South Korea to Steal the Spotlight: FIFA World Cup 2026 Group A Preview

The Hard Tackle takes a closer look at Group A of FIFA World Cup 2026, where host nation Mexico, South Africa, South Korea, and Czechia collide.

The 2026 FIFA World Cup arrives with fresh promises: expanded stadia, a three-nation hosting experiment, and a tournament long on intrigue. With 48 teams now competing, the group phase has acquired new tactical wrinkles; every point, every goal, and every defensive nugget matters more than ever as the path to the last 32 can be decided by marginal details.

Fans and analysts alike have shifted from broad-brush predictions to granular assessments of styles, personnel and underlying data; understanding how a team plays is almost as important as knowing who plays.

Group A encapsulates much of this modern complexity. Anchored by co-host Mexico, the group also contains a wiley European side in Czechia, an expressive African team in South Africa, and a disciplined, physically and technically robust South Korea.

On paper, the quartet looks balanced: Mexico bring pedigree and expectation, South Korea arrive with organised coherence and a world-class captain, Czechia have firepower and experience, while South Africa enters with momentum and a passionate fanbase.

Below, The Hard Tackle take a comprehensive look at each nation’s playing style, recent form, managerial imprint and the players likely to swing Group A’s outcomes.

FIFA World Cup 2026 Group A

Group A Fixtures

Mexico

Automatic qualification as a co-host comes with perks and burdens. Mexico, under Javier Aguirre, have a clear roadmap: build a side that blends Liga MX dynamism with European experience in attack and a pragmatic defensive base.

Aguirre’s pragmatic management style leans on structure, compactness when out of possession and quick transition moments, attributes that suit tournament football where cautious efficiency often trumps expansive optimism.

What to expect?

Managerial imprint

Aguirre’s tenure has emphasised discipline and clarity. He selects a spine that can withstand tournament pressure, a stable goalkeeper, central defenders who read situations well, and attackers who can finish with precision.

His record with Mexico underlines a willingness to alternate formations between a compact 4-2-3-1 and a more direct 4-3-3, depending on opponents. Overall, he has led them in 28 matches, and they average 2 points per game under him. The positive for them is that they have only lost two out of their last 13 friendlies ahead of the World Cup.

Key players and why they matter

Prediction for Mexico

As hosts, they have expectations and a tactical blueprint, but inconsistent underlying numbers mean they are not guaranteed progression. Mexico should contest spots assertively; finishing third is a realistic projection, with a route into the round of 32 dependent on favourable results elsewhere and the ability to convert scoring opportunities.

South Africa

South Africa’s road to the World Cup has been both methodical and emblematic of improved structures in South African football. Their qualification reflected defensive solidity and a pragmatic, collective approach under coach Hugo Broos, whose discipline-first mindset helped them progress through CAF qualifying.

Broos’ team qualified for the World Cup by topping CAF Group C with a 3–0 win over Rwanda on 14 October 2025, securing direct qualification despite an earlier three-point deduction and marking their fourth World Cup appearance. While Nigeria were favourites to win the group, South Africa stepped up when it mattered.

What to expect?

Managerial imprint

Broos’s management centres on organisation and discipline. He has instilled a stern defensive shape and clear transitional patterns, pressing in waves and exploiting turnovers. That discipline can frustrate free-scoring opponents but can leave them passive against teams that control possession and probe patiently.

Key players and why they matter

Prediction for South Africa

Expect a combative showing. Their disciplined defensive base and capacity to spring quick attacks make them dangerous in single-elimination moments, but against possession-heavy sides, they may struggle to manufacture sustained attacking pressure. Finishing third or fourth is realistic; victory against Czechia or Korea would elevate their prospects.

South Korea

South Korea arrive with a blend of tactical clarity and world-class individuals, most notably Son Heung-Min. Their qualification through the AFC pathway highlighted a well-balanced side combining technical midfield control with swift wide play. The Asian giants secured their ticket to the World Cup by finishing top of Group B in the third round of the AFC qualifiers.

What to expect?

Managerial imprint

The coaching staff have emphasised structure, compact lines and exploiting wide spaces. They trust a core group to implement a cohesive pressing system that also allows key attackers to receive the ball in dangerous zones.

Hong Myung-bo, who took charge in the summer of 2024, has led them in 22 games and has averaged two points per game. In their last nine friendly outings, they have won five, drawn two and lost three.

Key players and why they matter

Prediction for South Korea

South Korea combine structure with elite-level individual quality. Given their balance and Son’s influence, they are my pick to top Group A. Expect a few hard-fought wins, especially against teams that allow South Korea to play through midfield with Hwang and hope Son finishes the chances he receives.

Czechia

Czechia bring a mixture of physicality, set-piece proficiency and proven goal-scorers. They secured their spot at the World Cup for the first time in 20 years after a dramatic penalty shootout win over Denmark in the play-off final. Their route to the 2026 World Cup underlined a team comfortable in tense knockout scenarios and possessing the temperament to grind out results.

What to expect?

Managerial imprint

Miroslav Koubek has only led them in three games heading into the World Cup, which could actually be a concern. He emphasises directness anchored in a disciplined midfield. Czechia often play with a clear attacking focal point and expects midfielders and wide players to supply crosses and secondary runs. The team’s approach is pragmatic and well-suited to tournament football.

Key players and why they matter

Prediction for Czechia

Czechia will be formidable opponents: tactically disciplined with a reliable goalscorer. I project them to finish second in Group A, their pragmatic structure allowing them to take down the hosts in a crucial fixture. Their set-piece potency and Schick’s finishing give them the edge in tight matches.

Final prediction

After weighing styles, data and personnel, our projection for Group A is:

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