← Beyond the Pitch Group H

Uruguay

3.4 million people, two World Cup titles, Bielsa on the touchline, and the original *garra charrúa*

Group
H
Region
CONMEBOL
World Cup Appearances
15
Code
UY

The Story

Uruguay is the answer to the most useful trivia question in soccer: which country, with the population of metro Pittsburgh, has won two World Cups and finished fourth twice? The first title came in 1930, on home soil, in the first tournament ever played. The second came in 1950, in Rio, when Uruguay went into the final match needing a win against a Brazil team that had already declared itself champion — and won it 2-1 in front of 200,000 stunned people. They still call that day the Maracanazo. Brazilians still don't.

The team that arrives in 2026 is coached by Marcelo Bielsa — yes, that Bielsa, the Argentine madman whose Leeds United side and Athletic Club years made him a cult figure across two continents. He took the Uruguay job in 2023 and immediately started rebuilding around a generation that's actually quite good: Federico Valverde at the heart of Real Madrid's midfield, Ronald Araújo and José María Giménez forming a center-back partnership most Premier League teams would commit crimes for, and Darwin Núñez leading the line.

Suárez and Cavani are gone from the senior squad now. The garra charrúa — that fighting spirit Uruguayans treat as national infrastructure — is the inheritance. They're in Group E with Portugal, South Korea, and Ghana. (Yes, the same Ghana whose 2010 World Cup quarterfinal Suárez ended with the most controversial handball in the sport's history. The bracket has a sense of humor.)

3 Players to Know

Federico Valverde

Real Madrid's vice-captain when Carvajal is out, which is increasingly often. He plays box-to-box with a long-range shot that arrives like a brick through a window — the kind of midfielder who scores from 30 yards in a Champions League final and acts like it was the third option. Uruguay's actual on-pitch leader. If they go far in 2026, it's because Valverde is dragging them.

Darwin Núñez

Three years at Liverpool that ranged from electric to baffling, often inside the same 15 minutes. Sold to Al-Hilal in summer 2025 for £56m, where it has not gone well — frozen out by December, reportedly looking for an exit. Bielsa picks him anyway. He's 26, faster than most defenders he'll see in this tournament, and one of those strikers where the goal-to-shot ratio doesn't matter because the shots themselves change games. Uruguay's lead striker.

Ronald Araújo

Barcelona's center-back, 27 years old, built like he was carved out of a cypress. The kind of defender opposing strikers describe as 'frustrating' through gritted teeth in post-match interviews. With José María Giménez beside him, Uruguay has one of the meanest center-back pairings in the tournament — the spine of a team that hasn't conceded easily in a decade.

The Food

Signature Dish

Asado — yes, like Argentina, but Uruguayans will fight you about whose is better. The cut to know is *tira de asado* (short rib, cross-cut, slow over wood), eaten with chimichurri and a chorizo or morcilla on the side. Then *chivito*, the national sandwich — steak, ham, mozzarella, bacon, lettuce, tomato, fried egg, on a soft bun, eaten with a fork because there is no other choice. And mate. Always mate. The thermos under the arm is essentially a national identification card.

Where to Eat in DFW

Honest answer: there's no Uruguayan restaurant in DFW, period. The closest cultural cousin is Corrientes 348 (Dallas Arts District) — Argentine parrilla, but the wood-fired tira de asado, the chimichurri, and the wine list will all read very familiar to a Uruguayan palate. (For Argentina's profile we sent you here too — share a table.) For lunch, Empa Mundo (multiple locations) does respectable empanadas and serves dulce de leche desserts that scratch the itch. Bring your own mate gourd.

The Music

A soundtrack for the matches, the pregame, and the afterparty.

Fan Culture

Uruguayan support is *garra charrúa* — fighting spirit, named after the Indigenous Charrúa people, and treated as a literal national tactical asset. The crowd is small (the country only has 3.4 million people; even a sold-out Estadio Centenario fits 60,000), but they travel and they sing and they drink mate in the stands while it's happening. "Soy Celeste" is the song. The flag is sky blue and white with a literal sun on it that's been smiling for 200 years. Sit near them and you will be offered mate from a stranger's gourd, with the same straw, in a way that would be illegal in three U.S. states. Accept it. That's the whole thing.
Fun Fact

Uruguay won the first World Cup ever held, in 1930, on home soil — the trophy traveled by ocean liner from Montevideo to Italy four years later. They've also won it once more (1950, the *Maracanazo*, when they shocked Brazil 2-1 in Rio in front of 200,000 people) and remain, by a long way, the smallest country to ever lift the trophy. Population today: about the same as metro Pittsburgh.

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