Imagine a country where children kick a ball not on a green grass field, but on dusty roads, where there is not a single football field, no registered team, and not even a national federation. Until recently, such a country really existed. The Marshall Islands — a tiny Pacific island nation with a population of less than 40,000 people — for many years remained the only recognized UN state in the world without a national football team. How did it happen that in a country where football has long become a universal language of the world, this sport turned out to be forgotten?
The Marshall Islands are located in the heart of the Pacific Ocean, between Hawaii and Australia. This is 29 coral atolls that rise on average only two meters above sea level. Inhabited about two thousand years ago by people from Southeast Asia, the islands remained on the periphery of world history for a long time. Discovered by the Spaniards in the 16th century, then renamed by British captain John Marshall in 1788, they eventually fell under German, Japanese control, and after World War II — under the control of the United States. From 1946 to 1958, the United States conducted nuclear tests on the atolls of Bikini and Eniwetok, leaving not only radioactive contamination, but also a deep mark in the collective memory of the people. The country gained independence only in 1986.
This historical path largely predetermined why football never took root on the islands.
The main reason for the absence of football in the Marshall Islands is the powerful cultural influence of the United States. After World War II, the islands came under the control of the United States, and American culture penetrated all spheres of life. Along with military bases, American sports came to the islands. Children on the Marshall Islands grew up playing basketball and baseball, not football. This was a natural choice: American soldiers brought balls, showed games, organized tournaments. Basketball became the most popular sport in the country and remains so to this day.
Football simply did not have time to take root. It was not part of the school curriculum, there were no coaches, no tradition. For Marshallese, football was long considered an exotic game that was shown on TV, but no one played. Many local residents even did not hold a football ball in their hands.
If there is no tradition, there is no infrastructure. Until recently, there was not a single full-fledged football field in the Marshall Islands. The atolls that make up the country have a limited area, and almost all of the land suitable for development is occupied by residential buildings, roads, and administrative buildings. Building a football stadium requires space that simply does not exist. There were no clubs, leagues, or competitions in the country. Most importantly, there were no coaches capable of training children. Football is not just a ball and a goal, it is a system of knowledge, tactics, and methods that are passed down from generation to generation. On the Marshall Islands, this chain was broken.
The capital of the country, the city of Majuro, did not even have basic sports infrastructure until 2020. Only in 2019 did the construction of an athletic stadium begin, which later became the basis for a future football field.
Another reason is the complete absence of an organizational structure. The national team did not appear on its own because there was no federation that could create it. The Marshall Islands are not part of FIFA and are not members of the Oceania Football Confederation (OFC). And without a federation, there are no international matches, no rating, no funding — a closed circle that has not been broken for decades.
Until 2020, football in the Marshall Islands was only talked about as a joke: “The only country in the world without a football team”. The irony of fate was that the country that could have been proud of its uniqueness actually felt deprived. Because football is not just a game, it is a way to assert oneself on the international stage.
Everything changed because of one person — Shem Livia. He was born in the Marshall Islands, but lived in the United States. One day, his son, like many children, wanted to play football. It turned out that there is no infrastructure for this game at home. No fields, no balls, no teams. This was a shock to him.
In 2020, Shem Livia founded the Marshall Islands Football Federation. He started from scratch — collected equipment, brought balls from the United States, organized the first training for children. He found like-minded people all over the world: volunteers from the UK, coaches from Europe, representatives of the diaspora in Arkansas, where the largest community of Marshallese outside the country lives. In 2021, the federation hired its first technical director — a British coach, Lloyd Ow尔斯, holder of a UEFA license. He traveled 13,000 kilometers to come to the islands and start training local coaches.
But this project had another, much more serious mission. The Marshall Islands are at the forefront of the climate crisis. Due to the rising level of the World Ocean, the country may completely disappear by 2050. No one knows how much longer these atolls will exist, but the forecasts are terrifying.
Football has become a way for Marshallese to draw attention to their plight. The federation released a special form called “No Home” (No Home). On the jerseys, there were holes, and in the center, in large numbers — “1.5”. This refers to the climate threshold: if the average temperature on the planet rises by 1.5 degrees, the Marshall Islands may sink. Football has become not just a game, but a political statement, a cry for help addressed to the whole world. The creation of the national team is an attempt not to let the world forget about the existence of this small country.
On August 14, 2025, the Marshall Islands played their first official match in history in the 11v11 format. This event was not just a sporting one — it was symbolic. The team played against the team from the U.S. Virgin Islands in the Outrigger Challenge Cup tournament. The match took place not on the Marshall Islands, but in the city of Springdale, Arkansas, USA — 10,000 kilometers from the team's homeland. This was a conscious decision: it is in Arkansas that the largest diaspora of Marshallese lives, and the organizers wanted the compatriots to support their team.
The team lost 0:4, but the fact of stepping onto the field was a victory. Coach Lloyd Ow尔斯 called this event “unbelievable”: “This was a dream. We have created many conditions and structures so that children can play and adults can train.” Many players on the team played on the field for the first time in their lives in the 11v11 format. Before this, they played only in futsal or did not have any competitive experience. The team was assembled just days before the tournament.
The first match has become the beginning of a new era. The Marshall Islands Football Federation intends to gain membership in FIFA and OFC. By 2030, the federation's leadership hopes to achieve international recognition. The plans are ambitious: in 2027, they plan to hold the first international matches on their home soil. In July 2027, the first in the country's history club championship — the Marshall Islands Football League — will begin.
Not just a national team is being created, but an entire football ecosystem: children's academies, coaching courses, school programs. The federation is working to make football part of physical education in schools. And it continues to use sports as a platform for climate activism.
The Marshall Islands have long been the last country on Earth without a football team — not because they did not love sports, but because history, geography, and politics were such that football simply did not have time to come to these shores. American influence brought basketball, the absence of infrastructure did not allow the game to develop, and the small population and isolation made the creation of a national team almost impossible. But thanks to the efforts of enthusiasts who started from scratch — without fields, without balls, without coaches — the country has finally stepped onto the international stage.
Today, football in the Marshall Islands is not just a sport. It is a symbol of hope, a way to assert oneself and one's plight, an opportunity to unite the diaspora and attract the attention of the whole world to the climate catastrophe. The Marshall Islands are no longer the “country without football”. They are a country that has just started to play. And this game has just begun.
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