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  • Top 10 Players to Watch at the World Cup — And the Uncomfortable Questions They Need to Answer

    World Cup football stadium at night

    FIFA World Cup

    Top 10 Players to Watch at the World Cup — And the Uncomfortable Questions They Need to Answer

    By Gordon Abak

     ·  April 4, 2026  ·  12 min read

    The World Cup has always been where legends are made and where overrated players get brutally exposed. This summer, we’re getting both. Here are the ten players carrying the most weight — and the most awkward questions — into the tournament.


    10. Mohamed Salah — The Final Bow

    Egypt footballer sprinting on pitch

    Let’s be honest about what this is. Salah is 34 years old and this is his last serious crack at a World Cup. Egypt have never won it, never come close, and realistically won’t this time either. But Salah doesn’t need Egypt to win — he needs himself to show up. Because the narrative being quietly written around him is that he’s been a spectacular club player who somehow never translated that brilliance onto the international stage when it mattered most. This is his last chance to rewrite that chapter. The worry? He might not have the legs to carry Egypt the way he needs to. The hope? The man has spent his entire career proving people wrong.


    9. Kenan Yildiz — The Kid the Whole of Europe is Talking About

    Young footballer in action

    Twenty years old. Already Juventus’s most important attacking player. Already wearing a number that carries history. Yildiz has arrived in European football not just as a talent but as a statement — Turkey have quietly been building something serious, and this kid is the centrepiece of it. What makes him dangerous at a World Cup is exactly what makes him dangerous at club level: he doesn’t care about reputations. He’ll nutmeg a veteran defender and smile about it. Whether Turkey have enough around him to go deep is a genuine question. But Yildiz himself? He won’t be overawed. That’s what makes him terrifying.


    8. Federico Valverde — The Heart Uruguay Didn’t Know It Needed

    Midfielder in a football match

    Uruguay’s golden generation is fading. Suarez is gone, Cavani barely relevant at international level anymore. But Valverde? Valverde is the real deal — an engine that never stops, a passer who makes the game look easy, a box-to-box midfielder who could play in any system in world football. The knock on him has always been that he’s been better for Real Madrid than for Uruguay. This is the tournament where that changes or doesn’t. If Uruguay are going to genuinely threaten anyone, it goes through him. The pressure is immense, but he’s the kind of player who seems to play better the higher the stakes get.


    7. Harry Kane — England’s Eternal Bridesmaid

    England footballer on the pitch

    Here’s the brutal truth about Harry Kane: he is a generational goalscorer playing for a nation that has made underachievement a cultural tradition. England will arrive at this tournament with genuine expectation, a squad that on paper should challenge anyone, and a manager who’ll probably set up defensively against teams they should be destroying. Kane will score goals. England will probably still find a way to disappoint. It’s not entirely his fault — he can’t tackle, he can’t manage in real time, he can’t stop the inevitable penalty shootout heartbreak. But as captain and talisman, the weight falls on him. The question isn’t whether Kane will perform. It’s whether England deserve him.


    6. Erling Haaland — Norway’s Dark Horse and Football’s Great Experiment

    Striker celebrating a goal

    Norway at a World Cup with Haaland in their prime is arguably the most fascinating subplot of the entire tournament. This man scores goals the way other people breathe — effortlessly, constantly, almost annoyingly. The question nobody wants to answer is this: what happens when a one-man team meets the elite? We’ve seen it at Champions League level — Haaland can disappear in games where City struggle to create. Now strip away De Bruyne, the system, the structure, and give him a Norway side that qualified largely on his brilliance alone. Dark horse? Genuinely, yes. But if Norway go out early, don’t let the noise fool you — Haaland will still have been the most watchable player at the tournament.


    5. Vinícius Jr — Brazil’s Last Hope for the Beautiful Game

    Brazilian footballer in action

    Brazil haven’t won a World Cup since 2002. A whole generation of football fans has grown up without a Brazilian triumph. The samba football, the joga bonito, the sense that Brazil were something different — it’s been replaced by cautious tactics, defensive pragmatism and tournament exits that feel more like a European side than the most decorated nation in World Cup history. Vinicius is the antidote to all of that. When he plays with freedom — the way he does at the Bernabéu — there is no more exciting footballer on the planet. The problem? Brazil’s setup has historically suffocated his instincts. If this tournament finally gives Vini Jr the freedom he needs, Brazil win it. That’s not an exaggeration. That’s a statement of fact.


