A major opportunity for Serbia and Switzerland. As is the case with most light heavyweight European teams, both Serbia and Switzerland are blessed with plenty of exciting talent that plays for major clubs — Serbia have forwards Dusan Vlahovic (Juventus ) and Aleksandar Mitrovic (Fulham) and midfielder Filip Kostic (Juventus); Switzerland have veteran midfielders Granit Xhaka (Arsenal) and Denis Zakaria (Chelsea), defender Manuel Akanji (Manchester City), forward Breel Embolo (Monaco) and about 17 strong goalkeepers.They are also blessed with an intriguing draw: The second-placed team in Group H could draw one of the tournament’s weaker group winners (likely either Portugal or Uruguay.) Switzerland came achingly close to a semifinal run in last summer’s Euros, and it wouldn’t take much luck for either of these teams to reach the quarterfinals if they’re dialed in.
An intriguing Cameroon attack. Cameroon have one of the more storied histories in African soccer — this will be their eighth World Cup appearance since 1982, and they famously reached the quarterfinals in 1990 — but it took a shocker for them to qualify this time around. Lyon ‘s Karl Toko Ekambi scored vs. Algeria in the 124th minute of their final qualification match, just six minutes after Algeria had seemingly clinched advancement with a goal of their own.
This isn’t the most talented squad Cameroon have brought to a World Cup, but they’ve got just enough intriguing pieces to challenge. Lyon’s Toko Ekambi, Brentford winger Bryan Mbeumo and Bayern’s smoking-hot Eric Maxim Choupo-Moting are key up front, and while depth is problematic in the back, they’ve at least got high-level players in defensive midfielder Frank Anguissa (Napoli) and goalkeeper Andre Onana (Inter Milan). It would be a surprise if they advanced, but only so much of one.
Group H Odds to advance to knockout rounds: Portugal -600 (equivalent to 86%), Uruguay -225 (69%), South Korea +240 (29%), Ghana +280 (26%) Portugal vs. the worst of vibes. Act I: Cristiano Ronaldo waits until Manchester United begin to play well without him, then decides to burn every possible bridge with the club (which still employs Portugal teammate Bruno Fernandes ) on his way out the door to Qatar.
Act II: This strange interaction between Ronaldo and Fernandes.
Act III: Whatever the heck this interaction was between Ronaldo and another Portuguese star, Joao Cancelo.
These clips, of course, lack loads of context. We’re not in the Portugal camp. We have no inside information as to whether the Piers Morgan saga has affected anything. (And if it hasn’t, then we’re talking about a team with a ridiculous amount of talent and potential.) All I’ll say is, if we’re talking about Portugal as this tournament’s “Horrible Vibes Team” in a few more weeks — and every major tournament always has one — it wouldn’t be much of a surprise.
Finishers ‘R’ Us. More from the “Last Dance for Aging Strikers” theme: Luis Suarez and Edinson Cavani are both 35 years old and surely playing in their final World Cup. They are among five Uruguay players with over 100 caps and 10 players aged 29 or older. They are a veteran squad with a few key, young pieces — forwards Darwin Nunez (Liverpool) and Facundo Pellistri (Manchester United), midfielder Fede Valverde (Real Madrid), defender Ronald Araujo (Barcelona) — and have been in pretty good form in 2022.
If Portugal are in anything less than fifth gear, Uruguay might be the favorite to win the group.
Sonny’s team. Here’s a fun tie: Ronaldo’s old teammate at Sporting CP , Paulo Bento, could end up knocking Ronaldo out if Portugal underachieve. Bento has been in charge in South Korea for more than four years and has lost only seven of 53 matches. They might not have the defensive chops for a lengthy run in Qatar, but they have exciting potential in attack thanks to the combination of a face-masked Son Heung-min (Tottenham Hotspur) — he’s coming off of a facial fracture — Hwang Hee-chan (Wolves), Hwang Ui-jo (Olympiacos), Jeong Woo-yeong (Freiburg) and perhaps Lee Kang-in (Mallorca .)
Ghana’s next generation. Like Cameroon, Ghana are a familiar face and surprise qualifier. They hit a dreadful run of form early in 2022, quickly exiting the Africa Cup of Nations, but upset Nigeria to advance to Qatar.
Older faces like captain Andre Ayew (Al-Sadd), Jordan Ayew (Crystal Palace ) and Thomas Partey (Arsenal) are still around, but younger stars like Daniel-Kofi Kyereh (Freiburg) and new national additions Inaki Williams (Athletic Club ) and Tariq Lamptey (Brighton) have given a struggling team a boost of upside. Can new faces help to provide some improved results?