Santa Fe New Mexican

How to talk about the Cup and sound reasonably smart.

- By Daniel Gendler and Jonah Engel Bromwich

The World Cup started Thursday. You may not be the world’s biggest soccer fan, but you want to at least pretend, right?

Excellent. We’ve got you covered. Here is our five-step plan to sounding smart wherever you might be watching the 2018 World Cup.

WHERE IS THIS THING, ANYWAY?

This year’s tournament is in Russia. The first game, on Thursday, between the host and Saudi Arabia, was in Moscow. Over the next month, games will be played in 11 cities: as far east as Yekaterinb­urg (which is closer to Astana, the capital of Kazakhstan, than it is to Moscow) and as far north as St. Petersburg.

The time difference means most games will be broadcast between early morning and late afternoon in the United States.

KNOW WHO’S PLAYING … AND WHO’S NOT

Let’s start here: The United States is not playing in Russia. A change in coaches and the lack of a consistent lineup led to a ragged qualifying period for the team, and an October loss to Trinidad and Tobago (and Honduras’ win over Mexico) sealed its fate.

Italy and the Netherland­s, perennial soccer superpower­s, did not qualify this year, either. Other than that, all the big teams are here: Germany, Spain, France, Argentina, Brazil and England, which has not made much noise in internatio­nal soccer for several decades but which many people care deeply about anyway.

The 32 teams are organized into eight four-team groups. Each team plays three matches, against its group members. The top two teams from each group advance to an eliminatio­n stage, at which point each match becomes a must-win.

PICK A TEAM

It’s easier to know a lot about a single country’s team than it is to know a little about every team in the tournament. Pick a nation and a justificat­ion for rooting for its team, read a couple of articles and know what number its best player wears. That’s all it takes to seem knowledgea­ble enough to hang; no one expects you to know every player on every team.

Attractive potential options include:

Iceland: the least populous country ever to qualify for the Cup.

Colombia: a fun, flashy team with a politicall­y divided nation united behind it.

Brazil: eager to avenge a 7-1 loss to Germany at home in the 2014 World Cup semifinal.

Peru: which hasn’t been back since 1982, and has great uniforms.

RECOGNIZE TODAY’S BIG STARS, AND TOMORROW’S

Cristiano Ronaldo of Portugal and Lionel Messi of Argentina are the two most recognizab­le athletes on the planet, but this is likely the last World Cup for both of them. This tournament will be a moment of transition as their spots at the top of the game continue to be threatened by this group:

Neymar: The Brazilian attacker is 26 and already tied for third on his country’s career scoring list, a testament to his skill with the ball. (He goes by a single name, as is traditiona­l for the country’s biggest “fútbol” stars.) He was injured toward the end of his club season, but if his goal against Austria in Brazil’s last tuneup before the World Cup is any indication, he will be fine.

Mo Salah: The ferociousl­y fast Egyptian winger was the English Premier League player of the year, netting 44 goals in all competitio­ns last season. He, too, is coming off an injury, strained shoulder tendons suffered during the recent Champions League final, but is likely to play in Egypt’s first game, against Uruguay, on Friday, when he turns 26. He may be talented enough to take a relatively weak Egyptian team into the knockout stages for the first time.

Kevin De Bruyne: The Belgian, 26, is probably the best player on a talented Belgian team that most soccer experts expect to go far this year. He plays midfield, and his biggest contributi­on is making sure a game is played at the pace his team needs.

A BRIEF AND ARBITRARY GLOSSARY FOR NEWBIES

So you want to hang with true soccer fans? Memorize some key phrases about how teams approach the game or that can be used to describe in-game moments, and you’ll be golden.

Tiki-taka: Playing a possession game with short passes between players arranged in a series of connected triangles. Usage: “Spain’s tiki-taka style is going to be tough for Portugal to defend against.”

Route one: Some teams prefer the directness of playing a long ball over the heads of defensive players to attackers who are sprinting at full speed. At its best, it can produce a goal of superb quality. Usage: “England’s really getting desperate if they’re resorting to route one.”

Kit: What soccer people call uniforms. Like everyone else, we are pretty partial to what Nike dreamed up for Nigeria this year.

Dive: A flop, in which a player acts as if he has been fouled or injured when, in fact, he hasn’t. Traditiona­lly, Americans complain about diving, or simulation, but it can be hilarious and sometimes dramatic.

Joga bonito: The unofficial catchphras­e of the Brazilian national team. It has used the phrase to describe soccer that is played more as a form of artistic expression than as a sport.

The offside rule: An attacking player cannot be the first to touch the ball if there is not at least one opposing player (not counting the goalkeeper) between him and the goal when the ball is passed to him.

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