    4. Kylian Mbappé — The Man Who Has Everything Except a World Cup He Actually Dominated

    French footballer dribbling

    Yes, he won one in 2018. He was 19 and he was electric. But let’s be uncomfortable for a second: Mbappé in 2022 was astonishing individually and France still lost the final in the most painful way possible. He scored a hat-trick in a final and went home empty-handed. There is an argument — a serious one — that Mbappé has been the best player at the last two World Cups and has nothing to show for it collectively. France remain the most talented squad in world football on paper. But their dressing room issues, their tactical confusion and their tendency to be less than the sum of their parts against the truly elite has become a recurring problem. Mbappé needs France to turn up around him. Whether Deschamps — or whoever succeeds him — can finally crack that code is the biggest coaching question of the tournament.


    3. Lamine Yamal — The Question Is No Longer Whether He’s World Class. It’s Whether He’s The Best

    Young Spanish football star

    He won Euro 2024 as a 17-year-old. He’s been playing for Barcelona as if he’s been there for a decade. He dribbles like Messi, scores like Messi, and makes people around him better in ways that feel uncomfortably familiar to anyone who watched Barcelona between 2008 and 2016. The world is trying to be careful about the Messi comparison because it feels unfair to saddle a teenager with that weight. But Yamal isn’t helping — he keeps performing in ways that make the comparison inevitable. If Spain perform at this World Cup the way they’ve performed in the last two years, and Yamal leads them to it, this will be the moment he stops being a prodigy and becomes a legend. He’ll be 19. Let that sink in.


    2. Cristiano Ronaldo — The GOAT Conversation He Refuses to Let Die

    Football star posing confidently

    Only Ronaldo could be playing in Saudi Arabia and still feel relevant to a World Cup conversation. That’s either a testament to his genius or a sign of how desperately he needs this tournament — depending on which side of the debate you’re on. Here’s the uncomfortable truth: Ronaldo is 41 years old and will be the oldest meaningful player at this World Cup by some distance. Portugal have a young, talented squad that arguably don’t need him to win — they might actually play better without the ball revolving around his ego. But Ronaldo at a World Cup, with everything to prove, is genuinely capable of doing something extraordinary. One last iconic moment. One last reason to reopen the GOAT debate that most people quietly believe is already closed. The question is whether Portugal will have the courage to play through him when it matters, or around him when it’s necessary. History suggests they’ll try the former, get it wrong, and nearly get knocked out before course-correcting. But Ronaldo will score. He always scores.


    1. Lionel Messi — The GOAT’s Final Chapter, and Nobody Knows How It Ends

    Football legend on the pitch

    He won it in 2022. He silenced everyone who ever questioned his international legacy. He had the greatest individual tournament any player has ever had at a World Cup and he did it at 35, in what should have been the twilight of his career. Now he’s 38 and playing in MLS and somehow — somehow — this is still the number one story of this World Cup. Because Messi is coming back. Not as the invincible force of Qatar, but as something arguably more compelling: a legend playing his final game on the biggest stage, knowing it, and choosing to be there anyway. The body won’t be the same. The instincts will be. The question hanging over the entire tournament is not whether Argentina can win it — they probably can, they have the squad. The question is what Messi does in the moments that define it. In 2022 he was transcendent. In 2026 he’ll have to be something different — wiser, more selective, more like a conductor than a soloist. If he can do that, if Argentina win it with Messi orchestrating rather than carrying, it will be the greatest footballing farewell in the history of the sport. No pressure.


    Every World Cup tells us something we didn’t know. This one might tell us more than any in recent memory — about legacy, about age, about whether greatness has a shelf life. We can’t wait.

  • Pep Guardiola Isn’t a Genius Anymore — He’s Just a Man Running Out of Ideas

    Football stadium packed with fans under floodlights

    Opinion

    Pep Guardiola Isn’t a Genius Anymore — He’s Just a Man Running Out of Ideas

    By Gordon Abak

     ·  April 4, 2026  ·  7 min read

    There was a time when watching a Pep Guardiola team was like watching someone solve a puzzle you didn’t even know existed. His Barcelona side didn’t just beat you — they made you feel stupid for thinking football was simple. His early Manchester City teams were the same. Relentless, suffocating, impossibly precise.

    That man feels like a long time ago now. Because the Pep we’ve been watching lately — the one rotating goalkeepers at random, the one losing to mid-table sides in ways that would embarrass a Sunday league manager, the one who seems to be confusing complexity with brilliance — that Pep is something else entirely. And the football world is finally, slowly, starting to admit it.

