International football coverage from every corner of the globe
Club football gets the headlines, but international football is where it gets personal. This is where players carry their countries, where entire nations stop what they’re doing, and where a single goal can send a fanbase into delirium. 101 Great Goals covers it all — from the biggest tournaments on the planet to the qualifiers and friendlies that shape how those tournaments look.
The FIFA World Cup
Nothing in football comes close to the World Cup. It is the most watched sporting event on earth, held every four years, and it has a way of producing moments that simply don’t happen anywhere else. Legends are made in World Cups. Careers are defined by them. The 2026 edition — hosted across the United States, Canada and Mexico — is the largest yet, with 48 nations competing across 104 matches in 16 cities. Argentina head into the tournament as defending champions after their remarkable victory in Qatar.
How the World Cup works
Qualification is a competition in itself. More than 200 nations enter the qualifying process, fighting for 45 available spots alongside the three host nations. UEFA send 16 teams, up from 13 at the last edition, while CONMEBOL, CAF, AFC and the other confederations each have their own allocation. Once the tournament begins, 48 nations play in 12 groups of four, with the top two in each group advancing to a straight knockout round of 32.
UEFA Nations League
The Nations League changed how European international football works. Launched in 2018, it replaced the kind of dead-rubber friendly that nobody really wanted to watch, and replaced it with a competitive league format where every match has genuine stakes — promotion, relegation, or a route to a major tournament. The top four nations in League A meet for a finals tournament to decide the European champion. It is not the Euros, but it is far from meaningless, and the format has produced some genuinely absorbing football.
Copa América and beyond
South America’s national teams play for the Copa América, the oldest international continental competition in the world. Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay have historically dominated it, though Colombia and Chile have had their moments. Across Africa, the AFCON keeps producing unexpected heroes and tournament upsets. Asia has its own continental championship. The international football calendar never really stops.
Why international football still matters
Some people argue that the club game has surpassed the international game in quality. The best players in the world spend most of their time at clubs where tactical systems are drilled to a fine degree, and national teams only get a handful of days together before each campaign. That gap in preparation is real. But it hasn’t killed international football’s ability to surprise. Underdog stories still happen. Players who barely feature for their clubs become national heroes. And for fans who will never see their team win a Champions League, the international game offers something different: genuine possibility.
At 101 Great Goals, we cover the international game the same way we cover everything else — accurately, quickly, and without the filler. Every major tournament. Every qualifying campaign. Every story worth telling.