The FIFA World Cup 2026 has officially started, which means football fever is everywhere.
Watching football for the first time during the World Cup can be a confusing experience.
Suddenly, living rooms sound like stadiums, group chats are full of match predictions, and everyone has become a part-time coach. But if you are watching football and still wondering why everyone is screaming at the referee, this guide is for you.
The problem? If you’re new to football, it can sometimes feel like everyone else received a handbook you somehow missed. One minute people are celebrating, the next they’re arguing with the referee, and before you can ask what’s happening, someone mentions VAR and expects you to understand.
So before you pretend to know what a clean sheet is (it’s not laundry-related, we promise), here are seven football terms that will help you survive the World Cup like a seasoned fan.
Here are 7 football terms you need to know before the next match.
1. Offside
Offside is the rule that confuses everyone, including people who pretend it does not.
Here is the simplest way to understand it: when a player from the attacking team receives a pass, they cannot be closer to the opponent’s goal than both the ball and the second-last defender at the moment the ball is passed to them.
Basically, you cannot just stand near the goalkeeper waiting for someone to pass you the ball. That would be too easy.
So if a player is ahead of the defenders too early and then gets the ball, the referee can call offside. This is why sometimes a team scores a beautiful goal, everyone celebrates, and then suddenly the goal is cancelled.
That is football’s way of saying: not so fast.
2. VAR
VAR stands for Video Assistant Referee.
In normal language, it means: “Wait, do not celebrate yet.”
VAR checks big decisions like goals, penalties, red cards, and possible referee mistakes. It is supposed to make the game fairer, but it also turns every goal celebration into a suspense thriller.
3. Penalty
A penalty is given when a player commits a foul inside their own penalty box.
It is one player against the goalkeeper, and somehow an entire nation’s blood pressure depends on one kick.
During the World Cup, penalties are not just football moments. They are heartbreak, drama, trauma, and history.
4. Stoppage Time
Stoppage time is the extra time added at the end of each half.
It makes up for delays during the match, like injuries, substitutions, VAR checks, or players dramatically falling to the ground like they have been personally betrayed.
So when the match clock says 90 minutes but the game is still going, this is why.
5. Extra Time
Extra time is different from stoppage time.
In knockout matches, if both teams are tied after 90 minutes, they usually play 30 more minutes. That is extra time.
If nobody scores even then, the match may go to penalties, also known as emotional damage.
6. Clean Sheet
A clean sheet means a team did not concede any goals.
No, it has nothing to do with laundry.
It simply means the goalkeeper and defenders managed to keep the other team from scoring. For fans, this is a very big deal.
7. Yellow Card & Red Card
A yellow card is a warning.
A red card means the player is sent off and their team has to continue with one less player.
Two yellow cards also become a red card, which is why players suddenly start behaving like innocent schoolchildren after receiving the first one.
Final Whistle
You do not need to understand every tactic, formation, or player statistic to enjoy FIFA World Cup 2026.
Sometimes, all you need to know is when to scream, when to panic, and when to ask, “Wait, why was that goal cancelled?”
And if anyone tries to quiz you, just say, “That looked offside,” and walk away confidently.
