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Jun 10, 2026
Analyzed by Llama- 4 Scout 17B 16E Instruct

Ecuador, Japan, and Norway: The Dark Horses of World Cup 2026

AI Summary
The World Cup 2026 is set to feature some unexpected dark horses, including Ecuador, Japan, and Norway. These teams have shown remarkable skills and determination, making them potential contenders for the tournament.

The Rise of the Dark Horses

Every World Cup needs a dark horse: the team that nobody quite planned for that disrupts the natural order and is remembered more vividly than the finalists. Morocco did it in 2022, beating Spain and Portugal on their way to becoming the first African side to reach the semi-finals. Croatia produced a fairytale run to the final in 2018. Costa Rica topped a group that featured three former champions – England, Italy and Uruguay – in 2014 before eventually losing to the Netherlands on penalties in the quarter-finals. And South Korea, who had never won a match at a World Cup, went all the way to the semi-finals in 2002.

Ecuador's Strong Defense

A defence featuring two Champions League finalists, a 15-game unbeaten streak, and second place in South American qualifying. Ecuador have a great chance to go further than ever before at the World Cup – their last-16 exit at the 2006 tournament in Germany. A new generation of players – led by Moisés Caicedo, Piero Hincapié and Willian Pacho, under the guidance of manager Sebastián Beccacece – have turned Ecuador into one of the hardest teams to break down in world football.

Japan's Growing Belief

The round of 16 has haunted Japan at World Cups. Four times they have reached the knockout stages and four times their journey has ended there. Japan hold the record for most World Cup matches played without ever reaching the quarter-finals (25). However, this team has been refined over years. Thirteen players from the squad that topped a group featuring Spain, Germany and Costa Rica in 2022 are back, bringing experience and a shared understanding of what it takes to compete on the big stage.

Norway's Formidable Attack

When Norway last played at a World Cup, in 1998, only nine of the 26 players in this squad had been born. The current generation have ended the country’s long wait and they are not just making up the numbers. Headlined by Erling Haaland and Martin Ødegaard, Norway arrive in North America with wind in their sails. Ståle Solbakken’s side stormed through qualifying, becoming one of only two European teams – alongside England – to win every match.