In November 2025, a football miracle unfolded in Kingston, Jamaica when Curaçao, a sun-drenched Caribbean Island with a population of roughly 156,000 people, held Jamaica to a hard-fought 0-0 draw.
With this result, Curaçao clinched top spot in their qualifying group and booked a historic ticket to the 2026 FIFA World Cup.
This tiny Dutch Caribbean territory, with a land area smaller than many cities, became the smallest nation by both population and geography ever to reach football’s greatest stage.
Curaçao’s rise defies every conventional logic in international sport.
With a GDP of around $3.5-4 billion and an economy centered on tourism, oil refining, and offshore finance, the island lacks the vast resources that usually fuel football powerhouses.
Yet, the Blue Sharks remained undefeated through qualifying.
Players like Tahith Chong (Sheffield United), combined with homegrown talent and tactical discipline to punch far above their weight. When the final whistle blew, tears poured in the capital, Willemstad as the island erupted in carnival-style celebrations.
This achievement stands in stark contrast to football’s more frustrating realities.
Think of India, home to nearly 1.4 billion people-almost 9,000 times Curaçao’s population. Despite its massive talent pool and booming economy, India has never truly competed at a World Cup.
Curaçao’s success also echoes the growing wave of small-island and developing-nation breakthroughs.
Cape Verde, with around 525,000 people, has similarly punched above its weight, qualifying for the 2026 World Cup after strong Africa Cup of Nations performances.
These Cinderella stories prove that heart, organisation, and tactical intelligence can overcome demographic and economic disadvantages.
Curaçao’s feat has inspired hope across Africa and the Caribbean.
In Rwanda, a country that has transformed itself with outstanding resilience and development since the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi, football fans especially President Paul Kagame have taken great notice of this.
Rwanda has steadily invested in youth academies, infrastructure, and grassroots programs. There’s no doubt that when Rwanda eventually makes it to the World Cup, the world will once again be writing headlines just like Curaçao’s.
They will be stories of vision, unity, and sporting triumph against the odds.
Curaçao’s group-stage opponents will include football giants, (they play in Group E against Germany, Ecuador and Ivory Coast) yet the mere presence of the Blue Sharks inspires millions in small nations worldwide.
In an era of billion-dollar superstars and powerhouse federations, Curaçao reminds us why we love the beautiful game: sometimes, the smallest voices produce the loudest roars.