cupworld.club presents
Cup World Notes 001
The Worlds Around The Game
Opening Whistle
Sport is one of humanity’s oldest cultural technologies.
Long before leagues, television deals and billion-pound sponsorships, communities gathered around games to build identity, pass on stories and imagine themselves as part of something larger.
Today sport remains one of the few truly global languages. A goal scored in Barcelona can spark conversations in London, Lagos, São Paulo and Seoul within seconds. A shirt becomes a political statement. A stadium becomes a symbol of civic pride. A tournament becomes a lens through which entire nations see themselves.
Yet much of sports media remains focused on the immediate. Results. Transfers. Rankings. Statistics.
These stories matter, but they rarely tell the whole story.
Beneath every match lies a wider world of migration, memory, design, ritual, politics, creativity and culture.
Cup World Notes exists to explore those worlds.
What can sport tell us about the societies that create it?
Movement 01
Flags, Identity and the New Global Footballer
The image travelled around the world in minutes.
As Barcelona celebrated another league title, teenage star Lamine Yamal appeared draped in a Palestinian flag. What might once have remained a local moment instantly became part of a global conversation.
Football has always reflected the political realities surrounding it. From anti-apartheid campaigns to anti-racism movements, from national independence struggles to debates around migration and citizenship, the game has never existed in isolation.
What has changed is the speed.
Social media has transformed athletes into global cultural figures whose actions can resonate far beyond the stadium. Players are no longer simply representatives of clubs or national teams. They increasingly operate as public figures navigating questions of identity, heritage and belonging.
The modern footballer occupies multiple roles simultaneously: athlete, entertainer, citizen and cultural ambassador.
Football remains a game. But it has also become one of the world’s most influential cultural stages.
Further Reading → Lamine Yamal and Barcelona celebrations
Movement 02
Arsenal and the Making of Modern Black Football Britain
Few clubs tell the story of contemporary Britain as clearly as Arsenal.
Across several generations, the club has become intertwined with the experiences of Black players, supporters and communities whose histories have helped shape modern London itself.
This relationship cannot be understood purely through football. It runs through migration, music, fashion, neighbourhoods and family histories.
From the Windrush generation onwards, London’s sporting culture evolved alongside wider demographic changes. Communities arriving from the Caribbean and later from across Africa transformed the social fabric of the city.
Football became one of the places where those identities were expressed.
Arsenal’s story intersects with pirate radio, grime, community organising, youth culture and everyday life across North and East London.
Like music scenes, football clubs create belonging. They provide rituals, symbols and shared memories.
For many supporters, supporting Arsenal is not simply a sporting preference. It forms part of a wider cultural identity.
Further Reading → How Arsenal became a home for Black fans
Movement 03
The King Returns
Mohamed Salah and Contemporary Mythology
When Adidas portrayed Mohamed Salah as a modern Egyptian king, it was more than a marketing campaign.
It was an exercise in mythology.
Throughout history, societies have elevated athletes into symbolic figures. Ancient Olympians, heavyweight champions and football legends often become vessels through which wider hopes and identities are projected.
Salah occupies a particularly fascinating position within this tradition.
He represents multiple worlds simultaneously: Liverpool icon, Egyptian national hero, global sporting ambassador and one of the most recognisable athletes on the planet.
What makes the campaign interesting is the way it consciously engages with heritage and symbolism. The imagery draws upon thousands of years of Egyptian history while positioning Salah firmly within a contemporary global landscape.
Brands increasingly recognise that athletes are not merely performers. They are storytellers, symbols and cultural reference points.
The crown merely makes visible what many supporters already see.
Further Reading → Adidas reimagines Mo Salah as a modern Egyptian king
Movement 04
Before Football
The Rubber Ball Game
Thousands of years before FIFA.
Thousands of years before the Premier League.
Communities across Mesoamerica played a game that connected ritual, astronomy and society.
The Rubber Ball Game remains one of humanity’s most fascinating sporting traditions.
Unlike many contemporary sports, the game was never solely about competition. Courts functioned as ceremonial spaces where politics, religion, performance and communal identity converged.
Across cities including Chichén Itzá, El Tajín and Copán, ball courts occupied prominent positions within the urban landscape.
Their scale suggests that these were not merely sporting venues but stages upon which broader cultural narratives were enacted.
The game itself varied across regions and centuries, yet certain themes remained constant: movement, spectacle, symbolism and participation.
Modern sporting culture often separates competition from wider social life. The Rubber Ball Game reminds us that games have historically served many purposes at once: education, storytelling, diplomacy, spirituality and collective identity.
Long before the first World Cup final, communities were already using sport to explain their place in the world.
Perhaps that remains true today.
Further Reading → The Rubber Ball Game — Penn Museum
Movement 05
The Ball
Football’s Most Overlooked Design Object
Every World Cup produces iconic moments.
Few people remember the object at the centre of them.
The football itself.
