Jordan National Team
Eleven Attempts, Zero Success — Until Now
Jordan has tried to qualify for the World Cup more than ten times. For decades, qualification ended in heartbreak: a narrow defeat, a playoff loss, a group stage elimination on goal difference. The country came close enough, often enough, to understand exactly how far away close actually is. This generation changed that. Under coach Jamal Sellami, Jordan topped their qualifying group ahead of Saudi Arabia, then held their nerve to finish second behind South Korea in the next round, edging out better-resourced opponents. They became the first team from Jordan in the history of football to qualify for the FIFA World Cup. Jordan is a Middle Eastern nation of roughly 11 million people, a country that hosts one of the largest refugee populations per capita in the world, and a country that has never before seen its flag carried into a World Cup. When the Jordan team ran on the field at the draw in Miami, the videos of fans watching at home — screaming, weeping, calling their parents — said everything about what this means. Group J. Austria, Algeria, Argentina. None of those opponents are easy. None of that matters quite yet.
Mousa Al-Tamari
The Captain Who Carries a Nation on His Shoulders
If Jordan has one player the neutral fan should know, it is Mousa Al-Tamari. At 28, the Rennes winger is the captain and the only Jordanian competing in one of Europe's top five leagues. His last season in Ligue 1 — seven goals, eleven assists in 36 appearances — established him as a legitimate force at a high level of the game, not a token representative of a developing football nation. He has 23 goals in 76 international appearances, scoring in qualifying matches that mattered enormously. Al-Tamari is Muslim, of Palestinian heritage, and is a hafiz of the Quran — a man who memorized scripture and also torments full-backs on the wing. He has spoken about what Jordan's debut means to the people who follow the team, the supporters who have waited through all those failed qualifying campaigns. He carries that weight not as burden but as fuel. Jordan's chances of advancing from a group containing Argentina are long. But Al-Tamari's job is to make sure nobody forgets that Jordan was here.