What happens when the nations that invented football start losing their grip on it? How does a team representing a country that doesn't officially exist end up touring the world and unnerving an empire? And why did thirty-one African nations refuse to play at all?
Afua and Peter follow football into the age of decolonisation — Algeria's phantom side, Nkrumah's Black Stars, a seventeen-year-old in tears in Stockholm — as the colonised stop asking permission and take the game for themselves.
[0:00] 1950: the empires are gone, but nobody's told the World Cup
[6:55] Bandung — half the planet decides to stop being spectators
[9:27] Algeria's ghost team: the national side that didn't officially exist
[12:46] Nkrumah, the Black Star, and building a nation out of nothing
[17:48] South Korea lose 9–0 — and it still counts as a triumph
[19:51] A teenager weeps on his teammates' shoulders and reorders the game
[26:37] Thirty-one nations walk out of the World Cup at once
[29:33] Eusébio: the man winning for the empire that denied his own
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Explore more from Peter and Afua — essays, sources, and ideas:
Substack: peterfrankopan.substack.com | afuahirsch.substack.com
Join Legacy+ for bonus episodes, early access, Q&A's, fewer adverts and more.
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Stay connected with Legacy:
Instagram: @originallegacypodcast
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Explore more from Peter and Afua — essays, sources, and ideas: Substack: peterfrankopan.substack.com | afuahirsch.substack.com
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