The question

My son was on the sofa with his iPad, poking at the live "Predict the Bracket" game — the whole 2026 World Cup knockout tree on one screen, every slot already filled with the crowd's favourite for that match. Tap a match, see who most people think goes through, watch the picks flow all the way up to a predicted champion.

He frowned at it. "Daddy, how do they know which team plays which team? The teams aren't even decided yet."

He'd caught something real. The little cards sitting in those slots were only predictions — the crowd's best hunch — but the shape underneath them, who-plays-who and where, was already locked in. Months before a single match kicks off.

Fair question. The 2026 World Cup has 48 teams in 12 groups (A through L). The top two of every group go through — that's 24 teams. Then, to round it up to a nice bracket of 32, they also take the 8 best third-placed teams. Twelve groups, but only eight of their third-place teams get a golden ticket.