President Donald Trump has never been shy about telling America how to run its sports, but this latest blast from the White House might be his boldest—and most baffling—yet. Speaking at the glittering 2026 FIFA World Cup draw ceremony in Washington, D.C., with Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum and Canada’s Prime Minister Mark Carney in attendance, Trump looked out over the global soccer stage and decided the real problem wasn’t group seeding or tournament logistics. It was the word “football.”

In a rambling but very on-brand riff, the 79-year-old president argued that the sport Americans call “soccer” is the only one that truly deserves the name football, because it’s played with feet and an actual ball. Meanwhile, the sport Americans have called football for a century—helmeted, collision-heavy, mostly hand-thrown—should, in his view, be renamed to avoid “conflict.” “This is football,” Trump insisted, gesturing toward the world’s game. “We have to come up with another name for the other one. It really does not make sense when you think about it.”

Here’s the video of Donald Trump making the argument:

It was the kind of comment that sounds half like a joke and half like a declaration, and it landed exactly the way Trump comments always do: instant applause in the room, instant combustion online. Within minutes, American football fans flooded social media to mock the idea as sacrilege, with some joking it was “unpatriotic” and others saying it was the closest thing to an impeachable offense they’d heard all week. The message from the home crowd was clear: you can host the World Cup, but you’re not taking “football” away from the NFL.

And this isn’t some random throwaway stance. Trump has been wading deeper into pro sports during his second term than any modern president, treating stadiums and locker rooms like extensions of the campaign trail. He became the first sitting U.S. president to attend a Super Bowl, has appeared at major combat-sports events, and keeps popping up in the NFL universe like he’s trying to secure a sideline pass to the national identity itself.

Donald Trump Has Been Heavily Involved In The Professional Sports Scene

That NFL fixation has a very specific address, too: Washington. Over the past few months, Trump has openly pressured the Washington Commanders to restore their old name—scrapped in 2020 amid decades of backlash—going so far as to threaten interference with the team’s long-planned return to a new stadium site in D.C. unless ownership “gets it done.”

Then came the extra twist, because with Trump there is always an extra twist. Multiple outlets have reported that the president wants the Commanders’ new stadium—set for the RFK Stadium site—to be named after him, an idea the White House has publicly floated as “beautiful.” It’s a striking ask even by Trump standards: not content with reshaping a franchise’s identity, he appears to want his own name stamped onto its future home.

So when Trump stands on a World Cup stage and starts talking about renaming “American football,” it doesn’t read like a harmless barroom take. It reads like a continuation of a pattern: sports as symbolism, naming as power, and Trump positioning himself as the guy who decides what America’s rituals should look like. The irony, of course, is that he may be the loudest voice in the room, but he’s shouting at a cultural wall. “Football” in the U.S. isn’t a technical label—it’s a religion, a Thanksgiving tradition, a Friday-night hometown heartbeat, a billion-dollar brand. Even Trump himself has acknowledged that changing “soccer” to “football” wouldn’t be easy. Rename the NFL’s sport instead? That’s not just unlikely. It’s fantasy.

Still, Trump got what he always gets from moments like this: a new controversy that drags cameras, clicks, and conversation back to him. In a single off-the-cuff paragraph, he managed to stir up the global soccer crowd, provoke the NFL faithful, and remind Washington’s football franchise that he’s still hovering over their branding decisions like a restless owner in the luxury box. Whether you think it’s hilarious or infuriating, the takeaway is the same as ever with this president: the sport may be up for debate, but the spotlight isn’t.