Tag: 22 goals

Celebrate Football’s Biggest Tournament With the Most Popular Anthems, Playlists, and Podcasts from Around the World

After four long years, the biggest sporting event on the planet is finally back. All around the world, football fans are passionately supporting their national teams and celebrating the world’s game by listening to their favorite anthems.

While every country has its own iconic football songs, fans everywhere share a common love of the official anthems from past tournaments. We took a look at our listening data to figure out which official football anthems were the most popular.

So which anthems do fans love the most? 2010’s competition in South Africa gave fans not one, but two songs—Shakira’s “Waka Waka (This Time for Africa) [The Official 2010 FIFA World Cup™ Song],” and K’naan’s “Wavin’ Flag – Coca-Cola® Celebration Mix”—and it’s these hits that fans have gravitated to the most. 

Ricky Martin’s 1998 song “La Copa de la Vida (La Canción Oficial de la Copa Mundial, Francia ’98) – Spanglish Radio Edit” was the third most popular, while Pitbull, Jennifer Lopez, and Claudia Leitte’s 2014 song “We Are One (Ole Ola) [The Official 2014 FIFA World Cup Song]” rounds out our list of the most popular anthems. 

But the fun’s not stopping there. Across the globe, fans and creators have released a wide variety of playlists and podcasts as they get ready for the big tournament. And while we’ve already shared some of these offerings, such as the podcast 22 Goals, there is plenty more that we’re excited to help the world discover.

Fans get in on the action

In addition to listening to their favorite tournament anthems, fans have turned into creators, making their own football-related playlists that have attracted a staggering number of listeners. 

And when it comes to the countries that have created the most football-related playlists, our data shows them as Argentina, Brazil, and then Mexico.

In Argentina specifically, fans have been drawn to the sounds of World Cup Songs / Canciones de los mundiales (with nearly 400,000 followers), Fútbol Argentino (with more than 275,000 followers), and ESTRENO MUNDIAL (with more than 210,000 followers).

Destination: Latin America

Given Latin America’s support of football on Spotify, it only made sense to help fans discover the wealth of content that is out there for them to enjoy. That’s why we’ve created a special hub full of the country’s top football playlists and podcasts.

As fans get fired up on match day, they’ll be able to listen to playlists like Himnos de Futbol, Himnos de Estadio, Previa Futbolera, Asadito, Cancionero Popular de Argentina, Asadito Cumbiero, Mates y Música, and Gracias Diego

When they want to dive deeper into the stories behind the beautiful game, they can tune into podcasts like La Scaloneta, Sorbos de Copas, Red Gol al Arcos, and La Primera Jugada.

And for fans of Argentina, we’ve created a series of special playlists for those moments when they want to reminisce about the Albiceleste’s historic moments and revisit the popular sounds of the time: pov: 22 de Junio de 1986, Estadio Azteca, pov: estás en el vestuario de La Scaloneta, and pov: no fue penal.

Relive the biggest moments in tournament history with Maldini Mundial 

Just in time for the big tournament, football fans in Spain can now enjoy Maldini Mundial, a new Spotify Original podcast. Over the course of 10 episodes, Maldini Mundial takes listeners through the most incredible and surprising anecdotes from football’s world tournaments, narrated by one of the world’s leading experts on international football, Julio Maldonado Maldini.

In the first episode, “Maradona and the Shirt of God,” the story revolves around Argentinian football legend Diego Maradona and his miraculous goal during the 1986 tournament in Mexico that’s regarded as one of the greatest of all time. The second episode, “The Sparwasser Legend,” takes a look at Jürgen Sparwasser, the East German footballer who scored the lone goal that propelled his side over West Germany during the 1974 tournament amid a backdrop of political complexity. Every Friday until December 16, Spotify users can enjoy a new episode of the show.

Get to know one of Germany’s rising stars

On November 24, we’ll be premiering a new podcast for German football fans: Karim & Ben Machen Auge. In this series, footballer Karim Adeyemi—the 20-year-old rising star who plays for Bundesliga club Borussia Dortmund and the German national team—teams up with his best friend Ben Bako to offer a close-up look at his rise to stardom, and takes a look back at a defining year that has culminated in a trip to the big tournament. 

But more than revisiting his triumphs on the pitch, the show also looks at the personal side of Karim and his life as a friend, son, rebel, rap fan, and gamer. During each episode, Karim and Ben will go back and forth with one another, talking about sports, pop culture, music, fashion, and more.

So, are you ready to support your team? The biggest sporting event in the world promises to bring plenty of thrills, and with Spotify, you can soundtrack every moment of glory.

