Sports
World Cup 2026: Spain, France, Argentina, Portugal and Germany Lead Our Five Favourites to Lift the Trophy
The FIFA World Cup is finally here.
Over the next month, the world’s best players will battle for football’s biggest prize, with national pride, history and immortality on the line.
Every tournament begins with a handful of favourites, a few dark horses and several nations hoping to spring a surprise. While the expanded format means more opportunities for shocks, history suggests the eventual winner is usually found among a select group of elite teams.
Here are SportsRation’s five leading contenders to lift the World Cup trophy.
1. Spain
If there is one team entering the tournament with the fewest weaknesses, it is Spain.
The European champions have blended youthful brilliance with proven experience, creating arguably the most balanced squad in international football.
Lamine Yamal has emerged as one of the game’s brightest stars, while Pedri continues to control matches with his intelligence and composure. Behind them sits Rodri, the midfielder many consider the most important player in world football.
Spain do not simply win games; they control them.
Their ability to dominate possession, dictate tempo and suffocate opponents makes them the team everyone will want to avoid in the knockout rounds.
2. France
France arrive at another major tournament carrying familiar expectations.
They reached the 2018 World Cup final, won it, then returned to the final again in 2022. No nation has been more consistently successful on the biggest stage over the last decade.
Kylian Mbappé remains the headline act, but France’s strength lies in their incredible depth.
Ousmane Dembélé is coming off one of the finest seasons of his career, while players such as Aurélien Tchouaméni, William Saliba, Michael Olise and Eduardo Camavinga’s replacements ensure Didier Deschamps has quality in every area of the pitch.
France know how to navigate tournament football, and that experience makes them genuine contenders once again.
3. Argentina
Writing off Argentina would be foolish.
The reigning world champions arrive with the confidence of a team that knows exactly what it takes to win football’s greatest prize.
While Lionel Messi may no longer be at his physical peak, his influence remains enormous. More importantly, Argentina are no longer dependent on him.
Enzo Fernández, Alexis Mac Allister and Julián Álvarez have become world-class performers in their own right, while manager Lionel Scaloni has built one of the most cohesive units in international football.
The motivation is obvious too.
Many within the squad have spoken openly about wanting to give Messi one final World Cup triumph before the curtain falls on his international career.
4. Portugal
This may be Portugal’s best opportunity since Cristiano Ronaldo first burst onto the international scene.
The spotlight naturally falls on Ronaldo, who is likely playing in his final World Cup, but Portugal’s strength extends far beyond their iconic captain.
Vitinha enters the tournament after a sensational season that has placed him among the world’s elite midfielders. Bruno Fernandes remains one of football’s most creative forces, while João Neves and Nuno Mendes have developed into world-class talents.
Portugal are no longer a team built solely around Ronaldo.
Instead, they possess quality throughout the squad, with the added emotional motivation of trying to deliver the ultimate prize for their greatest-ever player.
5. Germany
Germany are flying under the radar.
That is usually when they are most dangerous.
While Spain, France and Argentina dominate the headlines, Germany quietly possess one of the most exciting young cores in world football.
Jamal Musiala and Florian Wirtz are capable of deciding matches on their own, while Germany’s tournament pedigree remains unmatched by most nations.
Few teams understand World Cup football better.
If Germany gather momentum, they have the quality and experience to beat anyone.
Dark Horse: Colombia
Every World Cup produces a surprise package.
This time, Colombia could be that team.
Led by Liverpool star Luis Díaz, Colombia possess the attacking quality needed to trouble the world’s best sides.
They are physically strong, tactically disciplined and enter the tournament without the pressure facing traditional powerhouses.
A favourable draw could see them become one of the stories of the competition.
Why England and Brazil Miss Out
The absence of England and Brazil may surprise some readers.
England possess outstanding talent, but injuries and squad balance concerns leave questions unanswered. Jude Bellingham, Harry Kane and Phil Foden are capable of carrying the Three Lions deep into the tournament, but compared to Spain, France and Argentina, England still feel incomplete.
Brazil remain Brazil. They have stars, quality and history.
However, recent performances have lacked the consistency and cohesion that characterised their greatest World Cup-winning sides. Until they prove otherwise against elite opposition, they sit just outside our top five.
Prediction
Spain enter the tournament as the team to beat.
France have the depth.
Argentina have the belief.
Portugal have the emotion.
Germany have the pedigree.
One of those five nations is likely to be celebrating when the final whistle blows.
The only certainty is that football’s biggest stage is ready for another unforgettable chapter.
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