
After a penalty miss, a deluge of hate: the rising tide of racist abuse at the World Cup
FIFA’s monitoring service recorded 89,000 abusive posts during the group stage, a 13-fold increase, as Dutch players became the latest targets of online racism.
The final whistle had barely faded in the North American night when the notifications began. Crysencio Summerville, Justin Kluivert and Quinten Timber, three Dutch internationals who had just seen their penalty kicks saved in a last‑16 shootout defeat to Morocco, opened their social‑media accounts to a cascade of monkey emojis, gifs and racial slurs. Within hours, all three had been forced to disable comments on their profiles, a digital retreat that has become a grim ritual of modern tournaments. The Royal Dutch Football Association issued a statement the following day, drawing “a clear line” against behaviour it said had no place in football or society.
That episode, far from an isolated flare‑up, sits inside a much larger and more troubling dataset. FIFA’s Social Media Protection Service (SMPS), which scans platforms for discriminatory content aimed at players, coaches and match officials, identified 89,000 abusive posts during the group stage of the 2026 World Cup. The figure represents a 13‑fold increase on the 6,700 posts flagged at the same stage of the 2022 tournament in Qatar, even after accounting for the expansion from 32 to 48 teams and the corresponding jump in matches. Of those messages, 11 per cent were racially motivated, a proportion that has risen by three percentage points since the last edition. The SMPS, which combines automated tools with human review, analysed more than six million posts and comments, eventually hiding 181,000 hateful comments and referring around 1,000 accounts for deeper investigation.
Viewed from Rio de Janeiro, the pattern fits a phenomenon that Adriano Freixo, a professor of international relations at the Federal Fluminense University, has described as “European when you win, immigrant when you lose”. In an analysis published by the Brazilian news portal G1, Freixo argued that black players and the children of immigrants become scapegoats at moments of collective disappointment, a release valve for anti‑immigrant sentiment that has been stoked by the far right across Europe. The data bears this out: more than 75 per cent of France’s squad at this World Cup are of immigrant origin, and half of the Dutch team share that background. When the penalty goes wide, the online mob reaches for the oldest and ugliest distinctions.
FIFA’s response has been to sharpen the technical and legal edges of its moderation apparatus. The SMPS, launched in 2022, has now contributed to the removal of over 30 million abusive posts, and during this group stage it gathered evidence in more than 100 cases that meet the legal threshold for criminal prosecution. Yet the sheer volume of hate continues to outpace the defences. The service itself noted a “significant increase in the objectively worst, most offensive material”, a trend that Clarence Seedorf, the former Dutch midfielder, addressed in a video manifesto after the Morocco match. Seedorf, who revealed that he too had felt the sting of rejection after missing penalties for the Netherlands in a pre‑social‑media era, called for “serious measures” and warned that “those who remain silent are also part of the problem”.
In the stands and on the screens, the tournament rolls on, but the digital terraces remain a place where a missed kick can strip a player of his national belonging in an instant. The image that lingers is not of a stadium but of a locked comment section: three young men, still in their sweat‑soaked kits, scrolling through a feed that has suddenly turned into a wall of hate, and hitting the button that makes the world go quiet.
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The racist attacks on Dutch players after their penalty miss expose a deep hypocrisy: they are celebrated as Europeans in victory but reduced to immigrants in defeat. This incident, part of a broader surge in online abuse documented by FIFA, has sparked demands for accountability and a reckoning with the persistence of racism in football.
FIFA's social media protection service logged 89,000 abusive posts during the group stage, a thirteenfold increase from the previous tournament. The figures highlight a sharp escalation in online harassment targeting players and teams.
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