The Sporting Caracal Global | May 23, 2026

The Sporting Caracal Global

May 23, 2026 

Sport at the intersection of geopolitics, commerce, and governments. With insights for better communications from an athletic perspective, and a 68.5-foot birdie championship putt.

The cheapest ticket to the World Cup final now runs $2,030, the most expensive seat at the most expensive sporting event ever staged. The hotels built to house the fans who would pay for them are sitting empty. Hold those two facts next to each other, and you have the communications story of the summer.

That is the lens this week. Five stories where the score on the field matters less than who controls the story off it, plus the Person of the Week.

The lead: America is losing the World Cup narrative before a ball is kicked

The story of the week in sport is not a game. It is a set of empty hotel rooms.

The American Hotel & Lodging Association (AHLA) reports bookings well below expectations in almost every host city, and warns the anticipated economic lift may fall short. The AHLA represents more than 32,000 properties and over 80% of franchised hotels in the country, so this is not a fringe complaint. It also directly contradicts FIFA's claim that more than five million tickets have been sold.

That gap is the whole story. The host country wanted a soft-power triumph: a tourism boom, a billion friendly eyeballs, proof that America still throws the best party in the world. Instead, the narrative is being written by empty rooms, a $2,030 entry price, SoFi Stadium workers threatening to strike over ICE deployment, and the fact that Trump handed hosting duties to Andrew Giuliani. Every one of those is a message the host is not choosing to send.

The communications failure is structural. FIFA and the US government are running two different stories, and nobody is reconciling them. Tell investors to expect a World Cup revenue surge in Q3, watch it not materialize, and the press writes the disappointment story for you. Better to walk expectations down yourself, on your own terms and timeline. Pre-empting a bad narrative is cheaper than correcting one.

The Saudi sports story is leaving the arena

Two signals, one trend. The Esports World Cup is leaving Riyadh for Paris, the first time the event has been held outside Saudi Arabia, with Macron personally receiving the Esports Foundation chief at the Élysée. And LIV Golf is reportedly drawing up bankruptcy plans for the end of the season.

Saudi Arabia spent a decade buying sport to buy a narrative: modern, open, a fixture on the global calendar. That works only as long as the money and the legitimacy hold together. LIV is the clearest evidence yet that you cannot purchase a story you cannot sustain, and the esports defection shows the assets walking to a host that offers something Riyadh could not. The lesson is not that the Saudis ran out of money. It is that money was never the part that was failing.

Watch what France did. Macron treated esports like the Olympics, framing state involvement as a national partnership rather than acquisition. That is the difference in communication between sportswashing and soft power. One buys the trophy and tells you so. The other builds the platform and lets you draw the conclusion. France just won that transfer without spending Gulf money.

Britain's one world-beating industry is its best unused message

Arsenal ended a 22-year wait for the Premier League title. Aston Villa won European silverware for the first time in 44 years, dismantling Freiburg away. And The Economist made the point underneath both results: in a country where many things are not working, the Premier League is.

This is the most underused communications asset Britain owns. The national story the UK tells the world right now is decline, dysfunction, and political fragmentation. The single best brand the country exports tells the opposite story: global dominance, ruthless execution, the standard everyone else measures against. Those two messages are running side by side, and only one of them is true at scale.

For UK Inc., and for any company using Britain as a gateway brand, the lesson is that the Premier League is doing soft-power work the government cannot. The country communicates managed decline. Its best export communicates winning. Smart stakeholder messaging borrows from the export, rather than the self-image.

The NAACP boycott is a communications strategy, not a sports story

The NAACP has called on Black athletes to withhold commitments to athletic programs in eight states over redistricting that targets Black voting power, and asked fans to stop buying tickets. Read it as a campaign, not a protest.

The reason it targets sport is precise. College athletes command a narrative that state legislatures cannot control, and athletic programs are the most visible, most sponsor-dependent institutions in those states. By routing a voting-rights fight through recruiting, the NAACP forces a values conversation onto schools and corporate partners who would much rather talk about depth charts and television windows.

