Football365
·11 juin 2026
World Cup 2026 Power Rankings: Starting positions confirmed as tournament arrives at last

In partnership with
Yahoo sportsFootball365
·11 juin 2026

The World Cup is here. Nobody seems that interested yet, but we’re certain that changes once the actual games begin and the teams show themselves.
That moment is now so close we can taste it. But all we can do until that moment is rank the teams. Rank them by power. Power rank them, if you will.
We really cannot stress enough that these rankings are neither definitive, nor set in stone, nor remotely worth getting worked up about. Okay? Yeah? Okay.
Before proceeding, it will definitely be worth reminding yourselves how this all works because obviously this is – for so many reasons – a World Cup like no other.
The full details from December’s group-stage draw can be found here, and the final 26-man squads everyone has brought to the tournament are here.
For entirely non-footballing reasons (or what would be entirely non-footballing reasons if Gianni Infantino hadn’t decided to give a warmongering toddler a made-up Peace Prize) a very capable Iran team who came through Asia’s competitive qualification process in decent style have to sit right at the foot of this list purely because until we actually see them playing actual World Cup games we still can’t entirely rule out Donald Trump doing something mental and just not letting them play while FIFA shrug and go ‘Ah, what can you do?’ and ruffling his extraordinary hair.
Chris Wood and co. are among the biggest winners of the expanded World Cup format, one that for the first time hands the best team in the OFC a ticket straight to the World Cup rather than a ticklish play-off against Uruguay or some such. Until and unless Australia come crawling back, that ticket is almost certain to go New Zealand’s way as it has this time.
A warm-up thrashing from Haiti wasn’t the most encouraging way to start, but they were better – or at least not thrashed – against an England side very much in warm-up mode.
Returning to the World Cup for the first time in over half a century. That time they lost all three games.
Their first game this time out against Scotland feels absolutely enormous for both sides, given it’s Brazil and Morocco who round out one of the tougher first-round groups. If Haiti lose that first one, it’s hard to see where a point comes from.
Held off Jamaica to qualify for their first ever World Cup and in doing so become the smallest ever nation – both in population and area – ever to make it to the finals. Germany, Ivory Coast and a dark-horse Ecuador is a very tough group.
Came through the inter-confederation play-offs. They were seeded to do so, but it still shows nerve under pressure for a team that don’t usually get here.
Beat Nigeria in a nerve-jangling sudden-death penalty shoot-out to snatch Africa’s place at the inter-confederation play-off, and then got the job done against Jamaica to reach the World Cup for only the second time.
Back in the World Cup for the first time since a pummelling from Harry Kane and England in 2018, and now find themselves drawn once more against Harry Kane and England and at risk of more of the same.
In a group also featuring the time-served tournament smarts of Croatia, pipping Ghana to third and hoping to be one of the eight ‘lucky losers’ who still make the last 32 appears to be the best-case scenario here.
One of the truly incredible stories of this qualification process, Cape Verde confirmed their place at a World Cup for the very first time after winning their group at the expense of Cameroon.
Unlikely to bother Spain or Uruguay, but could give Saudi Arabia a run for third in Group H.
Another first-time qualifier from the Asian section, while a run to their first ever Asian Cup final in 2023 shows they are not to be lightly dismissed. Do we think they can get the better of Argentina in Group J? We do not. Algeria and Austria, though? Doable, perhaps.
Home advantage helped them get over the line in the fourth stage of AFC qualification after they failed to get the job done in the third stage.
Being one of the best third-place teams looks like the main goal for the Saudis in a group featuring Spain and Uruguay.
The 2023 Asian Cup champions and 2022 hosts had to take the long route to qualification having failed to make it directly to North America from the third round of Asian qualifying, but home advantage for October’s quick-fire fourth group stage helped them over the line and they would expect to do far better than the three defeats they managed on debut last time out, and landing in Canada’s group definitely offers a chance.
The expansion of the World Cup to 48 teams was always going to offer opportunities, and Uzbekistan were among the first to grab theirs.
