Norway defeated Senegal 3-2 at MetLife Stadium, New Jersey, in the FIFA World Cup Group I fixture, securing a spot at the Round of 32. Erling Haaland scored twice, along with right-back Marcus Holmgren Pedersen, to secure three points. The win was celebrated again with the ‘Viking Row’ along with drumbeats at the end of the match.
Every football tournament—from Champions League to World Cup—comes up with a gesture, chants, tifos and rituals which the fans seize on and turn into a routine for the team’s identity. Most of them fade by the end of the season, but the Norwegian ‘Viking Row’ has a different tale to tell. It’s here to stay, like the thunderclaps from Iceland, or the Mexican wave, which has eventually nudged its way into cricket as well.Let’s look at the usual goal or victory celebrations in football. A chest thump, a roar or even a finger to the lips. These celebrations resemble individual triumph or shutting down the opponent. But the ‘Viking Row’ does something that is needed in everyday life—unity. And, in unity, there lies strength. And football is a team game.
If we consider rowing as an individual sport, it requires cooperation and timing from all the players at the same time. A single person rowing will lead nowhere. But, when the act is pulled off together—same power, same force, same rhythm, same pull—then the boat moves forward. It moves forward faster with more momentum. The celebration also resembles that of the Norwegian football team, which qualified for the FIFA World Cup after 28 years. When demonstrated physically inside the stadium, it uplifts the Norwegian players, and they are more focused on moving forward with a clear goal—to win the 2026 World Cup.Norway lifting the coveted trophy maybe far fetched, but at least the nation has come together for a cause. And, the pivot role in this has been played by the fans who are pulling the team with all their force. If rowing is out of sync, the whole thing looks ragged and falls apart. There’s no faking it. Either the crowd has actually come together as one rhythm, or it visibly hasn’t.That’s the beauty of football. It’s a rare quality which this sport has to offer. And this is the exact reason why the celebration has gone far beyond the stadium—onto escalators in Boston, into Times Square, even into the Norwegian parliament, where lawmakers reportedly paused a session to perform it themselves. It is safe to say that the ‘Viking Row’ has been successfully converted into a movement.










