World Cup Round of 16 power rankings: Where do USA and Mexico stack up?

· Yahoo Sports

With the Round of 32 in the books, it’s again time to power-rank the remaining teams in the 2026 World Cup.

As always, my two primary factors were 1) how good each team has looked, and 2) how far the team can realistically go given the bracket path ahead. There’s a new (old) top team, and several others have shifted tiers, so let’s get to it …

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I’d still be surprised if a team from this tier does not lift the trophy, but I’ve dropped one country down a tier, cutting this list to three. 

The 2022 runner-up is the first team to score three goals in five straight World Cup games, and it’s hard to see any other team preventing that from happening. France leads the tournament with 13 goals and tops all remaining teams in shot quality (0.13 xG/shot). Kylian Mbappé and Michael Olise are both playing at a Golden Ball level, and oh yeah, the reigning Ballon d’Or winner (Ousmane Dembélé) is on that front line too. 

France has the talent and depth to win its second World Cup trophy in eight years.Stephen Nadler/ISI Photos via Getty Images

Plus the bracket has opened up well for France, which now faces Paraguay in the Round of 16 instead of Germany. 

My only hesitation on the field is that the defense and midfield haven’t been as rigid as at previous tournaments, but that’s part of the trade-off for opening up as France has. So far, the sacrifice has been well worth it. 

Spain really started looking like Spain in a dominant 3-0 win over Austria in the Round of 32, as Lamine Yamal went 85 minutes and became the youngest-ever player with double-digit one-v-ones and double-digit penalty-area touches in a World Cup match. Spain needs Nico Williams back at full strength to balance the left side, but the attack is starting to click.

The defense has been stellar, one of two teams (Mexico) yet to concede a goal at the tournament. Spain has allowed the fewest shots (19) and the lowest xG total (0.9). A lot of that is about Spain’s tournament-leading 68% possession, but it’s still a good sign going forward. The one downside is Spain’s potential path, which has a potential semifinal meeting with France.

Argentina may have been tested by unheralded Cape Verde in the Round of 32, but Lionel Messi and Co. know what it takes to win it all.Catherine Ivill - AMA via Getty Images

Argentina drops two spots after needing extra time to escape Cape Verde (!) on Friday. Lionel Messi and Co. were still fairly dominant, but a wee amount of concern has to linger about how Argentina hasn’t really put away any opponents at this tournament. 

Argentina will be fine on the whole though, having put up over two expected goals in each of the last three games while conceding less than one expected goal in all four matches. The defending champion also has the benefit of a favorable draw, as a big favorite (-750) against Egypt in the Round of 16. Then again, Argentina was also a -3000 favorite to advance over Cape Verde …

England goes down a tier after struggling with Congo DR before Harry Kane took over with two late goals in a 2-1 win. That match raised the same question the group stage did: how will England handle a stout low block? The Three Lions took most of the game to solve the Congo DR defense, and now they face a Mexico team that hasn’t conceded a goal in the tournament.

Sunday’s Round-of-16 matchup is also in Mexico City at Estadio Azteca, where the smog is as thick as the World Cup history that hangs over this game. Forty years ago, England lost 2-1 to Argentina in the World Cup quarterfinals at Azteca, conceding two Diego Maradona goals that rank among the most iconic in soccer history: “The Hand of God” and “The Goal of the Century.”

So England will battle ghosts, smog, elevation and a riotous fan base in the cauldron that is Azteca. And who knows how much sleep they’ll get, given the likelihood that Mexican fans repeat their noise-making outside England’s hotel. If England does get by Mexico, Brazil or Norway awaits, likely followed by Argentina or Colombia, just to reach the final.

Luis Díaz has helped Colombia emerge as a dangerous World Cup knockout threat.Anadolu via Getty Images

Colombia crushed Ghana in the Round of 32, winning only 1-0 but with 2.2 expected goals to Ghana’s 0.3 on eight shots. Ghana barely threatened toward the end of the game, as Colombia had its fans chanting “Ole!” while its players were playing keep-away from Ghana. The game was as impressive a 1-0 win as you’ll see.

Colombia can win games any way, whether creating lots of chances or locking down defensively or pressing anywhere on the field. Plus Colombia won’t be intimidated by Argentina in a potential quarterfinal matchup, after winning at home and drawing away in qualifying, and also taking Argentina to extra time in the 2024 Copa América final. I don’t know if Los Cafeteros can be considered dark horses now, but they’re capable of beating anyone.

Morocco was the better team for most of its Round-of-16 match with Netherlands, eventually advancing on penalties. This is a better Morocco team than the semifinalist from four years ago, now as comfortable with the ball as without.

The Atlas Lions will have the bulk of the ball in the Round of 16 against Canada, and they’ll be able to find holes in Canada’s defense while still preventing many counterattack chances. Also, remember that this game is in Houston, so Canada won’t have much if any home-field advantage.

Were the tournament’s two best teams not Morocco’s likely quarterfinal (France) and semifinal (Spain) opponents, I’d consider bumping them up a couple spots.

Erling Haaland and Norway have become one of the World Cup’s most dangerous knockout teamsIcon Sportswire via Getty Images

Norway is unbeaten in four previous matchups with Brazil and is the only country Brazil has played and never beaten. I think that streak continues on Sunday. 

