
World Cup 2026 • Asian Teams • Expert Preview
2026 World Cup: Asian Teams to Watch
Asia enters the 2026 World Cup with more teams, more storylines, and a real chance to make noise beyond the group stage.
Why Asia matters more in the 2026 World Cup
The 2026 World Cup is the first 48-team tournament. That change gives Asia a bigger stage, but it does not make the tournament easier. The real question is not simply “how many Asian teams qualified,” but which teams can actually survive the group stage.
This preview focuses on group difficulty, tactical identity, past World Cup ceiling, and realistic expected results.
Quick ranking: Asian teams to watch
| Team | Group | Opponents | Best World Cup Result | Expected Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Japan | Group F | Netherlands, Sweden, Tunisia | Round of 16 | Round of 32 / possible Round of 16 |
| South Korea | Group A | Mexico, South Africa, Czech Republic | 4th place | Round of 32 |
| Iran | Group G | Belgium, Egypt, New Zealand | Group stage | Round of 32 chance |
| Australia | Group D | USA, Paraguay, Turkey | Round of 16 | 3rd-place battle |
| Saudi Arabia | Group H | Spain, Cape Verde, Uruguay | Round of 16 | Group stage |
| Uzbekistan | Group K | Portugal, DR Congo, Colombia | Debut | Group stage, but dangerous debutant |
| Qatar | Group B | Canada, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Switzerland | Group stage | Group stage |
| Jordan | Group J | Argentina, Algeria, Austria | Debut | Group stage |
| Iraq | Group I | France, Senegal, Norway | Group stage | Group stage |
1) Japan — Asia’s most complete contender
Group F: Netherlands, Japan, Sweden, Tunisia
Japan has the strongest overall profile among Asian teams: technical quality, European experience, tactical flexibility, and tournament maturity. The group is not easy, but Japan is no longer a team that simply hopes to survive.
2) South Korea — the group is open, but the margin is thin
Group A: Mexico, South Africa, South Korea, Czech Republic
Korea avoided a brutal group, but this is not an easy draw. Mexico has host-region advantage, Czech Republic brings European structure, and South Africa is the kind of opponent Korea must beat if it wants to advance.
3) Iran — the best chance to finally escape the group stage
Group G: Belgium, Egypt, Iran, New Zealand
Iran has never reached the knockout stage, but this draw gives them a real path. Belgium is the favorite, but Egypt and New Zealand make this a competitive but not impossible group.
4) Australia — tournament resilience, difficult path
Group D: USA, Paraguay, Australia, Turkey
Australia is rarely glamorous, but it is often hard to kill in tournament football. The problem is the group: the USA has home advantage, Turkey has attacking talent, and Paraguay is physically awkward.
5) Saudi Arabia — huge name, brutal group
Group H: Spain, Cape Verde, Saudi Arabia, Uruguay
Saudi Arabia has World Cup history and confidence from recent tournaments, but Spain and Uruguay make this one of the hardest Asian paths. The realistic target is beating Cape Verde and trying to steal a point elsewhere.
6) Uzbekistan — the most interesting Asian debutant
Group K: Portugal, DR Congo, Uzbekistan, Colombia
Uzbekistan’s first World Cup appearance is a major Asian football story. The group is tough, but not meaningless. If Uzbekistan can compete physically and stay compact, the DR Congo match becomes a real opportunity.
7) Qatar, Jordan, Iraq — storylines bigger than expectations
Qatar
Qatar’s Group B is not impossible, but Switzerland and Canada make the route narrow. The target should be competitiveness and first real World Cup points.
Expected result: Group stage
Jordan
Jordan faces Argentina, Algeria, and Austria. As a debutant, the main question is whether Jordan can turn Asian Cup momentum into World Cup resistance.
Expected result: Group stage
Iraq
Iraq returns to the World Cup but faces France, Senegal, and Norway. This is arguably the toughest Asian draw on paper.
Expected result: Group stage
Final prediction: who goes furthest?
Asia’s 2026 World Cup story will likely be led by Japan and South Korea, but the real intrigue is whether Iran can finally break its group-stage ceiling and whether Uzbekistan or Jordan can make a debut that feels bigger than the result.
