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MERRY POTTER

A broken leg, surgery, working for David Sullivan, being sacked by David Sullivan, to say things had looked bleak for Sweden’s main men during the Premier League season, is an understatement. Alexander Isak and Graham Potter were at a low ebb; the former failed to live up to his record-breaking £125m move to Liverpool, unable to find neither fitness nor form, ending the campaign with a pitiful four goals in 22 games having never got going at Anfield. Potter was churned out by West Ham in September, deemed unfit to lead the team forward, a low moment for anyone at the London Stadium. In fairness, the team was doomed regardless and while he is leading a team to a 5-1 thrashing of Tunisia at the Geopolitics World Cup, the Hammers are planning for life in the Championship and Sullivan is no longer co-chair.

It is not just individuals, the Swedish national team was a complete embarrassment for a sustained period. Thankfully USA USA USA Mexico is the land where dreams are made and this GWC is all about uniting the globe, supposedly. There is nothing like the hard luck story of the Swedish underdogs, who managed to partner Isak with £63m Premier League winning thoroughbred Viktor Gyökeres on Sunday. They finished bottom of their qualifying group collecting two points from six matches, losing at home to Kosovo and generally just being quite pathetic. Jon Dahl Tomasson got the boot for producing a smorgasbord of incompetent performances. The former Newcastle striker was out and the ex-Macclesfield defender Graham Potter was in. Despite the inept attempt to reach the tournament first time around, the kind people of Uefa offered a playoff route thanks to the Nations League. In the end two competitive wins in 17 months was inexplicably enough to book a place for the GWC as Sweden defied the odds … and logic.

It is now three victories in as many games for Potter et al after giving Tunisia the shooing of a lifetime. Brighton’s Yasin Ayari closed the sandwich with one early and one late goal, as Isak, Gyökeres and Mattias Svanberg provided the heft in a resounding win over the 56th best team on the planet. It’s not a bad start considering they were officially the worst team in European qualifying but everyone likes an underdog story. All of Potter’s memories of wondering what to do with Niclas Füllkrug melted away when Isak and Gyökeres tested the strength of the netting. “They haven’t played that much together, so it’s going to get better the more ‌they play,” Potter purred. “I thought they worked well for each other, worked hard. It’s nice for them to score goals, this convinces them that they are on the right path, but I thought they were both fantastic.”

Football, like life, is rarely a meritocracy and Sweden have proved that just by being here. They probably shouldn’t be at the tournament but there were 48 spots to be inexplicably filled and they seemed most willing to work through the summer. If this GWC is about anything, it is celebrating failure from the people that priced the tickets to the public transport planning. Sweden are the embodiment of this, spending a long time being an expensive flop, not knowing what they were doing as they bungled at every opportunity but still made it to where they want to be, providing hope to other underperforming entities worldwide. It does not matter how bad things get, you can still live out your dreams whether by accident or design. Sweden are providing a life-affirming message to everyone who has hit rock bottom: there is always a chance to bounce back and have the last laugh.

LIVE ON BIG WEBSITE

Daniel Harris is in the hot seat to bring you minute-by-minute coverage of Spain 5-0 Cape Verde from 5pm BST (12pm EDT), with Rob Smyth on deck for Belgium 1-0 Egypt at 8pm BST (3pm EDT). Rob goes again for Saudi Arabia 1-2 Uruguay at 11pm BST (6pm EDT) and Martin Pegan is primed for action and Iran 0-0 New Zealand from 2am BST (9pm EST).

QUOTE OF THE DAY

“For our countries, there is no such thing as an unimportant World Cup match. To suggest that these matches are somehow less important is deeply disappointing and fails to recognise the efforts, sacrifices and aspirations of players, coaches, clubs, football leaders and supporters across the world” – 13 fresh and funky GWC teams, deep breath … Cape Verde, Curaçao, Uzbekistan, DR Congo, Haiti, Algeria, Tunisia, Morocco, Egypt, Ghana, Senegal, Ivory Coast and South Africa, call out Uefa bigwig Aleksander Ceferin over reported remarks in which he said the expanded tournament would lead to many “completely uninteresting” matches.

RECOMMENDED BOOKMARKING

It’s the GWC Golden Boot page, updated live throughout the tournament.

FOOTBALL DAILY LETTERS

Poor Haiti tried everything to change their destiny against Scotland over the weekend, even swapping Providence for Fortuné in the 86th minute” – Sholem Lenkiewicz.

Margaritha coming on for a Curaçao led by D1ck Advocaat is definitely the most alcoholic GWC moment so far. Meanwhile, following on from the idea that Football Daily does not do weekends (yesterday’s Football Daily letters), yesterday’s edition ended in my junk folder” – Nigel Sanders [and balance is restored – Football Daily Ed].

If you have any, please send letters to the.boss@theguardian.com. Today’s prizeless letter o’ the day is … Sholem Lenkiewicz. Terms and conditions for our competitions, when we run them, are here. 

