A young player with exceptional talent who's expected to become world class. The label creates pressure and expectations. Some wonderkids fulfill the hype (Messi, Mbappé), others don't (Freddy Adu, remember him?). Football Manager made the term mainstream - everyone's hunting the next wonderkid before their price explodes. The hype machine starts younger every year.
Lamine Yamal became Barcelona's latest wonderkid, playing first-team football at 16 - the hype around him mirrors earlier prodigies like Messi and Ansu Fati, with everyone waiting to see if he can handle the weight of expectation.
Robbie
Jan 31, 2026
Carefully controlling how much a player plays to prevent injuries. Involves resting players who've played too many minutes, monitoring training loads, and sometimes sitting out less important games. Modern sports science tracks everything. Fans complain when their best players get rested, but the alternative is burning them out. The fixture congestion in modern football makes it more important than ever.
Guardiola's rotation of key players is workload management in action - Haaland might miss a League Cup game so he's fresh for the Champions League, and the data from sports science informs every decision about who plays and who rests.
Robbie
Feb 8, 2026
The FIFA World Cup. International football's biggest tournament, held every four years since 1930 (with breaks for World War II). 32 teams qualify through continental competitions, then play a month-long tournament in the host country. Brazil have won it five times, more than anyone else. The 2026 edition expands to 48 teams and will be hosted across the USA, Canada, and Mexico.
Argentina won the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, beating France on penalties in what many called the greatest final ever played. Messi finally got the trophy that had eluded him his entire career.
Robbie
Jan 27, 2026
British slang for a world-class goal. The kind that makes you stop what you're doing and rewatch it five times. Usually involves long range, insane technique, or both - think volleys from 30 yards, bicycle kicks, solo runs through entire defences. A true worldie ends up in highlight reels for decades.
Zinedine Zidane's volley in the 2002 Champions League final is the ultimate worldie - meeting Roberto Carlos's looping cross with a perfectly-timed left-footed volley that flew into the top corner from outside the box.
Robbie
Jan 25, 2026