“You see their faces, huh?” Javi shouted over the music, sweat dripping from his cornrowed hair. “They don’t know what hit them. Because they never watched us. They never thought they had to.”

“They’re playing… differently,” whispered the Portuguese goalkeeper, Diogo Costa, his voice hollow. “Not dirty. Just… faster. As if the ball is personal.”

The crowd – 12,000 Puerto Ricans in a stadium built for 18,000 – erupted like a volcano finally allowed to speak. Flags of the single star fluttered next to homemade signs: “El Subestimado” (The Underestimated) and “Portugal? Más como Portu-GOL.”

In the 58th minute, a Portuguese corner was cleared by a 19-year-old Puerto Rican defender named Yamil Flores – a gas station clerk’s son who had learned to head the ball by practicing against mangoes tossed by his abuela. The clearance found Javi Soto at midfield. He didn’t sprint. He glided, like a man walking on the moon, drawing two defenders before slipping a no-look pass to a winger named Diego “La Sombra” Méndez.

In the 77th minute, Portugal finally scored. A consolation header from a corner. A polite, European goal.

“With respect, sir,” he said softly. “We don’t deserve anything. We took it.”

Portugal’s coach, a former Ballon d’Or winner now red-faced with fury, made five substitutions. None mattered. Because Puerto Rico had discovered the secret that no European scout had ever bothered to find: they played as if each match was their last, because for most of them, it was. No Premier League contracts. No Champions League bonuses. Just the smell of wet grass and the memory of every closed door.

“Mija,” he said. “You already are.”