RECOMMENDED LISTENING

The latest episode of World Cup Daily is live live live! Max Rushden is joined by Barry Glendenning, Alex Abnos and Ben Fisher as the pod squad discuss the cracker between Netherlands and Japan, while Curaçao’s first taste of the World Cup … against Germany.

RECOMMENDED WATCHING

And if you prefer to look at the faces of Max, Barry, Alex and Ben, you can watch the video of the podcast right here.

NEWS, BITS AND BOBS

Fifa’s discrimination monitor at the GWC has called for video assistant referee Shaun Evans to be removed for appearing to make a hand gesture resembling a white supremacist sign.

Fifa wants to schedule a symbolic match between Israel and Palestine as the opening game of a new under-15s tournament in September.

Iran’s players have arrived in the US amid a peace deal but admit that tensions in the build-up “undermines joy”.

US broadcaster Fox will not face any sanction from Fifa for breaking the governing body’s advertising rules during the opening game last week.

A tough GWC bow for Curaçao – Germany’s Kai Havertz scored twice as Die Mannschaft cruised to a 7-1 win in Houston. “This is not a disgrace,” brave-faced head coach D1ck Advocaat.

The Netherlands and Japan shared four goals from an entertaining game in Arlington, Daichi Kamada’s late slice of luck rescuing a point.

Eberechi Eze says he’s happy to take a penalty for England, despite his miss from the spot for Arsenal in the Bigger Cup final. “For me it’s not something I wish never happened. I’m grateful it happened,” zenned the forward. “I’m going to grow from it, learn from it and move forward.”

And Thomas Tuchel is unlikely to be too thrilled at Clement Turpin being appointed as referee for England’s GWC opener against Croatia. In his Bayern Munich days, Tuchel gave this glowing appraisal of the French official after a loss to Manchester City: “I’d give him a one out of 10. He was absolutely terrible. It’s unbelievable at this level.”

STILL WANT MORE?

To no one’s great surprise, Spain are – justifiably – in bullish mood. Sid Lowe on a camp confident of repeating their Euro 2024 triumph. Sid has also interviewed Iraq’s flamin’ head coach Graham Arnold, who has had to contend with war, 50C heat and playoffs to steer the Asian country to their first World Cup in 40 years.

Morocco were sensational at times against Brazil and no one impressed more than Ayyoub Bouaddi. Ed Aarons on the teenage Lille midfielder who glided on to the very biggest stage.

Following high praise from Jude Bellingham for Jordan Henderson, here’s Jacob Steinberg on why the veteran’s Euro 2024 snub was a mistake, and what the Brentford midfielder is bringing to the England camp this time around.

Scotland’s weekend party shows no sign of stopping. Mark Brown and Paul MacInnes explore how the country celebrated victory over Haiti, and Ewan Murray has a look at what happens next on the pitch.

Meanwhile Rob Draper takes in a big night in New York and finds that, while the GWC may be in town, the Knicks rule in Manhattan.

Where have the wags gone? Matt Hughes in Miami notes that the BBC is not the only World Cup institution to have stayed at home.

Will Norway’s slick modern model succeed where the class of ’94 failed? Nick Ames has some thoughts.

Luke Entwistle sits down for a hot chat with Adrien Rabiot and why France are out for “revenge” at the GWC.

And what’s it like to be in a World Cup host city? If you live in one of Mexico City, Guadalajara and Monterrey, Toronto, Vancouver, Seattle, San Francisco Bay Area, Los Angeles, Dallas, Houston, Kansas City, Atlanta, Miami, Boston, Philadelphia or New York/New Jersey, we would be delighted to hear from you.

ON THE BALL

Big Website’s app now features a special edition of On the Ball for the Geopolitics World Cup. On the Ball: World Stage invites you to guess the World Cup player in five attempts – and it’s pretty tricky. You can have a go right now – and there are loads of other good puzzles to take up your time, too.

BEYOND THE GWC

Ruben Amorim has agreed to become Milan head coach in a boost to Manchester United finances.

Real Madrid have announced a £52m deal to sign Chelsea defender Marc Cucurella.

And Daniel Kretinsky, the owner of Royal Mail, is set to overtake David Sullivan as West Ham’s largest shareholder after agreeing to buy an additional stake in the club from the Gold family.

MEMORY LANE

Óscar Miguez of Peñarol beats Aberdeen’s Fred Martin to the ball during Uruguay’s 7-0 evisceration of Scotland in Basel in 1954. It remains Scotland’s biggest defeat ever, a skelping that shouldn’t have been that surprising given Uruguay were the reigning champions, manager Andy Beattie had resigned after losing to Austria three days earlier, to be replaced by team physio (!) Dawson Walker, and it was 38 degrees Celsius in Switzerland. Scottish footballers are not designed to operate in 38 degrees of heat, so let’s cut them some slack here.

THE MERCIFUL KEY