On an island where football arrived early and never left, Malta's national team has lived for more than a century inside the unforgiving arithmetic of international competition. Founded among garrisons, docks, schools, and parish rivalries, Maltese football developed deep roots long before global professionalism hardened the sport's hierarchy. This book tells the complete, fact-based story of how a small nation built one of Europe's oldest football associations-and why longevity, tradition, and passion have not translated into tournament qualification.Rather than searching for heroes or scapegoats, Knights of the Red Cross examines systems: governance, domestic league realities, coaching education, facilities, youth development, and the structural consequences of a tiny player pool. It traces Malta's journey from early representative matches to the modern era of UEFA Nations League football, showing how progress can be real, measurable, and sustained even when headline results remain scarce. In doing so, the book reveals what Malta's experience teaches about modern football itself-how scale, depth, and infrastructure quietly decide outcomes long before the teams walk onto the pitch.