Smaller than Isle of Man & huge Dutch influence: Curacao making historyImage source, Getty ImagesImage caption, Curacao won all four games in their first qualifying group – and remained unbeaten in the secondByEmlyn BegleyBBC Sport journalist in HoustonPublished1 hour agoA stunningly beautiful small Caribbean island, with a huge Dutch influence but fiercely proud of their own heritage – Curacao has, until now, possibly been most famous for its alcoholic drink of the same name.But that is all about to change as they prepare to make history as the smallest nation ever, by size and population, to take part in a World Cup.Smaller than the Isle of Man and with a population of 158,000 – less than 40 UK cities and towns – they are not even a fully sovereign nation, being part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands.”It brings so much joy and pride to the island that you can’t describe it. The whole island is turning blue,” Curacao Football Federation (FFK) president Gilbert Martina told BBC Sport.Only one of their World Cup squad, Tahith Chong, was born on the island – with the other 25 players all hailing from the mainland Netherlands.They have been placed in a difficult Group E with Germany, who they face on Sunday (18:00 BST), Ecuador and Ivory Coast.Thousands of Blue Wave fans are expected for their World Cup debut in Houston – with some same-day charter flights from the island.”People look at us always having fun and dancing. We are all together. But as soon as the referee blows the whistle we have one thing on our mind – getting a result,” captain Leandro Bacuna mentioned in the pre-match news conference.And in another bit of history, on-again, off-again manager Dick Advocaat will become the oldest boss in World Cup history at the age of 78.



