Updated June 12, 2026 — 11:52am,first published 11:50amAt the beginning of any World Cup, you can find all kinds of predictions and prognostications.But the vast majority rely the viewpoint of one person, one computer or one Paul the Octopus, may he rest in peace.Paul the octopus predicted a German win over England at the 2010 FIFA World Cup.DDPTo kickstart this year’s World Cup, our head of visual stories Mark Stehle used AI, filled with a bunch of cutting-edge statistics, to run what is called a “Monte Carlo simulation” to identify the most likely tournament winner.In basic terms, the Monte Carlo simulation ran through the 48 teams and their data with random probabilities thousands of times and reported which scenarios occurred the most.Basically, Stehle asked the AI to play 100,000 distinct versions of the 104-match 2026 World Cup schedule, and now we can present you with the findings, including breaking the teams into tiers, from the heavyweights to the longshots.Spain topped the simulations with a baseline winning percentage of 16.1 per cent of the time, while the Socceroos finished with only a 0.10 per cent winning percentage, which ranks them 33rd out of 48 teams.Among the numbers used are the dynamic Elo Ratings for each team, advanced stats like expected goals [known as xG], travel and rest degradation and the strength of the group and knockout bracket that each team is in.Spain’s possession-based playing style should allow them to handle the North American heat better than other nations, according to the simulations, while Portugal’s supposedly softer group and bracket paved them a road to victory in several of the simulations.No matter how many simulations you run, the crazy randomness of the actual World Cup will produce scenarios the AI never dreamt of, but the finding sure make for an interesting guide to how the tournament could play out.As a comparison, here are the predictions of our soccer writers and some other experts.News, results and expert analysis from the weekend of sport sent every Monday. Sign up for our Sport newsletter.From our partners