    The Injury Excuse Has Run Its Course

    Yes, City have had injuries. Rodri missing was a genuine blow — anyone who watched them struggle in his absence could see that. But injuries are part of football. Every manager in Europe deals with them. Arne Slot had his injury crises at Liverpool and found ways through. Erik ten Hag at United — okay, bad example. But the point stands.

    What you can’t excuse is the tactical rigidity dressed up as innovation. Pep has been playing a false nine, a false ten, a false full-back and a false sense of security all at the same time. At some point the falseness stops being genius and starts being indecision. Watching City build up from the back against a well-organised press and pass it straight to the opposition feels less like a system failing and more like a man who can’t let go of ideas that have stopped working.

    He’s Stopped Trusting His Players

    Kevin De Bruyne, when fit, should be the first name on the team sheet. Not rotated out of a home game for tactical reasons that nobody in the stadium can understand. Erling Haaland — the best pure striker on the planet right now — has spent stretches of games operating in a system that actively works against what he does best. You don’t buy a Lamborghini and then insist on driving it in first gear because you read something interesting about fuel efficiency.

    The great Guardiola teams had one thing in common: the players knew exactly what they were doing and why. Xavi, Iniesta, Silva, Kompany — those players could describe their roles in their sleep. The current City squad looks like they’re getting new instructions every Tuesday and being tested on them Saturday.

    The League Title Run Has Exposed Something Deeper

    Liverpool winning the league at a canter has taken away Pep’s favourite shield. For years, the narrative was that only City could match Liverpool and only Liverpool could match City. Now Liverpool are miles clear and City are fighting for top four. That’s not an injury crisis. That’s a gap in quality of management decisions, and the gap is growing.

    Slot in his first season has done what Pep couldn’t do in his seventh — build a team that plays with clarity, confidence and a clear identity week in, week out. That comparison isn’t unfair. It’s the job.

    So What Happens Next?

    Pep will stay. The club won’t sack him and he won’t walk. He’ll get a full rebuild in the summer, buy three or four players who cost more than most countries’ GDP, and come back with something new. Maybe it’ll work again. He’s done it before — reinvented himself at Bayern, then again at City. The man’s football IQ is still off the charts. That’s not the question.

    The question is whether the game has caught up with him in a way that can’t be reversed. Whether the months of predictable patterns, the dropped points against teams who had him scouted, the selections that made people squint at their screens and think — “what is he doing?” — represent a blip or a turning point. Right now, it looks a lot more like the latter.


    Genius is only genius until it stops working. Pep is dangerously close to the moment where the burden of proof shifts — where he has to earn back the benefit of the doubt rather than simply receiving it.

  • Messi Was Never the Greatest — And Here’s Why That Matters

    Football player dribbling on the pitch

    Featured Opinion

    Messi Was Never the Greatest — And Here’s Why That Matters

    By Gordon Abak

     ·  April 4, 2026  ·  8 min read

    The debate has been settled — or so we’re told. Lionel Messi is the Greatest of All Time. Full stop. Any dissent is dismissed as contrarianism, jealousy, or simply not understanding football. But what if the consensus was built on emotion rather than evidence?

    Let’s be clear: Messi is extraordinary. His technical ability is unmatched in the modern era. His vision, his dribbling, his goalscoring record — all historic. But “greatest” implies a totality of dominance that Messi, for all his brilliance, has never quite achieved.

    The International Question

    For the first fifteen years of his career, Messi’s international record was a source of genuine concern for his supporters. Multiple Copa América finals. A World Cup final. All lost. The Argentina national team, despite carrying the greatest player on the planet, repeatedly fell short when it mattered most.

    Yes, he eventually won the Copa América in 2021, and the World Cup in 2022. But the fact that these victories — coming so late in his career — were treated as redemption rather than expectation tells you something important: even his admirers quietly understood that international football had been his Achilles heel for years.

    The Pep Guardiola Factor

    Much of Messi’s peak dominance at Barcelona coincided with one of the greatest coaching setups in football history. Pep Guardiola’s Barcelona was a machine — Xavi, Iniesta, Busquets providing the engine, a high press system perfectly tailored to Messi’s strengths. How much of what we saw was Messi, and how much was the system around him?

    This isn’t to diminish Messi — it takes extraordinary talent to thrive even in the best systems. But the GOAT debate demands we ask uncomfortable questions, and this is one of them.


    The GOAT debate matters because how we discuss greatness shapes how we understand the game. Blind consensus helps no one.

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