From the Adidas Telstar to the Trionda, tournament balls reveal fascinating stories about engineering, manufacturing and visual culture.
For generations, the World Cup ball has acted as a marker of its era.
The black-and-white Telstar became synonymous with the television age. The colourful balls of the 1990s reflected football’s emergence as a global entertainment industry. Today’s tournament balls are increasingly shaped by data science, aerodynamics and digital manufacturing.
Yet beyond performance, the football is also a design object.
Like a pair of trainers, a record sleeve or a camera, it reflects wider movements in graphic design and technology.
The Adidas Trionda demonstrates how contemporary sporting equipment increasingly operates as a canvas for cultural storytelling.
The object itself becomes part of the narrative surrounding the tournament.
Few people attend a World Cup to look at the ball.
Yet every image, every goal and every moment passes through it.
Sport often begins with an object.
Understanding the object helps us understand the culture.
Further Reading → How the Adidas Trionda became a canvas for cultural creativity
Movement 06
Goals That Changed The World
Great goals do more than win matches.
They become stories.
The most memorable sporting moments often transcend the game itself, entering a shared cultural archive where they are replayed, reinterpreted and passed between generations.
Ask someone where they were when Diego Maradona scored against England in 1986, Andrés Iniesta scored in Johannesburg in 2010, or when Lionel Messi finally lifted the World Cup in 2022, and the answer rarely begins with tactics.
It begins with memory.
Football’s greatest goals operate like cultural landmarks. They become reference points through which communities understand particular moments in history.
The goal itself often lasts only seconds. Its cultural life can endure for decades.
This is perhaps football’s greatest storytelling power. Unlike many art forms, its most iconic moments emerge unexpectedly. They cannot be scripted.
They arrive in real time before millions of witnesses. Then they become mythology.
Football’s archive is not simply a history of sport. It is a history of collective memory.
Further Reading → Fifty greatest World Cup goals
Movement 07
Reading The Game
Sport has produced some of the most compelling cultural writing of the modern era.
The best sports books rarely focus solely on sport.
Instead they use games as a lens through which to explore society, politics, geography, economics and identity.
Football writer Simon Kuper understood this when he published Football Against The Enemy, a book that transformed the way many readers thought about the sport.
David Goldblatt’s The Ball Is Round expanded the scope even further, tracing football’s development across continents and cultures.
Meanwhile Brilliant Orange explored Dutch football as an expression of Dutch society itself.
These works remind us that football is never just football.
Every stadium exists within a city. Every club exists within a community. Every supporter arrives carrying a particular history.
Understanding football requires more than watching matches. It requires reading the worlds that surround them.
- Football Against The Enemy — Simon Kuper
- The Ball Is Round — David Goldblatt
- Brilliant Orange — David Winner
- Inverting The Pyramid — Jonathan Wilson
- Fever Pitch — Nick Hornby
Further Reading → A fundamental football reading list
Movement 08
Road To 2026
The 2026 FIFA World Cup will be the largest tournament in football history.
Hosted across the United States, Canada and Mexico, it represents far more than an expansion of the competition.
It offers a snapshot of the modern world itself.
Three countries. Sixteen cities. Forty-eight nations. Millions of journeys.
The scale is unprecedented.
Yet what makes the tournament particularly fascinating is the diversity of stories converging around it.
World Cups have always acted as mirrors. They reveal the hopes, tensions and identities of the societies that host them.
The 2026 World Cup arrives at a moment defined by migration, digital connectivity and cultural hybridity.
Many players now represent identities that stretch across multiple countries and communities. Supporters travel with equally complex stories.
For Cup World Notes, the most interesting questions sit beyond the tournament itself.
What happens to host cities? How do local creative communities respond? What visual identities emerge? Which stories survive beyond the final whistle?
The World Cup remains football’s greatest stage. But its most revealing narratives are often found beyond the pitch.
Further Reading → World Cup 2026 squads and stories
From TheGRIN.io Archives
Sport Beyond The Stadium
One of the reasons cupworld.club feels at home within TheGRIN.io is that many of the themes explored throughout this issue already exist across the wider network.
Migration. Identity. Memory. Community.
TheGRIN.io’s ongoing editorial themes — Diaspora Dialogues, Heritage Justice, Global Roots and Creative Resilience — all offer ways to understand sport as something larger than competition.
Football terraces, supporter chants and fan traditions demonstrate that sport and music frequently operate within the same cultural ecosystems.
Across these themes, a common idea emerges.
Sport is not separate from culture. It is culture.
Extra Time
Watch, Read, Visit
Watch
- Zidane: A 21st Century Portrait
- Senna
- Diego Maradona
- The Two Escobars
- Once In A Lifetime
Read
- Football Against The Enemy — Simon Kuper
- The Ball Is Round — David Goldblatt
- Brilliant Orange — David Winner
- Inverting The Pyramid — Jonathan Wilson
Visit
- National Football Museum, Manchester
- Museu do Futebol, São Paulo
- FIFA Museum, Zurich
