Paraguay Gets World Cup Fever as Fans Touch Football History
In Luque, Paraguay, a glass barrier keeps visitors away from the World Cup trophy. Yet people lean in, as if being closer could change their luck. The museum display becomes a quiet reflection on hope, superstition, and the future of South American football.
A Barrier, a Trophy, and the Muscle Memory of Belief
Abel Aguilera stands in front of the glass barrier, staring longer than he expected. He’s forty-six, Argentine, a Boca Juniors fan, the kind who feels the weight of a tournament before a single kick. The World Cup trophy has been on display at the CONMEBOL Museum in Luque since Thursday. It’s not the original, the guide explains later, but a winner’s trophy that’s an exact copy of it. Still, Aguilera’s expression shows he’s already lost in the dream.
“It’s a very nice feeling, for someone who likes football, it’s a strange feeling, it gives you emotion,” he told EFE, after taking photos that try to capture more than met “It’s a great feeling for someone who loves football. It’s strange, but it moves you,” he told EFE after snapping photos that try to capture more than just metal., and a Friday afternoon is not a final. But a trophy has its own gravity, and fans behave like people who have learned, over a lifetime, to treat symbols as if they can speak back.
Aguilera did not come for the trophy, at least not on purpose. He traveled more than 1,000 kilometers from Buenos Aires to Luque to visit family and see the CONMEBOL Museum. This space highlights the most memorable players and moments in South American football. Then he found it by chance. “I didn’t know it was here. I ran into it accidentally,” he told EFE, the tone of a man still surprised by his own luck.
He moves quickly from watching to hoping. “We’re going for the fourth,” he said, remembering Argentina’s three World Cup wins, including the famous 1986 victory led by Diego Armando Maradona.
But superstition comes quickly, as it always does with Argentine fans. Aguilera says that, by cabala and ritual, Argentines never call their team the favorite because surprises always happen. The idea is that humility keeps the football gods happy. It’s more than humility. It’s a way to protect against heartbreak.
Still, he shares his thoughts. He talks about the disappointment he expects from France, the team with Kylian Mbappé and Ousmane Dembélé. He wouldn’t bet a peso on them. His favorites are Germany, Portugal, Morocco, and Spain, which he calls full of talent. It sounds like analysis, but also like a fan hoping without getting hurt.
Around him, people do what people do when they are given a brief moment with something rare. They take photos, then take more. They angle their phones carefully, like a small everyday choreography: step left, lift the device, wait for the reflection to settle. In the museum’s calm, you can almost hear the soft taps on screens, the quick bursts of video, the low murmur of families deciding who stands where.
Most won’t get this close again, so they try to hold on to proof.

Paraguay’s Long Shot, Held in One Family Photo
By Friday afternoon, Mauricio Riquelme is standing in that same circle of glass and longing. He’s Paraguayan, thirty-eight, and drove nearly forty minutes to bring his family to see the trophy. This isn’t a casual stop; it’s a small pilgrimage with a plan; the kind of weekend trip families take to give their kids a memory.
“It’s an inexplicable emotion to see the cup up close,” he told EFE. “All the countries in the world imagine themselves winning it,” he added.
His wife and two daughters pose beside the trophy, the museum’s version of closeness: near enough for a photo, far enough to keep the object safe. Riquelme watches them and then returns to his own wish, voiced plainly. He hopes Paraguay’s national team, La Albirroja, under the Argentine coach Gustavo Alfaro, can bring it home.
“Faith and hope are the last things you lose,” he told EFE.
That line means something special in Paraguay, where hope in football often wrestles with reality. It makes the museum display feel bigger than just an exhibit. It becomes a place where the country’s mood plays out. You don’t have to be a favorite to imagine winning. In this room, imagination is part of the experience.
Paraguay isn’t alone. Groups of Brazilians, Argentines, and Paraguayans wait their turn. The scene feels regional, almost like family, a reminder that South American football is a shared language that welcomes arguments, pride, and the gentle mix of accents in one line.
People want a record of being here. They take so many photos and videos because the moment is brief, and because football fans collect closeness the way others collect souvenirs. It is not only vanity. It is evidence.
A museum guide moves through the groups, approaching visitors, asking questions, and offering details. He explains the trophy’s weight. “It weighs six kilos and a little more,” he says. He clarifies again that it is not the original trophy, but the version given to winners, with less gold, though it represents the same thing. And he adds a detail that shifts the scene from a temporary spectacle to a permanent attraction: starting today, the trophy will be displayed permanently at the CONMEBOL Museum.
That should end the debate about authenticity. But it doesn’t.

When the Real Thing Is Whatever, the Fans Can Feel
Here’s the quiet truth: the museum can’t control it. For many visitors, there’s no difference between this trophy and the real one. The guide can talk about gold and official status. The barrier can keep people apart. But emotions don’t care about those details.
South American football culture has always turned objects into vessels—shirts, flags, old tickets, a stadium seat, a photo. It’s not exactly irrational. It’s a way to hold feelings in something you can touch, something that stays the same even when teams change.
So the trophy sits behind its glass, but it still works its magic. It makes an Argentine fan dream of a fourth title while, out of superstition, refusing to call Argentina the favorite. It brings a Paraguayan father and his family for a photo and a talk about hope as the last thing you lose. It gathers Brazilians, Argentines, and Paraguayans in one line, where everyone knows why the person ahead is snapping another picture.
A museum exhibit is meant to preserve history. In Luque, Paraguay, it creates it too.
For the fans, there’s no real difference between the two trophies. The emotion doesn’t lessen. It rises to meet what’s in front of it, even if it’s a replica, behind glass, and the next tournament is still ahead.
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