FOOTBALL LIKE HOPE GROWS IN THE MOST UNLIKELY PLACES

In a country where baseball reigns supreme, João Tamura turns his lens toward the quiet, persistent rise of football in Cuba.

From the dusty streets of Havana to improvised pitches in Santiago, he captures the sport not just as a game, but as a growing symbol of hope, identity, and global connection.

In this evocative essay, Tamura explores how football takes root in the margins — played barefoot, beneath peeling balconies, by boys chasing dreams stitched in the colours of distant clubs.


“Perhaps it comes from the skinny bodies dodging stones, stray dogs, and potholes in the streets of Santiago, as if they were Barcelona defenders.”

SLOWLY LIKE SHY FLOWERS

In Cuba, football is omnipresent: it’s played at any time, in any place — from the streets of Havana, where piles of stones stand in for goalposts, to the Playas del Este, where boys run until sweat blends with salt

Related

From the Curva Sud to the Streets of Turin

Burcu tells us all about her love for Juventus A Game Begins at Home Football fandom rarely starts with a grand gesture. More often, it begins in the small, ordinary

Scroll to Top

Newsletter

Subscribe to theatlanticdispatch for fresh perspectives, insightful analysis, and stories that matter