and enjoy the game, do so. For me, the “FIFA Peace Prize” caused FIFA to lose credibility. Again, too bad for the athletes.

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  3. Jim says

    June 12, 2026 at 11:50 am

    Personally, I wish the USA team the best in this tournament. They are not “Trump’s team”. They are the American team. Trump can (and will) try to co-opt this to make it about Trump and MAGA (in that order) but that’s just another side-show from the man currently sinking in the worst presidency in American history (and there’s a lot of competition).
    I do not support FIFA – as the article alludes to – it is a very corrupt organization. And they gave Trump the “FIFA peace prize” which pretty much destroyed any dignity they had left to claim.
    I’ll cheer for a sports team representing my country and not the current “leadership”.

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  4. R.S. says

    June 12, 2026 at 12:31 pm

    The Copa Mundial de Fútbol is the one sport event that does indeed unite the world’s great football nations from Africa, South America, Europe, Asia, and Australia. And, yes, all eyes of the world are on the US, the fact that a Somali referee has been barred from entering the US, the fact that the Iranian team must fly in and out of Mexico without their support staff to play in the US, the fact that Scottish fans have been denied entry into the US despite their highly overpriced tickets bought and paid for. The world speaks with one voice: What on earth happened to the US as it’s going full blast into an autocracy by a demented autocrat, despite Infantino’s tickling his egomania with a laughable UEFA peace prize. With ICE’s carting off more fans into their concentration camps, the prestige of the US can only go down from here.

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