That is leverage through messaging, not through a lawsuit. For athletic programs, conference sponsors, and the brands associated with them, the exposure is both real and reputational. The instinct will be to stay silent and hope it passes. Silence is a position here, and a costly one. The operators who fare best will have decided in advance what they stand for, because this fight is designed to make neutrality impossible.

When diplomacy freezes, sport becomes the only open channel

Relations between the two Koreas sit near a historic low. Yet a rare visit by a North Korean soccer team to the South triggered intense emotions among older South Koreans, some of whom openly cheered for the visitors.

That emotional response is the message getting through where official channels are sealed. When governments stop talking, sport remains one of the last functioning channels of communication between adversaries, carrying signals that diplomats cannot send and publics cannot otherwise receive. It is the oldest soft-power instrument there is, and it still works precisely because it looks like it is about a game.

For anyone reading geopolitical risk, this is worth filing. Sporting contact between hostile states is rarely just sport - think Ping-Pong Diplomacy. It is a controlled, deniable, low-cost way to test sentiment and signal openness. Watch who plays whom, and where, as carefully as you watch who meets whom.

Person of the Week: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

Two MVPs in a row. Now defending an NBA championship. And the hardest narrative problem in American sport: he is, by wide agreement, too excellent to be interesting. They are literally calling him boring.

This is a communications case study dressed as a basketball story. Dominance is the toughest thing to sell, because narrative runs on tension, and inevitability kills tension. The league and the press cannot manufacture suspense around a man who simply wins, so they reach for the wardrobe instead: the fur coats worn without irony, the sunglasses indoors. That is not vanity. That is a market leader manufacturing personality because the product alone will not generate the story.

The lesson travels well beyond the NBA. Any company that wins too cleanly faces the same trap. Execute flawlessly, and you become invisible, then resented, then called dull. The scoreboard stops doing your communicating for you. Gilgeous-Alexander understands, consciously or not, that excellence needs a story bolted onto it. Plenty of dominant businesses never figure that out, and pay for it in the narrative ground they cede to louder, lesser competitors.

Enjoy the ride + plan accordingly.

— Marc


Marc A. Ross | Chief Communications Strategist @ Caracal Global | The Sporting Caracal Global is published on Saturdays.

The Sporting Caracal Global is a weekly memo applying the Caracal Global lens to sport: globalization, soft power, governments, and commerce, resolved on the communications stakes that decide who wins on and off the pitch.

Caracal Global is a communications firm for global business, working at the intersection of geopolitics, commerce, and governments. Specializing in Globalization + American Politics. Intelligence + Strategy + Communications.

Google found its wartime generals with an agentic turn

Three years ago, I wrote that Google had too many peacetime generals.

The argument was not mine alone. It came from Praveen Seshadri's essay on life inside the company. Google had 175,000 capable, well-compensated people trapped in a maze of approvals, launch processes, legal reviews, exec reviews, OKRs, and reorgs of reorgs.

No mission.

No urgency.

A collective delusion of exceptionalism. A soft culture where nothing was worth fighting for.

An environment where what to order at some of the best food in Silicon Valley at Google campus cafés was the biggest decision of the day.

I was rooting for them anyway. I wrote that I trusted they could bring on some wartime generals.

And they did.

The announcement at I/O 2026 is what that looks like.

On May 19, Google did not announce a product. It announced a posture.

Two new models, Gemini Omni and Gemini 3.5 Flash.

An agent-first development platform in Antigravity. Information agents in Search. Gemini Spark and Daily Brief in the Gemini app. A Universal Cart built for agentic commerce. Intelligent eyewear shipping this fall.

The framing throughout was not "here is a better tool." It was "now anyone can be a builder." That is mission language. That is urgency. That is a company that has decided what it is fighting for.

The context makes the turn sharper.

A year ago, Google was the cautionary tale of the AI race, the incumbent that invented the transformer and then watched a startup commercialize it. That story has flipped. By app-tracker data from Apptopia, ChatGPT's app market share fell from roughly 69% in early 2025 to about 45% in 2026, while Gemini's climbed from under 15% to about 25%. The pressure on the former leader became acute enough that OpenAI's Sam Altman declared an eight-week "code red" in December, urging staff to refocus on core products.

The peacetime general does not call a code red. The wartime general does.

