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# World Cup 2026: Meet the England fan who collected a beer from every nation

- **Source:** 
- **Published:** 9 Jun
- **Club:** Hull City
- **Original URL:** https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/articles/c4gy5nj5qgxo?at_medium=RSS&amp;at_campaign=rss

The Fifa World Cup is an event that lends itself to memorabilia.

From Panini stickers to iconic shirts and everything in between, if fans can buy it, they'll collect it.

But Gus Hully thought he'd take things up a level.

The London-based music industry analyst has managed to source one beer from each of the 48 nations competing at this summer's World Cup in the United States, Mexico and Canada.

Gus - inspired by another beer enthusiast's unsuccessful attempt to collect every beer at World Cup 2010 and Euro 2012 - is no rookie.

After a failed attempt for World Cup 2014, the Cheltenham Town fan has bought a beer for every participating nation at every men's and women's major international tournament since Euro 2016, as well as the 2022 and 2024 editions of the Eurovision Song Contest.

"It took a lot of time and effort to pull all of this together," Gus told BBC Sport of the challenge posed by an expanded 48-team World Cup.

Gus started researching this year's collection in early 2025 when Uzbekistan emerged as a frontrunner in the AFC Asian qualifiers.

From that point on he was constantly checking results and tables to monitor the progress of nations with difficult to source beers.

After ticking off the easier countries, Gus used every contact he had to complete the set.

For some, like Panama, he got lucky. He was on holiday in Florida and found a beer by Panamanian craft brewery Casa Bruja.

"Iraq was a headache to figure out, but I ended up spending £30 to buy a bottle off a guy in Poland who went to Iraq a few years ago and brought a bottle back as a souvenir," said Gus.

"For countries where people don't drink, like Qatar and Saudi Arabia, I got non-alcoholic malt beverages which are as close to beer as you can get over there considering they're brewed with barley malt."

The Iranian community in Finchley, north London, helped Gus out, but Qatar proved trickier.

"I had to trade some rare English beers with a bloke from Finland for a can of Fizzin from Qatar, and I traded a Panamanian beer with another collector for a bottle of Moussy from Saudi Arabia," explained Gus.

There are even beers from countries that didn't qualify like Costa Rica and Guatemala, bought when the opportunity arose just to be on the safe side.

With friends bringing him beers back from Curacao, Jordan and Algeria - the latter found in a shop in northern Paris - Gus says half of his collection was sourced overseas.

A non-alcoholic pineapple flavoured malt drink from Iraq was the final beer to arrive, just two weeks ago.

After spending about £250 on the 48-beer haul, will Gus be savouring or saving his collection?

"I'll be drinking each beer once that team has been eliminated from the competition, basically as a toast to their participation and failure at winning the tournament," he said.

Like many England fans, Gus won't be travelling to the most expensive World Cup in history.

"I would love to have gone to some games," he said. "But the costs of flights, hotels and matches were too much of a deterrent for me."

Gus said this will probably be his last World Cup challenge as sourcing 48 beers has been "too much hassle" - but he may give Euro 2028 a go.

"That's only 24 teams so it's much easier to collect. Well, unless Andorra or San Marino qualify, then I wouldn't mind a couple of jaunts to countries I've never visited before."

World Cup fixtures and group standings

How to watch the World Cup on the BBC

Everything you need to know about the World Cup

