TRENDING
Fire Scare At National Assembly As Senators Prevent Outbreak • We drank our urine to survive, Libya returnee recounts desert ordeal • Ugochinyere loses Minority Leader bid in House of Reps • Wanne mbaroni tuhuma za mauaji raia wa China • Reps to vote on State Police proposal tomorrow amid security push • Roads Minister reassigns Bogoso–Prestea road project to new contractor over delays • Stop tweeting and brief Parliament on South Africa situation — Patrick Boamah to Ablakwa • Football Daily | Desiré and Guéla Doué lead way at World Cup bursting with brotherly love • NCAA grounds road-landed aircraft • House Halts Ugochinyere’s Minority Leader’s Bid, Bars First-term Lawmakers from Principal Offices • A wonder of the world — South African bank CEO commits to Dangote Refinery IPO listing • Federal High Court judges begin 2026 annual vacation July 27 • NCC, risk managers advocate overhaul of national security system • Kamati ya Bunge yapendekeza Hospitali ya Benjamini Mkapa iwe ya Taifa • Mchengerwa: Huduma za afya zizingatie utu wa mgonjwa • Nigeria–US joint operations kill over 200 terrorists in North-East — DHQ • Stocks Slide As US Inflation Surges, US And Iran Trade Strikes • International Breweries PLC Goes All In for the FIFA World Cup 2026 • NWFL: Bayelsa Queens beat Rivers Angels to end barren streak • Have you experienced the Samsung Galaxy Buds4 Series with Smarter AI, Premium Sound and All-Day Comfort? • Fire Scare At National Assembly As Senators Prevent Outbreak • We drank our urine to survive, Libya returnee recounts desert ordeal • Ugochinyere loses Minority Leader bid in House of Reps • Wanne mbaroni tuhuma za mauaji raia wa China • Reps to vote on State Police proposal tomorrow amid security push • Roads Minister reassigns Bogoso–Prestea road project to new contractor over delays • Stop tweeting and brief Parliament on South Africa situation — Patrick Boamah to Ablakwa • Football Daily | Desiré and Guéla Doué lead way at World Cup bursting with brotherly love • NCAA grounds road-landed aircraft • House Halts Ugochinyere’s Minority Leader’s Bid, Bars First-term Lawmakers from Principal Offices • A wonder of the world — South African bank CEO commits to Dangote Refinery IPO listing • Federal High Court judges begin 2026 annual vacation July 27 • NCC, risk managers advocate overhaul of national security system • Kamati ya Bunge yapendekeza Hospitali ya Benjamini Mkapa iwe ya Taifa • Mchengerwa: Huduma za afya zizingatie utu wa mgonjwa • Nigeria–US joint operations kill over 200 terrorists in North-East — DHQ • Stocks Slide As US Inflation Surges, US And Iran Trade Strikes • International Breweries PLC Goes All In for the FIFA World Cup 2026 • NWFL: Bayelsa Queens beat Rivers Angels to end barren streak • Have you experienced the Samsung Galaxy Buds4 Series with Smarter AI, Premium Sound and All-Day Comfort?
World Cup 2026: Guardian writers’ predictions for the tournament
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World Cup 2026: Guardian writers’ predictions for the tournament

The Guardian Football about 2 hours 1 mins read

From marvelling at teenage wonderkids to tracking the world’s largest coffee pot, our team of writers outline their expectations for the jamboree in North America

Spain and Portugal in the final, with Spain winning. I’ve played our Bracketology game 20 times and gotten 20 different paths but Spain always end up winning. Alexander Abnos

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