They have qualified for every Asian Cup since independence but never before now a World Cup. They are also the first double-landlocked country to reach a World Cup. Time for Liechtenstein to pull their finger out.
Every chance Uzbekistan’s hopes will come to rest entirely on the final match of their group stage against DR Congo, with Portugal and Colombia clear favourites for the top two spots.
World Cup stalwarts who have secured qualification and now turn attention to another bid to get beyond the group stage for the first time in the finals themselves.
Won’t be easy in what is the closest thing to a group of death you’ll find in a 48-team event where third place will often be enough to go through. Netherlands, Japan, Sweden is as tough as it gets, we reckon.
Hadn’t made it back to the World Cup since hosting in 2010, but finished third at AFCON two years ago and qualified ahead of Nigeria in their 2026 qualification group despite having to forfeit a game they won 2-0 after fielding an ineligible player. Assuming they don’t repeat that particular trick, could bloody a few noses next summer, starting in the tournament’s very first game against Mexico, who they also faced in the very first game as hosts back in 2010.
Came through a tough qualification battle with Gabon to win their group and reach their fourth World Cup and have a very plausible route out of a group containing Germany, Ecuador and Curacao.
A squad packed with players boasting top-tier club experience in Europe will have eyes on another run to the knockout stages to go with those from 2006 and 2010 but will have to negotiate a group containing the vast tournament know-how of England and Croatia.
Quarter-finalists in 2002 and knocked out by England in the last 16 in Qatar, Senegal won a tough qualifying group and face another tough task at the finals. As pot-one, pot-three combos go there really weren’t many worse potential outcomes out there than France and Norway.
One of those countries that feel like they’ve been at more World Cups than is actually the case having only actually been at two finals since the 1980s. They did reach the last 16 when last getting there in 2014, and will certainly have eyes on second place at the expense of Austria and Jordan in Argentina’s group.
The four UEFA play-off winners were, for the most part, hugely fortunate in the main group-stage draw that took place three months before we even knew who the precise beneficiaries would be.
By sitting in pot four by default, all manner of group-of-death unpleasantness might have awaited but three of the four bagged the hosts from pot one. Czech Republic, having seen off Denmark, will very correctly fancy their chances of emerging from a group containing Mexico, South Korea and South Africa.
Automatic qualifiers with the first objective being to improve on a World Cup finals record that currently reads played six, lost six after group-stage exits in 1986 and 2022. A run to the 2024 Copa America semi-finals in which their only defeats came against Argentina offers plenty of hope, while playing Switzerland (clearly the strongest team on paper in Group B) last gives Canada a genuine chance to get the job done against Bosnia and Qatar.
Held off Bosnia to top their group and reach their first World Cup since France 98. Which seems a truly mad amount of time for them not to have made it.
Surely won’t topple Argentina in Group J, but will fancy their chances of second place at the expense of Algeria and Jordan.
Back in the World Cup for the first time since 1998, and the fact there is quite literally nothing Scott McTominay can’t do means they cannot be airily dismissed. And if they still can’t get beyond the group stage when 32 teams will make it…
The games against Brazil and Morocco will be tasty group-stage fare, and the opener against Haiti already absolutely screams must-win. Do that in any kind of impressive style and it really might be enough for a knockout spot on its own.
The evidence from the Euros in 2021 and 2024 tells us that three points will put you in a goal-difference fight for one of the third-place qualification spots.
Haven’t appeared at the World Cup finals since a quarter-final appearance in 2010 but made it comfortably enough this time around.
A humbling experience at last year’s Copa America in the USA isn’t ideal major tournament prep, but we have an inkling they might go well having landed a plum draw in Group D where none of USA, Australia or Turkey should be faced with dread fear.
Massive ‘Tottenham in the Champions League’ vibes from Sweden here, who have bantered their way to the actual World Cup on the back of finishing bottom of their qualification group with a record of P6 W0 D2 L4. Their Nations League performance earned them a play-off safety net they absolutely didn’t deserve but upon which they capitalised in undeniably impressive style.
