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#广场预测世界杯赢40000U There are no easy opponents among the World Cup semi-final four—who will be the one to laugh last: France, Spain, England, or Argentina?
2026 FIFA World Cup
A century of World Cups—never before has such a splendid, powerful semi-final lineup existed.
The top four teams in the FIFA rankings—Argentina, France, England, and Spain—collectively boasting seven golden cups, have turned the World Cup semifinals for the U.S.-Canada-Mexico edition into an “early preview of the final.” Reject miracle upsets; the four heavyweight powers join forces to compete for the crown. No matter who ultimately wins, each team’s path to the summit will write a completely different footballing legend.
If the “Pampas Eagles” Argentina win the title again, it will once more showcase how seamlessly the team’s core lineup clicks—maximum cohesion, a mature tactical system, and exceptional resilience in major tournaments—while also shattering the awkwardness of “the World Cup turning into a European Championship,” giving South American football its due recognition.
If the “Les Bleus” France lift the trophy again, they will complete the feat of “three consecutive finals, two championships and one runner-up.” Their core, Kylian Mbappé, would also make a leap over his peers—over the last two World Cups, he has scored 16 goals; his total is 20, closely chasing Messi. If he wins, by age 26 he will establish himself as the “best player in the current era,” and he will finally wipe away the regret of missing out on the Champions League two straight years after moving from PSG to Real Madrid.
The “Three Lions” England are waiting to bring home this golden cup—exactly sixty years. If they can pull it off, “Football’s coming home” will no longer be an ironic lyric. Harry Kane and Jude Bellingham have both already scored 6 goals and have become the first player pairing in World Cup history to, in the same tournament, have both players score at least 6 goals for their national team. After winning the title, the two would stand shoulder to shoulder with their predecessor Bobby Charlton, becoming heroes of British football. Even more震撼 is this: if the German coach Thomas Tuchel leads England to lift the trophy, it will shatter the World Cup century-old rule—since 1930, no foreign head coach has ever conquered this holy grail. Breaking the curse, ending the wait, crossing tradition… England’s title route is filled with “breaking through” and “a new beginning,” and its impact will be far greater than the sport itself.
If Spain’s “Bullfighting Lions” reclaim the championship, it will be a major triumph for beautiful football. Sixteen years ago, Xavi and Andrés Iniesta conquered the world with possession-based control. Sixteen years later, the “youth monster” squad—average age 24.5—has adopted an even faster rhythm and sharper breakthroughs, evolving possession into a hybrid of “technique + speed.” If their youngster Lamine Yamal becomes a double-crown winner of both the World Cup and the European Championship before turning 19, he will become the youngest player in football history to achieve that feat. Spain’s title would also declare that team football has never gone out of style—the technical style can still shine brightest on the biggest stages.
Four storylines, four miracles. Argentina repeat as champions, France deliver another strong run, England break fate, Spain revive the art… No matter which team lifts the golden cup, this World Cup is already destined to be great—because every inch of grass beneath the four teams at the top is soaked with glory bright enough to be written into history.