Buckle up, because today’s World Cup slate at Houston’s NRG Stadium is serving up one of the most lopsided, fascinating, feel-good fixtures of the entire tournament. Four-time world champions Germany kick off their 2026 campaign against Curaçao — a nation making history just by being here. On paper, this looks like a mismatch for the ages. In reality, it’s the kind of game that makes the World Cup magical.
Germany Arrive Red Hot

Forget the disappointing group-stage exits of 2018 and 2022 — this Germany side under Julian Nagelsmann looks like a completely different animal. They roll into Houston having won nine straight matches in all competitions, including a wild 4-3 thriller over Switzerland, a 2-1 win against Ghana, a thumping 4-0 demolition of Finland, and a 2-1 victory over the United States. That’s not just form, that’s a statement.

The squad sheet reads like a who’s-who of Bundesliga and Premier League talent: Joshua Kimmich, Jonathan Tah, Leroy Sané, Jamal Musiala, and Florian Wirtz are all expected to feature, with Kai Havertz likely leading the line. There’s also a feel-good subplot brewing in goal

Manuel Neuer is back and expected to start after shaking off a minor calf issue, giving the legendary keeper a chance to add another World Cup chapter to his storied career. With Serge Gnabry and Lennart Karl sidelined by untimely injuries, Sané steps into a bigger role on the right wing, and against a Curaçao defense that’s leaked nine goals combined in recent friendlies against Australia and Scotland, he could be licking his lips.
Curaçao: The Smallest Nation, The Biggest Heart

Here’s where this match gets genuinely special. Curaçao isn’t just making its World Cup debut — it’s doing so as the smallest nation, by population, to ever qualify for the tournament. Think about that for a second. A Caribbean island of around 150,000 people is about to share a pitch with one of football’s great superpowers.

And they didn’t sneak in either — Curaçao rode an unbeaten CONCACAF qualifying run all the way to North America, with veteran Dutch coach Dick Advocaat (who briefly stepped away before returning) now set to become the oldest manager ever to stand on a World Cup touchline at 78 years old. Talk about a story.

On the pitch, keep an eye on the Bacuna brothers, Leandro and Juninho, who provide Curaçao’s best hope of springing a transition or two on the counter, along with top qualifying scorer Gervane Kastaneer leading the attack. Realistically, their gameplan likely involves defending deep, staying compact, and praying for a moment of chaos.
What to Expect

Let’s be honest about the betting markets here — oddsmakers see this as one of the biggest ranking mismatches in World Cup history, and “over 4.5 goals” is being floated as a value bet for good reason. Germany’s attacking talent is simply on another level, and anything less than a comfortable win would spark plenty of criticism back home.

But don’t write off the underdog narrative just yet. World Cups have produced shocks before, and even if Curaçao can’t pull off the unthinkable, simply going toe-to-toe with four-time champions on the world’s biggest stage — without collapsing — would be a victory of its own for a nation that hasn’t slept since they qualified.
Kickoff is set for 12:00 PM UTC at NRG Stadium in Houston. Whether it’s a German goal rush or a heroic Curaçao backs-against-the-wall performance, this one’s worth tuning in for.