And they do have a squad containing plenty of quality. They could absolutely cause some mischief now they are, somehow, here. But they’ve also landed in what comes closest to a group of death in the new watered-down format with Netherlands, Japan and Tunisia about as tough as it could possibly be these days. Not that Sweden can really complain.
Have secured their spot at a sixth consecutive World Cup and, while no longer the team of Viduka, Kewell and co, remain typically Australian in their reluctance to go quietly and should absolutely fancy their chances in a p*ss-weak group.
Reached the last 16 in Qatar, but haven’t been beyond the quarter-finals of the Asian Cup since winning it in 2015 in Ange Postecoglou’s second year in charge. It’s what he does, mate.
Won’t be quaking in their boots about facing USA, Turkey and Paraguay in what looks like the softest of all the various first-stage groups.
A strong contender for biggest World Cup underachievers given they are seven-time champions of Africa with a long and deep football heritage who have nevertheless made it to the World Cup only three times, with a best of the last 16 (when it was in fact then the first round) back in 1934.
Went out in the group stage in 1990 and 2018 but looked very decent indeed in qualification this time around. Mo Salah and co were among the earlier African teams to confirm top spot – and thus World Cup qualification – in their group.
Iran and New Zealand offer significant opportunities for Egypt in the group stage, while even a not-quite-what-they-were Belgium could be taken down.
Have reached the knockout stages at five of the last eight World Cups and would expect to at least match the last-16 effort from the last time they hosted in 1994.
Came out of the draw in good shape, with Australia the weakest team in pot two and Turkey not the worst outcome if you had to end up with a UEFA play-off qualifier from pot four.
Problem is that the USA currently look like they might be quite cack. Hard to deny it would be hilarious if they go out early, right up until the moment their president responds by launching all-out nuclear war on every other country in the world as a dirty protest.
Missed out on Qatar 2022 after finishing sixth in South American qualifying. That would have been good enough this time around with the tournament expansion, but Colombia ended up third in what was a tightly packed bunch of automatic CONMEBOL qualifiers stumbling over the line behind runaway leaders Argentina.
Reached the quarter-finals and last 16 in 2014 and 2018 and finished third and second in the last two editions of the Copa America to highlight tournament know-how that should not be lightly dismissed. Haven’t come out of the draw too badly either, with Portugal their top seed alongside Uzbekistan and DR Congo.
Pied off Italy to condemn the four-time winners to a third straight World Cup watching on from home. And should absolutely fancy their chances of making it to the knockouts after landing very handily in a group with Canada, Qatar and Switzerland.
Finalists and semi-finalists in the last two World Cups which commands obvious respect, and they safely negotiated their way out of a tough qualifying section where Czech Republic and quite wonderfully the Faroe Islands proved worthy adversaries.
But we do worry about an ageing squad now tournament time has rolled around at the end of another long season of club football, and kicking off their tournament with one of the standout fixtures of matchday one against 2018 semi-final foes England isn’t ideal. For either team, in fairness.
Already through to the 2030 World Cup as well as a ‘commemorative match host’ and came safely through the CONMEBOL qualification process with a game to spare as they look to put a disappointing 2022 World Cup behind them.
Spain wasn’t ideal from pot one, but pots three and four were kinder with Saudi Arabia and Cape Verde not teams who should block Uruguay’s path to the runner-up spot at least in Group H – but that is its own problem. Because the Group H runners-up are one of the unfortunate ones to land a group winner in the last 32, and in Uruguay’s case that would be the winners of Group J. So most likely Argentina. Oof.
Haven’t missed a World Cup since 1982 and never really looked like doing so this time around after a rock-solid AFC qualification campaign, and got the prize every pot-two team craved of landing one of the co-hosts as their pot-one opposition. Will surely fancy their chances of topping Group A ahead of Mexico, which obviously opens up a theoretically more straightforward knockout path for a very handy team.
