Is England Cursed at the World Cup?
A calm, slightly doomed guide to England's World Cup trauma, penalties, expectations, and why every tournament starts with hope and ends with group chat therapy.
England are not literally cursed. That would be too simple, too kind, and far too easy to fix.
The real England World Cup curse is a repeatable emotional machine: elite players, huge media attention, a believable squad, a nation that has learned to joke before it cries, and one small footballing event that turns the whole thing into national therapy.
That event is usually penalties. Sometimes it is a goalkeeper moment. Sometimes it is a red card, a VAR freeze, a heroic opponent, or the sentence every England fan fears most:
This year feels different.
Why the curse feels real
England have the perfect meme structure because the hope is never fake. The squads are usually good enough to make fans believe. The Premier League makes every player feel familiar. The media cycle makes every tactical choice feel historic. Then the tournament asks for one calm moment under pressure, and the entire country remembers every previous scar at once.
That is not a supernatural curse. It is institutional muscle memory.
The three ingredients
Expectation