By Tilly Boateng
It started as a joke, as most suspiciously honest things on the internet do. Somewhere between match predictions, stadium outfit checks, and videos of women suddenly developing a passionate interest in international football, a new conversation entered the group chat: what if the World Cup is not just a sporting event, but a dating opportunity with better lighting, better accents, and significantly more flags?
Across social media, women have been joking about booking flights, buying match tickets, updating dating profiles, and preparing to “accidentally” fall in love in a stadium full of men from countries they have only previously encountered during geography lessons and immigration drama. The tone is playful, but the message is not entirely unserious. For many women, the World Cup has become more than a game. It has become a fantasy of possibility.
And really, can we blame them?
Modern dating has not exactly been doing a brilliant public relations job. Between ghosting, talking stages that last longer than some university courses, emotionally unavailable men with podcast microphones, and dating apps that make romance feel like shopping for furniture with trust issues, many women are tired. Not heartbroken, necessarily. Just tired. Tired of swiping. Tired of decoding “wyd.” Tired of giving personality, patience, humour, vulnerability, and skincare routine, only to be met with the emotional range of a folding chair.
Naturally, the internet has opinions. Some people think the trend is harmless fun. Others think it is embarrassing. Some men seem personally offended, as if women considering men from other countries is an attack on national security. But men have travelled for pleasure, flirtation, and romantic possibility for centuries without being turned into think pieces. The moment women do it with a little humour and a match ticket, suddenly everyone wants to discuss morality, desperation, and the collapse of society.
Please. Let women enjoy one global tournament without forming a committee.
The truth is that some women are joking, some are flirting, and some may genuinely hope lightning strikes beside a stranger in Section 203. But most are probably expressing a longing that has very little to do with football itself. They want surprise. They want delight. They want chemistry that does not begin with “send pic.” They want to believe that love can still happen while they are living their lives, not only while actively searching for it like a missing passport.
That is why the trend feels bigger than a stadium crush. It speaks to a generation of women who still believe in love, but no longer want to beg for it. They are not necessarily desperate. They are imaginative. They are playful. They are fed up enough to joke, but hopeful enough to keep looking.
And here is my opinion: as long as women are safe, aware, and protected, love should not be policed by location. A woman can meet the wrong man in church, the right man at a football match, the wrong man through a family introduction, and the right man while buying suya after a very unserious day.
The place where two people meet does not automatically determine the quality, depth, or future of the relationship. What matters is character, intention, emotional maturity, respect, and consistency after the excitement has settled.
Love found in a stadium is not less serious because it began with noise, jerseys, and national anthems. Love found online is not automatically shallow. Love found through friends is not automatically safe. The location may create the first spark, but it does not build the relationship. People do. Their choices do. Their honesty does. Their ability to show up after the lights, cameras, and football chants are gone does.
So, if a woman attends the World Cup for the match, excellent. If she attends for the experience, also excellent. If she quietly hopes to meet someone interesting while pretending to understand why the referee made that call, may the odds be in her favour. The only serious rule is that she should move with wisdom, protect herself, and never confuse chemistry with character.
Football has always been about hope. Hope that your team will win. Hope that the referee will develop wisdom. Hope that one last chance can change everything. So perhaps it makes perfect sense that, in the middle of all that noise, colour, and chaos, some women are also hoping for something softer.
A conversation. A spark. A story.
And if love happens to arrive during extra time, who are we to blow the whistle?





