Twenty new players to watch at World Cup 2026
ByChris Bevan
BBC Sport journalist
9 June 2026,
You already know about the superstars who could light up the 2026 Fifa World Cup, but what about the next wave of talent?
A record 1,248 players can feature in the USA, Canada and Mexico and, while there are few total unknowns, 891 of them are at their first World Cup, including plenty of unfamiliar faces looking to announce themselves on the global stage.
Here, BBC Sport's TV and radio World Cup commentators pick out 20 players from outside the Premier League and Scottish Premiership who are worth watching out for this summer.
1. Yan Diomande (Ivory Coast)
Age: 19
Position: Winger
Club: RB Leipzig
Diomande has been linked with Liverpool, Manchester City, Real Madrid, Paris St-Germain and Bayern Munich but Leipzig insist he is not for sale and reportedly value him at more than 130m euros (£112m)
Steve Wilson: One of the most sought-after signatures of the summer will be RB Leipzig's teenage winger though the German club are naturally unwilling to see him go.
The winner of the Bundesliga rookie of the season award, Diomande only joined from Spanish side Leganes in July 2025 for a bargain 20m euros (£17.2m) and promptly registered 21 goal contributions (12 goals and nine assists) in 33 league appearances to help Leipzig qualify for the Champions League.
Diomande spent three years living in Florida after moving to the United States aged 15 so he should feel at home for the next few weeks.
He missed Ivory Coast's March friendlies against South Korea and Scotland with a shoulder injury but started last week's shock World Cup warm-up win over France and looks certain to keep his place once the tournament kicks off.
2. Gilberto Mora (Mexico)
Age: 17
Position: Midfielder
Club: Tijuana
Mora was nicknamed 'The Mexican Pedri', 'The Mexican Pearl' and 'Crackito' (which translates to 'Little Maestro') by the Spanish press after he starred against Spain at last year's Under-20 World Cup. He has been linked with a move to Europe and is reportedly on the radar of Real Madrid and Manchester City
Radio 5 Live football correspondent John Murray: The youngest of all the players at this World Cup is a 17-year-old attacking midfielder who was described as a wonderkid at last summer's Gold Cup, when he became Mexico's youngest senior player aged 16.
Not only that, coach Javier Aguirre then picked him in the team to start the final that Mexico won by beating Mauricio Pochettino's United States 2-1 in Houston.
Steve Wilson: Mexico's young sensation is the youngest goalscorer in Liga MX history, getting off the mark for Tijuana in August 2024 when he was still 15.
He is the player on whom many home hopes will be pinned when they kick off the World Cup against South Africa in the Azteca - if he can find a starting berth in Aguirre's side.
Spanish-born Alvaro Fidalgo's decision in February to represent Mexico rather than wait for a Spanish call-up, which would be unlikely to come, may mean that Mora has to begin the tournament on the bench.
3. Johan Manzambi (Switzerland)
Age: 20
Position: Midfielder
Club: SC Freiburg
Manzambi wanted to be a goalkeeper when he was a boy and grew up idolising Germany legend Manuel Neuer. Where will he play for Switzerland this summer?
Steve Bower: Switzerland have a record of getting to finals and giving young players the stage to make a name for themselves - at past tournaments it was Breel Embolo and Dan Ndoye. Now it could be Manzambi's turn.
Some people will have seen him play a big part in the Freiburg side that went all the way to the Europa League final.
Manzambi can play in various positions in midfield and is pretty good in the final third too. He carries the ball really well and I know the Swiss fans have got big hopes for him - Switzerland captain Granit Xhaka has done an interview praising him as well.
Vicki Sparks: The youngest player in Switzerland's squad, Manzambi has impressed for Freiburg this season. In the words of Swiss coach Murat Yakin, "he has this incredible hunger to score goals that I have rarely seen".
BBC Sport TV and radio commentators pick the players they think could be the breakout stars of the 2026 World Cup.
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