Football Today
·24 de abril de 2026
World Cup: Most Underrated Player From Each of the Three Favourites

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Yahoo sportsFootball Today
·24 de abril de 2026

Every World Cup-winning team has an underrated player that most onlookers instantly forget. Who played left back for Spain during their successful campaign in South Africa in 2010? Who played alongside German maestros Bastian Schweinsteiger and Toni Kroos in the final in 2014, stepping in for Sami Khedira on short notice when the Real Madrid man went down with an injury in the pre-match warm-up?
Any takers? For Spain, it was Villarreal’s Joan Capdevila and for Germany, it was forgotten former Borussia Mönchengladbach midfielder, Christoph Kramer. You’ve probably just Googled both of them right now!
With the World Cup less than two months away, online betting sites have their odds priced up, and their favourites list likely won’t change too much between now and the tournament opener between Mexico and South Africa in Mexico City on June 11th. The latest World Cup betting at Bovada odds currently list Spain as the 9/2 frontrunner, followed by France at 5/1, and finally England at 15/2.
Each of these teams will likely have an underrated player in their starting lineups this summer, a player that you never even considered a part of the team. Let’s take a look at each of the three frontrunners’ most underrated, and what we can expect to see from them once the World Cup gets underway.
When one thinks of Spain, they think of young wingers Lamine Yamal and Nico Williams. They think of that playmaking midfield anchored by Manchester City’s Rodri, with Pedri, Dani Olmo, and Fabian Ruiz just ahead of him. But who is the man tasked with scoring the goals at the tip of the attack?
Two years ago, it was former Real Madrid man Alvaro Morata who was leading the line at Euro 2024, even wearing the captain’s armband. However, his form has fallen off a cliff in the two years since, and he can’t currently get a game for Cesc Fabregas’ high-flying Como in Serie A. Now, the goalscoring responsibility has fallen to Real Sociedad captain Mikel Oyarzabal, a man that most neutrals wouldn’t even think of when it comes to La Liga strikers.
Oyarzabal came off the bench to score the winner in that 2-1 Euro 2024 final victory against England in Berlin, and that goal kicked off a purple patch for the striker. He has netted 13 goals in his last 16 appearances, beginning with that goal against the Three Lions in the Olympiastadion. To put that run of form into perspective, the 28-year-old has only netted 12 goals all season at club level, with those goals coming in 27 La Liga appearances.
Just a few short weeks ago, you could get odds of 33/1 finishing the World Cup as the top scorer. Following his brace against Serbia in a friendly on March 27th, those odds have come down to just 16/1. And we wouldn’t be surprised to see that bet cash.
The current French midfield is a who’s who of superstars. The veteran N’Golo Kante. Real Madrid duo Aurelien Tchouameni and Eduardo Camavinga. But one man who consistently starts ahead of them and has done for the better part of a decade is the unheralded Adrien Rabiot.
We’re not sure what it is about the 31-year-old, but he certainly doesn’t get the respect he deserves from the footballing public. He was an incredibly unpopular figure throughout his five-year stint at Juventus. Now at AC Milan, he often comes in for criticism from the Rossoneri faithful. But he remains one of the favourites of Les Bleus manager Didier Deschamps.
Rabiot started all but two of France’s games on the run to the World Cup final in Qatar two years ago. He was rested for the dead-rubber third group stage game against Tunisia as the French were already guaranteed top spot in the group. He then missed the semifinal win against Morocco due to illness. He started the rest, though, including the final, and he played a crucial role in Kylian Mbappe’s brilliantly taken equaliser with just ten minutes remaining.
This summer, he is likely to start in midfield for France’s opener against Senegal at MetLife Stadium on June 16th, with any one of Kante, Tchouameni, or Camavinga alongside him.
If you’d have told an England supporter 12 months ago that Elliot Anderson would be starting in central midfield alongside Declan Rice at the World Cup, they’d have laughed at you. It seemed that Kobbie Mainoo would be England’s midfield pivot alongside the Arsenal man for the next decade after his displays at Euro 2024, while Jude Bellingham was also a lock just ahead of them.
However, fast forward to now, and neither Mainoo nor Bellingham is guaranteed a spot in the starting line-up after form issues this season. Meanwhile, Anderson is, and here’s why. Not only is he tenacious when pressing the ball and covering ground for the team, but as soon as he does recover possession, he’s immediately looking to drive forward and spring counterattacks, something crucial to the way Thomas Tuchel likes his team to play.
He has gathered big-game experience at club level this season by leading Nottingham Forest to the Europa League semifinals, and he will almost certainly start England’s opener against Croatia in Dallas, alongside Rice, with either Bellingham or Aston Villa’s Morgan Rogers ahead of them.
Ao vivo


Ao vivo







































