10 Players to Watch at WC 2026
From teenage phenoms to veterans chasing glory one last time. These are the names you need to know before the first whistle.
Every World Cup produces its stars. In 1998 it was Ronaldo. In 2006 it was Zidane's final bow. In 2014 it was James Rodríguez. In 2022 it was Kylian Mbappé and Lionel Messi sharing a stage for the ages. So who will define 2026? Here are ten names to circle on your team sheet.
Lamine Yamal, Spain
He turns 19 during the tournament and has already won a European Championship, a Champions League and a La Liga title with Barcelona. Yamal is a generational talent playing with the confidence of a veteran. On his day he is unplayable.
Jude Bellingham, England
At 22, Bellingham is already the totemic figure England have been waiting decades for. He can play anywhere across midfield, score from anywhere and raise those around him. If England are to end 60 years of hurt, he is the man.
Vinicius Jr, Brazil
Two Champions League titles and a Ballon d'Or candidacy have not dulled his hunger. Vinicius plays with a joy and urgency that is infectious. Brazil have not won a World Cup since 2002. On a big stage, he can be the difference.
Kylian Mbappé, France
At 27 this could be the tournament where Mbappé cements his all-time legacy. He already has 51 international goals. A World Cup winners' medal remains the one prize he truly craves. He lost the 2022 final on penalties, despite scoring a hat-trick that night.
Pedri, Spain
The Barça midfielder has shaken off injury woes and is back to his brilliant best. His reading of the game, his first touch, his ability to keep the ball under pressure. At 23, he may be at the peak of his powers.
- Erling Haaland, Norway: Can the goal machine drag Norway to a first-ever World Cup knockout?
- Rodri, Spain: The 2024 Ballon d'Or winner anchors Spain's midfield engine room.
- Mohamed Salah, Egypt: At 34, a final chance to make an impression on the biggest stage.
- Enzo Fernández, Argentina: The heir to Argentina's deep midfield throne.
- Lautaro Martínez, Argentina: Clinical, aggressive, and the man Messi trusts most.
The beautiful thing about the World Cup is that the player who defines it might not even be on this list. There is always a surprise, someone like Salah, Son or Richarlison, who emerges from nowhere and steals the show. That unpredictability is exactly why we watch.
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