
Uruguay
South American nation of 3.5 million; two-time FIFA World Cup winners; competing in the 2026 tournament.
Last refreshed: 22 June 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
Can Uruguay's historic pedigree rescue a stuttering 2026 World Cup campaign?
Timeline for Uruguay
Mentioned in: Africa's last team out as France win
2026 FIFA World CupMentioned in: FIFA clears Balogun for Belgium tie
2026 FIFA World CupMentioned in: Cape Verde push Argentina to extra time
2026 FIFA World CupMentioned in: All three co-hosts reach last 32
2026 FIFA World CupMentioned in: Neymar returns after 20 months out
2026 FIFA World CupDo Uruguayan fans need a visa bond for the 2026 World Cup?
How many World Cups has Uruguay won?
What group is Uruguay in at the 2026 World Cup?
Background
Uruguay is a South American nation of approximately 3.5 million people, punching well above its weight in global football. The country has won the FIFA World Cup twice, in 1930 as inaugural hosts and in 1950 with the famous Maracanazo upset over Brazil at the Estadio Maracanã, and the Copa América fifteen times, the most of any nation. The current generation of the Celeste, named for their Sky-blue strip, features players competing across Europe's top divisions.
At the 2026 FIFA World Cup, Uruguay have made an unconvincing start, failing to win their opening two matches and dropping points for the second time with a 2-2 draw against Cape Verde on 21 June 2026. The result leaves their group-stage progression under pressure. Earlier, in March 2026, Uruguay played England at Wembley, with England drawing 1-1 as Ben White scored before conceding a penalty. Uruguay's fans also face practical barriers: the country is among those subject to the US Visa Bond Pilot Programme, which the State Department expanded to 50 nations on 2 April 2026, adding financial costs on top of standard Visa requirements. The State Department acknowledged it holds no estimate of the attendance impact.
Beyond football, Uruguay has appeared in Lowdown's coverage of AI labour disruption and pandemic preparedness as a South American policy benchmark. CONMEBOL has raised the Visa bond issue collectively on behalf of affected nations, lending diplomatic weight that individual national associations cannot match on their own.