One of the unluckier teams to find themselves in the UEFA play-offs after taking being far too strong for everyone not called Spain in their first-round group. But they’ve been luckier since then. Got a pretty kindly draw in those play-offs and duly capitalised, and haven’t landed in a bad spot in the tournament itself at all. Given all the play-off teams were in pot four by default, ending up in a group with USA, Paraguay and Australia is an absolute result.
Very decent argument that Turkey ought in fact to win that group.
Have only once made it beyond the World Cup group stage – in 2006, when they were narrowly beaten by England in the last 16 – but have now reached a fifth World Cup in the last seven, having also reached the quarter-finals in three of the last four Copa America.
Will really fancy their chances of progression from Group E, where Germany are the top seeds but Ivory Coast and Curacao offer a big opportunity.
Two things we know about Switzerland at the World Cup. They qualify, and then they get out of the group, and then they go out in the last 16. That’s been the case at five of the last eight. It’s not quite Mexico levels, but it’s the closest Europe can manage.
Got the dream result of Canada from pot one and should absolutely come out on top in a group also featuring Bosnia and Qatar.
Finally ended their streak of seven straight last-16 World Cup exits in Qatar, but not in the way they would have wanted. Qualified automatically here as hosts, and did win the CONCACAF Gold Cup in 2023 before failing to get beyond the group stage of the 2024 Copa America.
Have the honour of getting the tournament under way on June 11, and in a neat quirk of fate will do so against South Africa – just as they did 16 years earlier when South Africa were the hosts.
Being automatically placed into Group A as seeded hosts gives them an easier group-stage path than would otherwise have been the case.
First qualified for the World Cup in 1998 and haven’t missed one since. Won’t make life easy for Netherlands in Group F after pulling England’s pants down at Wembley, but there’s a strong case that – with Sweden and Tunisia also in there – F is the toughest of all the groups.
An inexplicably miserable major tournament record having last reached the World Cup in 1998 and not even getting themselves to a Euros since 2000.
But a solid squad sprinkled with plenty of stardust thanks to your Erling Haalands and Martin Odegaards will be a dark horse this summer. They won all eight games in qualification – thrashing Italy home and away and scoring 37 goals across the campaign – to confirm their place in North America.
They were without doubt the pot-three team everyone wanted to avoid in the draw, and their clash with France could be one of the standouts of the absolutely massive and exhausting group stage.
The golden generation is fading from view but they remain ranked inside the world’s top eight and won’t be a soft touch. Not a bad draw either, with perennial World Cup underachievers Egypt alongside Iran and New Zealand in a group Belgium ought to win handily enough to secure a clash with a third-place team in the first knockout round.
One of the great stories of the last World Cup, where they became the first African side ever to reach the last four. Were also the first African team to qualify for 2026 and should go well again. Brazil as the top seed in their group is firmly in the could have been better, could have been worse category these days.
Something strange has happened to Germany in recent tournament cycles. The old rule was that no matter how unconvincing they might look between majors, you could famously Never Rule Out The Germans when the serious business of tournament ball began.
The new rule is that no matter how good they look between majors, you simply cannot trust a really exciting squad of players to deliver when the big tournaments come around.
And now they’re actually starting to look quite rubbish in between tournaments as well. If losing from 1-0 up against Portugal in the Nations League semi-finals is unfortunate but forgivable, starting a World Cup qualification campaign that ought to be a formality with a 2-0 defeat to Slovakia is less so.
They have recovered their composure since then, and absolutely hammered Slovakia in the decisive return fixture to secure their place in North America but it is now 10 years since they reached a World Cup or Euros semi-final, with only quite flaky current evidence that they deserve your trust they can put that right.
Did well in the draw, though, avoiding a European opponent and bagging debutants Curacao as well as Ivory Coast and an admittedly dangerous Ecuador.