Get into the tournament spirit with our playlist Himnos de Futbol: 

Relive Soccer’s Biggest Moments With the Spotify Original Podcast ‘22 Goals’

There are few sports that have the power to captivate a critical mass of the global population quite like soccer (aka football) does. And every four years, fans rally behind their nations and experience the highs and lows of the beautiful game in one of the biggest tournaments in the world. 

As hype builds for the tournament in Qatar this November, Brian Phillips, Senior Staff Writer for The Ringer, is taking time to revisit some of the most memorable and significant goals of past competitions in the new Spotify Original Podcast 22 Goals.

Premiering today, the weekly podcast will explore those moments on the field that brought joy—or despair—to entire nations. But the show also dives into the cultural impact each of these 22 goals had off the pitch, highlighting how they continue to transcend the game itself.

For the Record sat down with Brian to discuss the inspiration behind the podcast, why big goals leave such an indelible mark on soccer fans, and what listeners can expect from the show as it leads up to the start of the tournament. 

Traditionally,  lists of great soccer goals have come in video form. What inspired you to explore this idea as a podcast?

It’s interesting that you ask that question because I was telling my dental hygienist about this podcast, and he was like, “That’s the worst thing I’ve ever heard. Nobody wants to listen to you describe the goals with words.” But the more I thought about it, I do think that podcasting is the right form for what I’m doing here, because what I really want to do is explore the joy of the game. 

A video series can provide a hit of joy really directly because you get to watch the goal and it’s like, “Oh my God, that’s an amazing goal.” But I wanted space to talk about where those moments came from and what they mean and how they kind of filter into society and culture. And so the podcast form makes more sense because you can have a longer meditation and talk to listeners in a very intimate or informal way. 

It’s fascinating that some of the most legendary goals often become more memorable than the matches themselves. Why is it that a single goal has the ability to captivate fans in this way?

There are goals that seem more memorable than the matches and there are goals that overshadow loss. I’m thinking about the goal that Netherlands midfielder Dennis Bergkamp scored against Argentina in ’98. It’s a match that the Netherlands didn’t win, and they fell short at the World Cup as they usually end up doing. But that goal just kind of stands out as such a beautiful thing that it almost seems like the rest of the tournament and the rest of the drama kind of fades around just that one moment. 

I think soccer has a couple of things going for it that makes it really well suited to provide these kinds of transcendent, euphoric just out-of-your-head sort of experiences. I think for one thing, it’s really hard to score in soccer. There’s this kind of frustration algorithm at work where you’re building up this anticipation for tens of minutes at a time while teams are trying to score. And then when it finally happens, even a relatively routine goal feels like a huge deal. I think the other thing is that soccer is probably the closest we come to a sport that is universal. So when something big happens in a World Cup, it’s like a breakthrough that you’re sharing with a vast percentage of the world’s population. It’s a recipe for these moments to become meaningful.

As fans sit down and listen to each episode, what can they expect in terms of storytelling?

Each goal is like the climax of a story. And so the episodes are really just about telling those stories and trying to use those stories to talk about things that were going on in the history of soccer, history of the world, around those moments. But mostly it’s just like if you take the goal as the high point of a story, then what is the story that comes before that, and how does it lead to this? We all know the moment is coming. In most of the episodes, I say at the very beginning, “This is the goal.” And you know what the ending is in advance, but it’s just about the journey.

Every goal on this list is obviously well-known to some extent, but are there any with a mythology or backstory that might surprise fans?

I think it’s probably the case that the older the goal is, the less people will know about it.  Particularly for fans like me who didn’t grow up with the game and caught the train fairly late. So one goal that I think American listeners are going to really enjoy hearing about is, it was scored by Joe Gaetjens in 1950. He was a Haitian player who played due to some weird loopholes at the time for the U.S. national team. And he scored a goal that allowed the United States to accomplish perhaps the biggest upset in World Cup history. And I just don’t think most people in America know about it. I didn’t even know about it until fairly recently. I feel like people are going to really flip over it because it’s an incredible story.

And then the other episode that comes to mind is about England in 1966 and the goal scored by Geoff Hurst that helped them win the World Cup. But a whole lot of that episode focuses on the history of the theft of the World Cup trophy in London, when it was on display at a stamp exhibition. There was this whole heist and it vanished. And then it was rediscovered in a really fun way. That’s a pretty well-known story for a lot of people, but I think it’s just so kooky and fun that people are going to get into that.

Do you have any predictions for who might score the next iconic goal in Qatar later this year?

Before I answer that question, I should acknowledge that there are literally octopi who have a better record of predicting World Cup outcomes. The future is not my strong suit when it comes to sports. But I feel like I want to say Poland striker Robert Lewandowski. I feel like he can’t stop falling into goals in his club career, and he’s going to do something amazing at a tournament one of these days. I think this is the tournament where that happens.

To make the countdown to Qatar a little more bearable, hit the play button below and start streaming the first episode of 22 Goals.