At the peak of their power in the early 1990s, Pablo Escobar and the Cali Cartel were not content controlling cocaine routes, politicians, and police, they moved into professional soccer and used Colombia's World Cup ambitions as a vehicle for laundering cartel billions, buying influence, and projecting the kind of cultural legitimacy that no amount of bribery could otherwise purchase. The 1994 World Cup became the most visible and most dangerous expression of that infiltration, with narco gambling syndicates placing enormous bets on match outcomes and cartel enforcers treating a deflected ball in a group stage game as a financial grievance that demanded a fatal response. This episode breaks down how the Medellin and Cali Cartels built their parallel empire inside Colombian football, what the business model of narco club ownership actually looked like, and how the execution of Andrés Escobar ten days after Colombia's World Cup elimination exposed just how deeply cartel infrastructure had penetrated the sport and the nation behind it.
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