Goalkeeper: The Group Stage Specialist

1. Aymen Dahmen (Tunisia) — $4.5M

Tunisia's group includes one heavyweight (France) and two beatable opponents. Dahmen kept clean sheets in AFCON qualifying and Tunisia's defensive system is notoriously organized. He'll face plenty of shots against France — save points galore — then has genuine clean sheet potential in the other two matches. The perfect budget GK rotation option.

Defenders: Set-Piece Threats on a Budget

2. Hiroki Ito (Japan) — $5.0M

Bayern Munich's left-footed center-back is a set-piece weapon. Japan's group is manageable, and Ito is their primary aerial threat on corners. At $5.0M, you're getting a Bundesliga starter with goal threat who plays for a team that could keep two clean sheets in the group stage.

3. Nayef Aguerd (Morocco) — $5.5M

Morocco's defense was the story of 2022 — 4 clean sheets en route to the semifinals. Aguerd, now at West Ham, is the anchor. He scored twice at the 2022 World Cup from corners. Morocco's 2026 group is navigable. Clean sheet potential + set-piece goal threat = perfect fantasy defender.

4. Milos Kerkez (Hungary) — $5.0M

The Bournemouth left-back is one of the most attacking fullbacks in the Premier League. Hungary plays an aggressive pressing system that creates turnovers in dangerous areas. Kerkez gets forward constantly. For $5.0M, you're getting a wingback who could easily bag an assist or clean sheet bonus.

Midfielders: The Differential Kings

5. Giorgian de Arrascaeta (Uruguay) — $6.0M

Uruguay's creative engine. De Arrascaeta is the set-piece taker, the penalty taker, and the primary playmaker. Uruguay's group is favorable, and he quietly posted elite creative numbers in CONMEBOL qualifying. At $6.0M, he's a steal compared to similarly-priced midfielders from bigger nations who share creative duties.

6. Azzedine Ounahi (Morocco) — $5.5M

The Angers midfielder was the breakout star of 2022 — remember him running Spain's midfield ragged? He's two years better now. Morocco's system funnels attack through him. Carries the ball, shoots from distance, and Morocco's fixtures are excellent. The ultimate tournament-mode midfielder.

7. Michael Olise (France) — $6.5M

OK, he's not completely under the radar. But in a France team with Mbappe and Dembele grabbing the headlines, Olise at $6.5M is absurd value. He's Crystal Palace's best player, takes set pieces, and France's group is ridiculously favorable. If he starts, he'll return double his price.

"Fantasy World Cup isn't about picking the best players. It's about picking players whose fixtures make them the best."

Forwards: The Budget Breakout Candidates

8. Santiago Gimenez (Mexico) — $7.0M

Feyenoord's goal machine. Gimenez scored 20+ Eredivisie goals and now leads Mexico's line as their #9. Mexico as co-hosts will face favorable matchups. Penalty duty is his. The only budget forward who realistically challenges for the Golden Boot conversation. Grab him before the group stage makes him unaffordable.

9. Dusan Vlahovic (Serbia) — $7.5M

Juventus's main striker for Serbia. Serbia has one of the most underrated attacking lineups — Mitrovic, Vlahovic, Tadic. Vlahovic takes penalties, is the primary target man, and Serbia's group includes a team that conceded heavily in qualifying. One Serbia rout and Vlahovic is the most transferred-in player of the gameweek.

10. Brian Brobbey (Netherlands) — $6.5M

Ajax's powerful striker has become Koeman's preferred #9. Netherlands plays attacking football under Koeman, and Brobbey's physical profile creates mismatches against smaller group-stage defenses. He's not the most clinical finisher, but fantasy rewards volume — and Brobbey will get chances. At $6.5M, he enables you to afford two premium midfielders.

Fantasy World Cup Golden Rules

  • Rule 1: Fixtures > Names. Always.
  • Rule 2: Budget picks must be starters. Bench players at $4.5M are wasted slots.
  • Rule 3: Penalty takers and set-piece specialists are cheat codes.
  • Rule 4: Captain forwards in the group stage. Captain defenders in knockouts.
  • Rule 5: Wait for confirmed lineups in Matchday 1 before making early transfers.