Watching Lamine Yamal score his first World Cup go...
Key takeaways
- It was for Nabil, perched in front of the television of the same bar, watching the game with his mother, Ayada.
- "[I dedicate the goal] to my mother, my girlfriend, to my friends and everyone back at home in Mataró," the 18-year-old Yamal told DAZN after La Roja's victory.
- Every footballer has a backstory: a hometown or a country where they laid their roots and have become a significant part of the place's culture or society.
Why this matters: a sports story that could shift standings, legacies, or fan conversations.
It was for Nabil, perched in front of the television of the same bar, watching the game with his mother, Ayada. It was for Fouad and Hamid, among the group of men sitting at tables outside the bar, looking in, as the Barcelona forward announced his arrival at this summer's tournament.
"[I dedicate the goal] to my mother, my girlfriend, to my friends and everyone back at home in Mataró," the 18-year-old Yamal told DAZN after La Roja's victory.
Every footballer has a backstory: a hometown or a country where they laid their roots and have become a significant part of the place's culture or society. Yamal's, though, feels especially powerful. That is partly because of how actively he remembers where he came from at any opportunity.