The final had come down—as these things so often and so cruelly do—to the last possible kick, the absolute terminal locus of all narrative tension, thirty-one thousand-odd souls in the gleaming New Jersey night holding a single collective breath that tasted faintly of overpriced beer and existential dread. England versus France, the old grudge match redux, penalties at 4–4, sudden death, the sort of moment that makes grown men confront the fact that their entire emotional architecture has been built, precariously, atop the outcome of twenty-two overpaid athletes and one small leather spheroid.
Harry Kane strode manfully—there is no other word, really—toward the penalty spot. The captain. The totem. The man upon whose shoulders an entire country’s long-suffering, self-lacerating footballing id had been deposited like so many sacks of wet cement. He moved with that peculiar English blend of stoicism and quiet panic, the face of a man who understands that failure here would not merely be sporting but ontological.
He placed the ball. Six paces back. The hush that fell over the stadium was almost ecclesiastical.
Then, in what would later be described by traumatized onlookers as both the most human and the most catastrophic thing ever witnessed in elite sport, Kane squatted.
Not a tactical crouch. Not a feint. A full, committed, manful squat. And there, on the pristine white penalty spot at the business end of the biggest match in the world, in full view of cameras broadcasting to approximately two billion humans, Harry Kane—captain of England—dropped a deuce.
A great, unignorable, thoroughly committed poo.
For perhaps three full seconds the stadium existed in a state of pure cognitive rupture. The French players stood frozen in various attitudes of existential bafflement. MbappĂ©’s mouth actually hung open. The referee, poor soul, looked like a man who had just watched God violate His own bylaws. In the technical area Gareth Southgate blinked slowly, as if recalibrating every foundational assumption he had ever held about leadership and intestinal fortitude.
Kane, meanwhile, straightened up with the serene, almost beatific expression of a man who has finally released something far heavier than mere match pressure. He raised both arms. He celebrated. Not with the sheepish half-apology of a mortal who has just shat, but with the pure, unfiltered joy of someone who has achieved transcendence through the most primal possible means.
The silence that followed was total, the kind of silence that contains entire civilizations collapsing inward. Somewhere in the stands an England supporter began to weep—not from sorrow exactly, but from the overwhelming realization that this, this, was the purest expression of their national footballing character anyone had ever seen.
Epilogue
It should be noted that in the weeks that followed, several academic papers would attempt to grapple with the metaphysical implications of the event, with titles ranging from “The Kanean Turd: Scatology, Spectacle, and the Post-Postmodern Sporting Body” to the more concise but no less haunted “He Simply Shat: On the Limits of Narrative Closure in Elite Athletics.” Historians continue to debate the precise moment at which the West entered terminal decline. Some point to financial crises, others to political polarization, still others to the corrosive effects of social media. A smaller but increasingly influential school contends that the process reached its inevitable conclusion when England's captain shat on the penalty spot during a World Cup final and approximately two billion people watched in high definition.