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Peru

La Blanquirroja — ninth in CONMEBOL qualifying, 'Contigo Perú' silenced for another cycle

Finished 9th in CONMEBOL qualifying — missed both automatic and playoff spots.

Status
Eliminated
Region
CONMEBOL
World Cup Appearances
6
Code
PE

The Story

Peru last played at a World Cup in 2018, and what's remembered isn't the football — they went out in the group, a late win over Australia for dignity. What's remembered is the crowd. Peruvians turned Kazan and Saransk into little Limas. 40,000 of them, by some counts, many having sold whatever they had to get on a plane. Neutrals around the world, including a lot of first-time Peru supporters in the U.S., adopted the shirt on sight. There will be no encore this summer.

Peru finished ninth in CONMEBOL qualifying — not close enough for an automatic spot, not close enough for the playoff, just out. The generational handoff that was supposed to carry La Blanquirroja back to the World Cup stalled in the middle of the table. Paolo Guerrero, the striker who carried Peruvian football for 15 years, is 42 and almost certainly done with international football. Gianluca Lapadula, the Italian-born forward who chose Peru over the Azzurri, and Luis Advíncula, still running the touchline at 36, gave everything the qualifying campaign asked. It wasn't enough. Two straight World Cups missed now, and the country that turned Russia into a second Lima in 2018 has nowhere to go this June.

But if you find a Peruvian bar in Arlington on a match day — Warique on Matlock Road, the cumbia band, the pisco sours — step inside anyway. "Contigo Perú" doesn't stop being sung because the team didn't qualify. The drumming doesn't stop. Oliver Sonne will be 28 by the next cycle, Lapadula still in his prime. Peru will be back. The crowd always comes first.

3 Players to Know

Luis Advíncula

The right-back who's played at Boca Juniors for five years now, a two-time Argentine league champion, and the kind of player whose running stats read like a typo. He's 36 this summer and almost certainly going to his final World Cup. The Peruvian press has spent most of the last cycle wondering who replaces him; the short answer is nobody, yet.

Gianluca Lapadula

Born in Turin to a Peruvian mother and an Italian father, he played professionally in Italy his entire career before choosing Peru in 2020 — a decision that briefly put him on the front page of every newspaper in Lima. He's now the starting striker, the lead scorer in qualifying, and the emotional center of the attack. There's an Italian in the side, and he wants to win this more than the Italians do.

Oliver Sonne

The Danish-Peruvian right-back who found out he was eligible through his maternal grandmother, debuted for Peru in 2023 and has been a Lima cult hero ever since. Silkeborg, then Burnley, now on loan at Sparta Prague for the back half of this season. The story of him FaceTiming his grandmother after his first cap made half the country cry. An entire generation of kids in Callao now wears the number 17.

The Food

Signature Dish

Ceviche is the argument Peruvians will have with anyone who claims another country invented it. Raw white fish — corvina, if you can get it — 'cooked' in lime juice with red onion, rocoto chile, cilantro, and a splash of leche de tigre, the milky, electric marinade that's worth drinking from the bowl afterward. Eat it with choclo (giant Andean corn) and camote (sweet potato) and an Inca Kola that glows like a highlighter. The best ceviche in the world is a matter of national honor.

Where to Eat in DFW

Warique Peruvian Restaurant on Matlock Road in Arlington — a half-dozen kinds of ceviche, a stage for the live cumbia band that plays weekend evenings, and Peruvian football on the big screen from the moment they unlock the door. The leche de tigre comes on the side in a shot glass. Go on a Saturday, order the ceviche mixto and a pisco sour, and let the room do what it does.

The Music

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

Fan Culture

Peruvian support is the one everyone else talks about after a tournament. In 2018 their fans made Russia an unofficial home — the authorities estimated 40,000 Peruvians traveled, many having sold cars, second-mortgaged houses, or emptied decade-old savings accounts to make a single World Cup. They sing "Contigo Perú" from the first whistle and they do not stop when Peru are losing; they sing louder. Red and white stripes across every face, the cajón drum keeping time somewhere behind you, grandmothers crying through the second verse. If you walk past a bar in Arlington in June with a Peruvian flag in the window, step inside. That's the invitation.
Fun Fact

'Contigo Perú' — the song Peruvian fans sing until grown men are openly crying — isn't a football chant at all. It was written in 1974 by Augusto Polo Campos as a letter of love to a country going through a rough decade. The national team adopted it, and it's now the loudest thing in any stadium they visit.

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