PARAGUAY · WORLD CUP 2026
Key Facts
—The scare: Julio Enciso, 22, was stretchered off in tears against Nicaragua on June 5, days before the World Cup opener.
—The injury: Coach Gustavo Alfaro described a double knock, a hamstring impact and a blow that affected the quadriceps area.
—The status: An MRI was ordered and, as of writing, no firm diagnosis has been confirmed.
—The stakes: Paraguay open against hosts the United States on June 12, in a tough Group D with Australia and Türkiye.
—The player: Enciso scored a dozen goals this season for Strasbourg in France and is the creative hub of the attack.
—The context: It is Paraguay’s first World Cup since 2010, ending a sixteen-year absence.
Julio Enciso, the young forward Paraguay’s whole World Cup campaign was built around, limped off in tears in a friendly that meant nothing, and days before their first World Cup match in sixteen years a nation is now waiting on a scan.
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How the Julio Enciso scare unfolded
The setting could hardly have been lower-stakes. Paraguay were cruising in a warm-up friendly against Nicaragua in Asuncion, a sendoff match before flying to the United States, when the night turned.
Around twenty-five minutes in, Enciso pulled up and signalled to the bench. He was helped from the pitch in tears, and the home crowd fell quiet in what was meant to be a celebration.
Paraguay won the match comfortably without him. But the scoreline was the last thing on anyone’s mind once their most important player had gone off holding his leg.
Coach Gustavo Alfaro said afterwards that Enciso took two blows in quick succession, one to the hamstring and one that affected the quadriceps area. He added that the player got scared, which was why he came off.
By the coach’s account, Enciso first signalled after the opening knock but tried to run it off, telling the bench it was loosening up. A second blow moments later was the one that ended his night.
No diagnosis yet
The crucial detail is what is not known. An MRI scan was ordered, and at the time of writing no firm diagnosis had been made public, leaving the severity an open question.
Alfaro struck a hopeful note, saying he wanted to believe the problem was the result of an impact rather than a muscle tear, and that he hoped to have the player back for the opener.
Other accounts have been more cautious, suggesting Enciso could miss the first couple of group games. Until the medical staff speak, both readings remain possible.
That uncertainty is its own kind of pressure. A clear timeline, even a bad one, lets a coach plan; an open question forces him to prepare for two very different tournaments at once.
There is a narrow window to work with. With the opener only days away, every hour without a result shortens the time the medical staff have to manage any recovery and the coach has to settle on a plan.
Why he matters this much
Enciso is the rare Paraguayan attacker with a top-five European league behind him. He scored a dozen goals this season for Strasbourg in France, the kind of return that marks a player out as a genuine difference-maker.
For a national team built more on grit than flair, he is the creative spark, the one expected to unlock tight games. Much of the attacking plan runs through him.
At twenty-two, he also carries a weight of expectation that goes beyond tactics. He is the face of a young Paraguay side that fans hope can announce itself on the biggest stage.
His club season made the case plainly. A double-figure goal haul from an attacking midfielder in a competitive European league is exactly the form a national team wants peaking at a tournament, not cut short the week before it.
A cruel twist before a historic return
The timing is what stings. Paraguay are back at a World Cup for the first time since 2010, a return that ended their longest absence and was celebrated as a national achievement.
They were drawn into a demanding Group D, opening against the host United States before facing Australia and Türkiye. There is no soft landing in which to ease a key player back.
An opener against the hosts is exactly the sort of occasion a side wants its best attacker fit for, both for the result and for the confidence a strong start would bring.
There is a bitter irony in how it happened. The injury came in a glorified exhibition, a match Enciso did not strictly need to play, rather than in the heat of qualifying where the risk would at least have bought something.
For now, Paraguay can only wait. A friendly that did not need to be played has handed the team its most anxious week, and the answer rests on a single scan.
If the news is good, the scare becomes a footnote to a feel-good return. If it is not, a tournament sixteen years in the making may have to be reimagined without its brightest attacking talent.
Frequently asked questions
What happened to Julio Enciso?
He was stretchered off in tears around twenty-five minutes into a friendly against Nicaragua on June 5, after taking two quick blows that the coach said affected his hamstring and quadriceps area.
Will he play in the World Cup opener?
It is unclear. An MRI was ordered and no firm diagnosis has been confirmed. The coach is hopeful, while other reports suggest he could miss early group games.
Why is he so important to Paraguay?
He is the side’s main creative attacker, fresh off a dozen goals for Strasbourg in France, and much of Paraguay’s attacking plan is built around him.
When and who do Paraguay play first?
They open against the host United States on June 12, in a Group D that also features Australia and Türkiye. It is their first World Cup since 2010.
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