Who could be the 2026 World Cup's breakout star?
A man poses for a photo in front of a giant replica of the FIFA World Cup trophy at the Cinta Costera in Panama City on May 13, 2026. Panama will play in the FIFA World Cup hosted by the United States, Mexico, and Canada from June 11 to July 19, 2026.
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World Cups are where rising stars of football quickly
transform into global icons.
Citizen Digital Sport
looks at five of the contenders to become the game's next superstar at this
year's finals in the United States, Mexico and Canada:
The son of former Argentine international Pablo Paz has
opted to play for the world champions despite being born and raised in Spain.
A rising star in the Real Madrid academy, Paz has flourished
in two years working under Cesc Fabregas since a move to Como in Italy.
Madrid are reportedly set to exercise their buyback option
on the 21-year-old.
His technical ability and eye for goal from range has alerted
Europe's other top clubs.
Paz could have the daunting task of filling in for Lionel
Messi with Argentina coach Lionel Scaloni expected to manage the 38-year-old's
minutes during the champions' title defence.
Doue has already lit up the biggest stage in club football,
winning the man-of-the-match award and scoring twice in Paris Saint-Germain's Champions
League final thrashing of Inter Milan last year.
But this will be the 20-year-old's first taste of a major
international tournament.
Doue has a battle just to ensure he starts for Les Bleus
among a dazzling display of attacking talent that includes Kylian Mbappe,
Ballon d'Or winner Ousmane Dembele and Bayern Munich's Michael Olise.
But Doue gave Didier Deschamps a timely reminder of his
quality with his first two international goals in a 3-1 friendly win over
Colombia in France's last outing in March.
Nico O'Reilly
(England)
O'Reilly, 21, has already earned the trust of Pep Guardiola
to become a regular for Manchester City.
Scorer of two goals from left-back in City's League Cup
final win over Arsenal in March, O'Reilly began his career as a goalscoring
midfielder.
Guardiola has harnessed his blend of height, speed and skill
as an attacking weapon from deep and may have solved a problem position for
England coach Thomas Tuchel in the process.
England reached the final of Euro 2024 without a natural
left-back for the majority of the tournament due to Luke Shaw's lack of
fitness.
"What a player," said Guardiola. "He has made
an incredible step up and he has had a lot of minutes, but he deserves
it."
A teenage prodigy who made his Palmeiras debut at 16 and was
snapped up by Real Madrid before his18th birthday, Endrick's hopes of shining
at the World Cup have been rekindled by a successful loan move at French club
Lyon.
Endrick burst onto the international scene by scoring the
winner against England at Wembley two years ago and becoming Brazil's youngest
goalscorer since Ronaldo in the process.
Relegated behind international team-mate Vinicius Junior and
Mbappe after his big move to Madrid two years ago, the 19-year-old has found
his scoring touch since his switch to France in January.
Often compared to another Brazilian great Romario for his
squat but powerful physique, Endrick will be hoping to recreate the former's
success in scoring five goals as Brazil won the World Cup on US soil in 1994.
Spain's latest passing metronome, Pedri has proven to be a
fitting heir to Xavi Hernandez for both club and country.
After first rising to prominence as an 18-year-old at Euro
2020, Pedri was key to Spain's run to conquering Europe two years ago in
Germany, but injury prevented him from featuring in the semi-finals and final.
For Barcelona he has put his fitness troubles behind him
under Hansi Flick, playing a starring role in back-to-back La Liga title
triumphs over the past two seasons.

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