For nearly a century, the FIFA World Cup has served as football's ultimate stage for the next generation of superstars.
It was where a 17-year-old Pelé introduced himself to the world in 1958. It was where a teenage Michael Owen stunned Argentina in 1998. More recently, Kylian Mbappé transformed from a promising youngster into a global icon during France's triumph in 2018.
World Cup 2026 may be remembered for the final appearances of legends such as Lionel Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo, Luka Modrić, and Robert Lewandowski. Yet it could also mark the beginning of a completely new era.
Across Europe, South America, and Africa, a remarkable generation of young players is preparing to make its biggest statement yet.
Here are the 10 under-21 stars who could define the future of football.
1. Lamine Yamal (Spain)
The Future Face of Football
At just 18 years old, Lamine Yamal is already being discussed alongside the biggest names in world football.
That statement would sound absurd for almost any teenager. For Yamal, it feels completely justified.
The Barcelona sensation possesses a combination of attributes rarely seen in a single player. He can beat defenders with pure pace, unlock compact defenses with intelligent passing, and create moments of brilliance from seemingly impossible situations.
What separates Yamal from most young stars is his decision-making. Many talented wingers rely solely on flair. Yamal combines creativity with maturity, consistently making the correct choice in high-pressure situations.
Spain will enter World Cup 2026 as one of the favorites, and Yamal could be the player who elevates them from contenders to champions.
Why he matters: He may already be the most dangerous one-on-one attacker in international football.
2. Arda Güler (Turkey)
Turkey's Golden Boy
Every generation produces a playmaker capable of seeing passes others cannot.
For Turkey, that player is Arda Güler.
The Real Madrid starlet combines technical elegance with exceptional football intelligence. While many attacking midfielders need time and space to create opportunities, Güler can change a match with a single touch.
What makes him particularly dangerous is his unpredictability. Defenders never know whether he will shoot, dribble, or split a defensive line with a perfectly weighted through ball.
Turkey may not be among the tournament favorites, but Güler is talented enough to carry his nation deep into the competition.
3. João Neves (Portugal)
The Engine Behind Portugal
Not every superstar scores goals.
Some quietly control everything.
João Neves is that type of player.
While Cristiano Ronaldo, Bruno Fernandes, and Rafael Leão attract headlines, Neves performs the less glamorous tasks that allow great teams to function.
He wins second balls, recovers possession, organizes transitions, and keeps Portugal connected from defense to attack.
In modern football, midfield control often decides major tournaments.
Portugal may have more famous players, but few are as important as João Neves.
4. Pau Cubarsí (Spain)
The Defender Who Plays Like a Midfielder
Most teenage center-backs focus on surviving.
Pau Cubarsí focuses on controlling matches.
The Barcelona defender already displays composure normally associated with elite veterans. Comfortable under pressure and technically outstanding, he helps Spain build attacks from deep positions while maintaining defensive stability.
Many scouts believe Cubarsí could become one of the defining defenders of his generation.
And World Cup 2026 could be where the wider football world discovers why.
The Players Just Outside the Spotlight
Several other young stars are equally capable of producing breakout performances:
Désiré Doué (France)
A versatile attacker with elite creativity and confidence in big matches.
Nico Paz (Argentina)
Often viewed as a potential heir to Argentina's creative tradition.
Kenan Yildiz (Turkey)
A fearless attacker capable of deciding games individually.
Warren Zaïre-Emery (France)
One of the most experienced young midfielders in world football.
Lennart Karl (Germany)
Germany's next attacking superstar in the making.
Yan Diomande (Ivory Coast)
Perhaps the most exciting African prospect heading into the tournament.
A Tournament That Could Change Careers Forever
Every World Cup creates heroes.
Some arrive as stars and leave as legends.
Others arrive as unknown prospects and leave as household names.
World Cup 2026 may ultimately be remembered as the tournament where football officially passed from the Messi-Ronaldo generation to a new group of global icons.
And among those future superstars, names like Lamine Yamal, Arda Güler, João Neves, Pau Cubarsí, and Désiré Doué appear ready to lead the way