Czechia hasn't been to a World Cup in twenty years — not since 2006 in Germany, when Pavel Nedvěd was still playing and Petr Čech was in his prime and the Czechs finished third in their group and went home disappointed. The 2004 Euros semifinal generation is lore now. An entire generation of Czech kids has grown up watching ice hockey at the World Cup and waiting for their football team to show up at the other one.
They finally did, the hard way. Czechia qualified through March's playoffs, beating Denmark on penalties in Copenhagen after a 2-2 draw — a scoreline that fit the team's entire campaign. Miroslav Koubek, the 74-year-old domestic coach who took over in December after the previous manager was dismissed, has built something direct and functional: Souček and Krejčí anchoring the spine, Schick finishing what the Premier League midfielders create, and not a lot of artistic flourish in between. It works.
Group A is winnable — Mexico, South Korea, and a South Africa side that got the brutal draw. The Czechs are nobody's favorite, which is how this country likes its football. They will travel, they will drink the American beer and be politely unimpressed, and they will remind everyone under 35 what it looks like when their team is actually at the tournament. Twenty years is a long time. June is close.