For executives, the temptation is to read this as a tech story. It is not. It is a case study in how a large, slow, internally focused organization changes its posture, and how fast the outside world re-rates it when it does. Every incumbent you compete with, advise, or sit on the board of is somewhere on the same curve.

Three things this means for global executives:

First, culture change is a communications event before it is an operational one. Google's announcements worked because they were legible. The market understood the story within hours: lagging to leading, peacetime to wartime. Most companies undergoing a genuine turnaround fail to tell that story clearly, so the change happens internally, and the re-rating never comes. If your organization is changing and your stakeholders cannot describe how, you have done the hard half and skipped the half that pays.

Second, "agentic" is about to become a board-level term, and you should not let your competitors define it for you. Gartner has projected that by 2026, 40% of enterprise applications will embed task-specific AI agents that pursue goals and take actions on behalf of users. That shifts the advantage toward whoever controls distribution and ecosystem access, which is exactly the ground Google just claimed. The strategic question for your company is not whether to adopt agents. It is which platform's agents will sit between you and your customers, and what that does to the relationship you thought you owned.

Third, competing on price is the quiet headline. Gemini 3.5 Flash was pitched at a competitive enterprise cost, a direct move against OpenAI and Anthropic on price. When a dominant distributor decides to compete on cost, margins across the category compress. If your planning assumes today's pricing for AI capability holds, rebuild the model. Assume it falls.

The Caracal Global scope

Tariff volatility. Supply chain disruption. NATO realignment. Increased China competition. AI governance. Export controls. Energy transition. Interest rate uncertainty.

These aren't background noise.

These events are reshaping how your company is understood by the audiences that matter most: boards, investors, employees, customers, regulators, journalists, and the broader public.

The world has changed. The way your company explains itself has not.

Most companies treat communications as the function that explains decisions after they are made. The companies winning in this environment treat communications as the function that shapes how decisions are understood, before, during, and after.

Google spent three years being misunderstood. It took one keynote, told clearly, to change the story. That is not a lesson about AI. That is a lesson about communications.

I'm still rooting for Google. The difference is that in 2023, I was hoping they would find their wartime generals. In 2026, the question for the rest of corporate America is whether you can recognize yours, and whether anyone outside your walls can tell.

Enjoy the ride + plan accordingly.

-Marc

You can always reach me @ marc@caracal.global.

*****

Caracal Global is your communications partner for global business, at the intersection of commerce and governments. We monitor geopolitical signals daily: tariff announcements, military movements, policy shifts, trade negotiations, export control changes, and competitive positioning. We translate those signals into messages that your boards, investors, employees, customers, regulators, and the broader public understand.

Geopolitics + Communications. Intelligence, Strategy, and Communications for Fortune 1,000 companies, private equity portfolio firms, and founder-led businesses operating in an environment of permanent disruption. Detroit-born, with deep roots in the Global Great Lakes region. Active in Washington, DC, and London.

Most companies treat communications as the function that explains decisions after they are made. We treat it as the function that shapes how decisions are understood, before, during, and after.

Caracal Global is your Chief Communications Strategist.

Always Be Communicating.

Learn more at caracal.global.

The Knowledge meets the algorithm

On May 17, 60 Minutes returned to a story I first wrote about back in 2019. The framing then was simple. Uber's mapping technology could not find my house in Old Town Alexandria, and London's cabbies, with their 161-year-old test called the Knowledge, were running circles around Silicon Valley.

Seven years later, the analog and digital sides of that fight are still in the ring, but the stakes have shifted. Waymo, owned by Alphabet, says it is now five times safer than a human driver and clocks more than two million miles per week across eleven US cities. Wayve, a British startup backed by Nvidia and Microsoft, is training its AI on London's roundabouts without first mapping the city. Both are racing to put robotaxis on London's streets later this year.

Meanwhile, London's licensed cab fleet has shrunk from 25,000 drivers a decade ago to 16,000 today. 60 Minutes followed cabbies as they worked to pass this grueling test. In the story, Steven Fairbrass has been studying for the Knowledge for eight years and just failed his 20th attempt. Anshu Moorjani finally passed on his 41st try after five years of trying. The exam still requires memorizing 25,000 streets and 6,000 points of interest. A University College London neuroscience study holds up after all this time. The posterior hippocampus, the brain's memory center, physically enlarges over the course of a cabbie's career.