Erling Haaland has scored plenty of goals against Gabriel and Marquinhos, Brazil’s stellar center-back pairing, and the midfield of Martin Ødegaard and Co. should be able to carve up Brazil’s midfield (and anyone else’s) like Japan did in the first half. I have a little concern about Norway’s depth over four more games, but there’s little doubt Norway has a ceiling as high as almost any team, fully capable of getting out of this quadrant of the bracket.

The attacking talent of Vinícius Júnior and Co. gives Brazil an extremely high ceiling. The midfield of Casemiro and Co. gives Brazil a low floor, as do the outside backs that will surely be attacked by every opponent the rest of the way. Had Japan not been missing its two top attackers, Brazil might already be heading home.

Those issues, plus a tough quadrant that includes Norway and England/Mexico, makes me more down on Brazil than most. I also admit that Carlo Ancelotti could figure out how to cover Brazil’s shortcomings, making them the most volatile team left in the tournament.

Christian Pulisic and the USMNT in the top 10? At this point, why not?Catherine Ivill - AMA via Getty Images

The U.S. took care of business in a 2-0 win over Bosnia and Herzegovina on Wednesday, then opened as a slight favorite to advance over Belgium in the Round of 16. The odds have shifted slightly toward Belgium, perhaps in part because Folarin Balogun is suspended for his questionable red card.

Either way, the U.S. is still nearly a coin flip to reach the World Cup quarterfinals, and that’s rarely if ever been true before. I wouldn’t expect the U.S. to repeat its 2009 upset of Spain after that, but even I as a numbers guy am won over by the U.S. intangibles of team spirit and home-field fan support. South Korea made a semifinal run as host in 2002. Why not U.S.?

That second U.S. paragraph is mostly true for Mexico too. The Round-of-16 match against England at Azteca is the knockout-stage match I most wanted to see, and it happens Sunday. 

Mexico’s defense has not yet conceded a goal, and while that’s likely a hot streak against not-great offensive teams, the 2.3 expected goals conceded are still third-fewest among remaining teams. El Tri (and fans and elevation and smog) should be able to frustrate England multiple ways, and a matchup with Norway or Brazil wouldn’t be overwhelming. Mexico has reached the World Cup quarterfinals only at home (twice), and doing so again wouldn’t be shocking.

I still don’t know how Belgium beat Senegal, after creating almost nothing for 85 minutes before scoring twice in regulation and then getting a generous penalty to win in extra time. That was the latest unimpressive performance for Belgium, which has only looked good against drastically outmatched New Zealand. 

Belgium has started slowly in its toughest three games at this tournament, failing to score against Egypt, Iran and Senegal in the first half. That’s trouble against a U.S. team that has scored in all four first halves so far, and Belgium’s aging legs will only be more of an issue as the tournament goes on. Even if Belgium gets by the co-hosts, I don’t see any way the Red Devils could hang with Spain in the quarters.

Again, this final tier is self-explanatory. 

Portugal has advanced, but Roberto Martínez is still trying to solve the Ronaldo puzzle.COLE BURSTON via Getty Images

In a vacuum, Portugal could be half a dozen spots higher. In the real world, Portugal is going to struggle against a Spain team that’s given up the fewest shots and expected goals of any remaining team.

Four games in, Portugal is still struggling to figure out how to play with Cristiano Ronaldo up top. Roberto Martínez’s side has 5.6 non-penalty expected goals, 12th-most among remaining teams. Almost half of that total came against Uzbekistan, and Portugal has had 62% possession so far, a number that will get cut by a third or more against Spain. 

Portugal obviously has the talent to go deeper in the tournament, but has shown no capability of doing so as a team.

The always-steady Swiss have taken care of business against four inferior opponents so far, but now they’ll run into Colombia and then probably Argentina. That’s a huge leap forward in difficulty, and I don’t see the Swiss making the jump. 

They didn’t pile up chances in their last three games, taking a total of 30 shots. That bodes poorly against two South American teams that will be better both defensively and offensively. Switzerland could hang around with Colombia, but doesn’t have the ceiling to make a deeper run.

I’d give Canada more of a chance to upset Morocco were this game in Vancouver. But it’s in Houston, where Canada won’t have any edge. 

Other than running riot over nine-man Qatar, Canada has looked as advertised, decent defensively and decent in transition. But none of Canada’s four opponents have had Morocco’s skill at either end. Canada handled South Africa easily enough but won’t do the same against the reigning AFCON champs from North Africa. If Canada does push forward on the counter as preferred, that will only expose the backline to Morocco’s own deadly counter.

Egypt fought well to get by Australia on penalties Friday, but six goals in four games are not enough offense to trouble Argentina in the next round. Egypt may try to muck up the game, but Argentina cruised through the morass of CONMEBOL qualifying, so any physical style won’t faze the defending champs. 

The Pharaohs have allowed the third-most shots of the remaining 16 teams, while taking the third-worst shots themselves. That’s a recipe for disaster against Argentina.

Kudos to Paraguay for eliminating Germany in the Round of 32. The Germans never figured out how to break down Paraguay’s low block, for both a lack of top-end talent and strategy. Unfortunately for Paraguay, France has both. Michael Olise leads the tournament with 11 through-balls, and he’ll find plenty of France runners, similar to how the U.S. torched Paraguay in the opener. 

Maybe Paraguay finds cracks in France’s defense for a goal, but Paraguay’s defense has allowed 81 shots, 22 more than any other remaining team. France will easily hang multiple goals with the brilliance of Mbappé and Dembélé and Barcola.

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