For the Frontrunner Fan: The Juggernaut
Do you fill out your March Madness bracket by picking all the No. 1 seeds? Do you think the best part of winning is, well, winning? Then you need a Juggernaut. These are the perennial powerhouses of world
soccer—teams like Brazil, Germany, and France. Their rosters are packed with global superstars you might actually recognize, and they carry the heavy burden of expectation into every match. Picking a juggernaut is a low-risk, high-reward proposition. When they win, you feel the validated thrill of backing a champion. When they lose, it’s a global shock, a front-page story. It’s never boring being at the top. If you want a good chance of celebrating at the end, hitch your wagon to one of these titans.
For the Romantic: The Glorious Underdog
Maybe you find frontrunners boring. You’re the person who roots for the scrappy startup over the mega-corp, the indie film over the blockbuster. You, my friend, are looking for an underdog. Every tournament has a Cinderella story—a team from a smaller nation that, through sheer grit and organization, punches way above its weight. Think of Morocco’s historic semifinal run in the 2022 World Cup or Greece’s impossible victory at Euro 2004. The emotional payoff is immense. You’ll be celebrating disciplined defense and savoring the one perfect counter-attacking goal. The ride might be short, but if your chosen underdog makes a deep run, it’s a story you’ll tell for years.
For the Aesthete: The Style Merchants
Is it not enough for you that a team wins? Must they also win with beauty, flair, and a certain 'je ne sais quoi'? Welcome to the club of the Style Merchants. These are the teams that prioritize a beautiful philosophy of play, sometimes even at the expense of victory. The classic example is the Netherlands and their legacy of 'Total Football,' a fluid system where every player is interchangeable. Spain’s 'tiki-taka' passing carousels also fall into this category. When it works, it’s soccer as art—a mesmerizing display of technical skill and collective harmony. When it fails, it can be frustrating. But for the aesthete, watching a team try to play the right way is a victory in itself.
For the Drama Lover: The Hard-Luck Heroes
Some people are just drawn to beautiful suffering. They appreciate the nobility in striving, the poetry in falling just short. If this is you, you must back a Hard-Luck Hero. England is the poster child for this archetype, a nation with a top-tier domestic league whose national team has been defined by decades of agonizing penalty-shootout losses and tabloid-fueled meltdowns. Argentina, before Lionel Messi finally broke the curse in 2022, was another prime example. Rooting for these teams is an emotional rollercoaster. The hope is intoxicating, the inevitable heartbreak is Shakespearean, and the sense of shared community in that disappointment is surprisingly powerful. It’s not for the faint of heart, but it’s never dull.
For the Agent of Chaos: The Wild Card
Do you find structured game plans and tactical discipline a bit... tedious? Do you live for unpredictability, explosive moments, and end-to-end action where anything could happen? You need a Wild Card. These teams defy easy categorization. They might be a talented South American side that plays with more passion than structure, or a dynamic African team with blindingly fast wingers and a tendency to forget how to defend. They might win 4-3 or lose 3-0; you never know what you’re going to get. This is the team you pick when your primary goal is entertainment. They will make you shout at your television, either in joy or frustration, but they will never, ever bore you.
For the Patriot: The Hometown Pick
Let’s not overthink this. If you’re an American, the simplest and often most rewarding choice is to root for the home team: the USMNT or USWNT. The narrative is built-in. You’re part of a growing soccer culture in a country still carving out its identity in the world’s game. Every victory feels like a massive step forward, and every loss is a chance to debate the future of U.S. Soccer with fellow fans. Following your own country connects you to a national conversation. The players are easier to follow as many play in domestic leagues, and the sense of collective investment is real. When in doubt, go with the red, white, and blue.