So who wins?

That is the wrong question. The right question is who is communicating effectively, because the analog-digital fight in London is not really a technology story. It is a communications story, and both sides are losing it.

Three things this means for global executives operating in any category where deep tradition meets exponential technology:

The cabbies have a great story and no platform: The Knowledge is one of the world's most extraordinary professional credentials. It changes the brain's literal structure. It dates to 1865, when horse-drawn cabmen first sat for it. It requires roughly 50,000 miles of preparation on foot, by bicycle, and on a motor scooter before a candidate ever gets near a steering wheel. Tom Scullion, a 34-year veteran of the cabbie trade, put it wryly on camera. His Knowledge is to Google Maps what Gordon Ramsay is to a hot dog vendor.

That is great copy. It is also nowhere near the volume or reach of what Alphabet and Nvidia can put behind their case. The cabbies are speaking through individual interviews, union pickets, and word of mouth. Waymo is speaking through five-times-safer data points, polished co-CEO appearances on national television, and billions of dollars in marketing infrastructure. London's cabbies are functionally a heritage brand with terrible distribution. Heritage brands without distribution lose, regardless of product quality.

The robotaxi companies have great data and a credibility problem they refuse to address: Waymo's safety numbers are real. The sensor stack of 29 cameras, 6 radars, 5 microphones, and 5 lidar units is genuinely superhuman. The simulation training is impressive. None of that, however, is what shows up in the public record when a Waymo drives through an active police scene in Los Angeles, blocks emergency responders, or illegally passes a stopped school bus, leading to a software recall and a federal investigation.

The sector treats these incidents as edge cases and statistical noise. To regulators, mayors, transit unions, parents, and Transport for London, those incidents are the entire conversation. The communications failure here is not denial. It is tone. Waymo co-CEO Tekedra Mawakana, on camera, referring to Waymo as a driver with three lifetimes of experience per week, is technically accurate and emotionally tone-deaf. Voters and policymakers do not want a three-lifetime statistical entity making decisions about their streets. They want accountability with a name and a face. The robotaxi sector has not solved that problem, and pretending it does not exist is itself a strategic choice with consequences.

The regulators will resolve this fight, not the technologists: Transport for London has not yet approved driverless commercial pickup. Waymo and Wayve are testing under human supervision. Whichever side of this argument, analog or digital, captures the regulator's confidence first will set the terms for the next decade. That is a communications and stakeholder engagement contest. It is decided in select committee hearings, City Hall briefings, op-ed pages, transit safety boards, and the careful management of every single edge-case incident that makes the evening news.

The same pattern is playing out across every category where deep tradition meets exponential technology. Legal services. Medical diagnostics. Education. Manufacturing. Financial advisory. Aviation. In each case, the analog incumbents have brand equity, cultural standing, and stories of mastery that they fail to translate. In each one, the digital challengers have scale, data, and capital, but cannot speak the language of regulators, employees, and the affected public.

Seven years ago, I wrote that Uber could not find my house. The mapping has gotten better. The communications challenge has gotten harder. The Knowledge, in 2026, is no longer just about memorizing streets. It is about knowing who you need to convince, and in what order.

Enjoy the ride + plan accordingly.

-Marc.

You can always reach me @ marc@caracal.global

*****

Caracal Global is your communications partner for global business, at the intersection of commerce and governments. We monitor geopolitical signals daily: tariff announcements, military movements, policy shifts, trade negotiations, export control changes, and competitive positioning. We translate those signals into messages that your boards, investors, employees, customers, regulators, and the broader public understand.

Geopolitics + Communications. Intelligence, Strategy, and Communications for Fortune 1,000 companies, private equity portfolio firms, and founder-led businesses operating in an environment of permanent disruption. Detroit-born, with deep roots in the Global Great Lakes region. Active in Washington, DC, and London.

Most companies treat communications as the function that explains decisions after they are made. We treat it as the function that shapes how decisions are understood, before, during, and after.

Caracal Global is your Chief Communications Strategist.

Always Be Communicating.

Learn more at caracal.global.