Narrowly beaten by Argentina in the quarters in Qatar and somehow beaten by England in the Euros semi-final, so recent tournament pedigree is solid enough and the squad is positively dripping in Premier League quality.
Were slightly unfortunate in the draw as the one big seed to get what nobody wanted; a UEFA play-off winner from pot four. And a resurgent Sweden were arguably the worst UEFA play-off winner to land once Italy had f*cked it. Throw Japan and a very capable Tunisia into the mix, and you’ve got a group that absolutely wouldn’t look out of place in a 24-team World Cup, never mind 48.
These are not glorious times for world football’s most decorated nation having made just one World Cup semi-final since 2002, and even that is one they would rather not talk about too much, thanks all the same.
A quarter-final exit at last year’s Copa America and none-too-convincing qualifying campaign don’t exactly indicate all is about to change, but they have qualified comfily enough and are still Brazil. And now they have Carlo Ancelotti and his eyebrows. Which could be massive. And not just the eyebrows.
Qatar 2022 semi-finalists Morocco are tough group-stage opposition, but Scotland and Haiti should hold few fears.
A formline through their last four major tournaments of SF-RU-QF-RU is one that has to be respected even if the specifics of just how England did it remain something of a puzzle involving an uncanny gift for landing on the right side of the draw every single time. Does feel like England are due a tournament where the run of the balls goes against them and can’t really complain if it’s this one.
Have a clear focus on this tournament under Thomas Tuchel, and won all eight of their qualifiers – without conceding a goal – to become the first European team to secure their place in North America.
Performances by the end of that qualification campaign were genuinely encouraging, with some pretty clear signs Tuchel is getting to grips with the players at his disposal and marking England out as a team who will have to be taken seriously this summer. Ropier efforts in subsequent friendlies have to be viewed through the prism of Tuchel being a club-football man who has treated every friendly placed in front of him very much like a July pre-season game.
They don’t have an easy group having landed Croatia from pot two and what then became the worst remaining possibility from pot four in Ghana, but they’ll have fond memories of playing Panama and shouldn’t have too much problem in reaching the knockouts.
For at least the fifth time, Portugal are preparing themselves for Cristiano Ronaldo’s major tournament farewell because surely this has to be the last one, right? Not even with Argentina does one player so dominate the attention, but Portugal looked the business yet again in the Nations League where they beat Germany and Spain to emerge as champions with Ronaldo still very much their main man even though Ronaldo has scored zero proper goals for Portugal.
But they stumbled over the line in qualification. And their recent actual-major-tournament record is spotty; they haven’t been beyond the quarter-finals in four attempts since sh*thousing their way to Euro 2016 title glory riding a wave of draws.
But they’ve got a decent draw and not the worst knockout path assuming they win Group K as they absolutely should. Also have the best midfield in the tournament. Could definitely win this.
Winners and runners-up in the last two World Cups, narrowly beaten by Spain in the Euro semi-finals, and third-place finishers in the Nations League. It’s some solid tournament pedigree.
The fact they kick off their campaign against Senegal could bring back some vexing 2002 memories, mind, and Norway were the pot-three lurker everyone wanted to avoid.
Won the Euros in thrilling style and possess a young, deep squad that should only improve, though they did lose the Nations League final to Portugal. Eased through qualification and are the current favourites with the bookies.
Cape Verde, Saudi Arabia and Uruguay is not too formidable a group either.
No point overcomplicating things at this stage. Argentina are the current holders of both the World Cup and the Copa America and absolutely dominated South American qualifying.
Concerns around an ageing squad’s ability to negotiate an even longer tournament are valid, but offset slightly by the suspicion that conditions at this tournament should suit South Americans more than Europeans.
Will be losing little sleep over the group-stage draw in which their Group J was in fact a group of As – Algeria and Austria are also there – before, confusingly, adding an actual J in Jordan. They should be winning that group with room to spare, and from there wouldn’t have to face another group winner until the quarter-final.







































