Sixteen matches played. Sixteen highlight reels watched. Every visible player scored on a 1-10 scale for attacking, defending, and passing.
The result is a performance ranking that the scoreline alone can't give you. A team can win ugly. A team can lose well. And a goalkeeper can be the most important player on the pitch without his team winning a single thing.
Here is what the video saw.
The team rankings
| Rank | Team | Video score | Result | Opponent |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Mexico | 9.0 | W 2-0 | South Africa |
| 2 | Czech Republic | 8.0 | L 1-2 | South Korea |
| 3 | United States | 8.0 | W 4-1 | Paraguay |
| 4 | South Korea | 7.8 | W 2-1 | Czech Republic |
| 5 | Sweden | 7.3 | W 5-1 | Tunisia |
| 6 | Saudi Arabia | 7.3 | D 1-1 | Uruguay |
| 7 | Cape Verde | 7.2 | D 0-0 | Spain |
| 8 | South Africa | 7.0 | L 0-2 | Mexico |
| 9 | Brazil | 7.0 | D 1-1 | Morocco |
| 10 | Iran | 7.0 | D 2-2 | New Zealand |
| 11 | Uruguay | 7.0 | D 1-1 | Saudi Arabia |
| 12 | Germany | 6.9 | W 7-1 | Curaçao |
| 13 | New Zealand | 6.8 | D 2-2 | Iran |
| 14 | Australia | 6.6 | W 2-0 | Turkey |
| 15 | Bosnia | 6.5 | D 1-1 | Canada |
| 16 | Switzerland | 6.5 | D 1-1 | Qatar |
| 17 | Japan | 6.5 | D 2-2 | Netherlands |
| 18 | Belgium | 6.4 | D 1-1 | Egypt |
| 19 | Netherlands | 6.3 | D 2-2 | Japan |
| 20 | Morocco | 6.2 | D 1-1 | Brazil |
| 21 | Canada | 6.2 | D 1-1 | Bosnia |
| 22 | Scotland | 6.2 | W 1-0 | Haiti |
| 23 | Curaçao | 6.2 | L 1-7 | Germany |
| 24 | Ecuador | 6.2 | L 0-1 | Ivory Coast |
| 25 | Egypt | 6.2 | D 1-1 | Belgium |
| 26 | Spain | 6.1 | D 0-0 | Cape Verde |
| 27 | Qatar | 6.0 | D 1-1 | Switzerland |
| 28 | Ivory Coast | 6.0 | W 1-0 | Ecuador |
| 29 | Haiti | 5.8 | L 0-1 | Scotland |
| 30 | Turkey | 5.8 | L 0-2 | Australia |
| 31 | Tunisia | 5.3 | L 1-5 | Sweden |
| 32 | Paraguay | 3.0 | L 1-4 | United States |
Three things jump out.
Czech Republic scored 8.0 and lost. They were the best-rated losing team by a full point. South Korea came from behind to beat them 2-1, and the video confirms it was a genuine contest. Czechia created, pressed, and competed. The scoreline says defeat. The video says "watch this team."
Germany scored 7-1 and only rated 6.9. That sounds wrong until you look at the opposition. Curaçao, the smallest nation in the tournament, rated 6.2 despite being demolished. Germany scored at will but the video didn't capture the kind of sustained high-quality play you'd expect from a dominant performance. Goals against weak opposition inflate the scoreline without proving much.
Spain rated 6.1, their lowest possible start. They held 70% possession against Cape Verde and created chance after chance. But creation without conversion earns you a 6, and Cape Verde's goalkeeper Vozinha was the reason nothing went in.
The goalkeepers
Four of the thirteen players who scored 9 out of 10 were goalkeepers. That ratio is unusual for a highlight reel analysis, which naturally favours goals and attacking play. When a goalkeeper shows up this prominently in the highlights, something exceptional happened.
Patrick Beach (Australia, 9/10) made several crucial saves to keep a clean sheet against Turkey, who generated the better chances for much of the match. Australia won 2-0 on clinical transitions, but Beach was the reason they were still level when those chances came.
Mostafa Shoubir (Egypt, 9/10) kept Belgium to a 1-1 draw with a string of stops. Belgium had the possession and the territory. Egypt had the goalkeeper.
Vozinha (Cape Verde, 9/10) held Spain scoreless. This was the performance of the round from a defensive standpoint. Spain threw everything at Cape Verde and Vozinha turned it all away.
Mohammed Al-Owais (Saudi Arabia, 9/10) was the primary reason Saudi Arabia earned a point against Uruguay. Multiple saves, commanding presence, a performance that single-handedly shifted the result from probable loss to draw.
The pattern is clear. Underdogs with great goalkeepers are surviving. This is not a temporary blip. Goalkeeper quality at World Cups is often the difference between group-stage exit and a run to the knockouts, and matchday 1 produced four examples in a single round.
The attackers
Sweden's 5-1 win against Tunisia produced three players with a 9 rating in the same match: Yasin Ayari, Viktor Gyokeres, and Mattias Svanberg. Svanberg scored his pair after coming off the bench. No other team had more than two top-rated players.
Mexico's Quinones and Jimenez both scored 9, each with two goals in the 2-0 win over South Africa. The scoreline was comfortable, but the video shows the first half was tighter than expected, with South Africa goalkeeper Williams making three saves before Mexico's quality broke through.
Folarin Balogun (USA, 9/10) was clinical against Paraguay. Two goals, sharp finishing, and the energy of a home crowd behind him. The USA's 8.0 team rating was built largely on his performance and the collective attacking intent.
Amad Diallo (Ivory Coast, 9/10) scored both goals including the winner in a 1-0 against Ecuador. The team's average was only 6.0, meaning the result was down to one player's brilliance rather than a collective display.
What the video misses
Honesty about the method. This analysis watches highlight reels, not full matches. That means it's biased toward goals, saves, and visible moments. A midfielder who controlled tempo for 90 minutes but never appeared in the highlights won't show up. A centre-back who organized the defensive line all match will score lower than the forward who buried two chances.
The team averages also depend on how many players were visible. Mexico's 9.0 comes from two players rated 9. Cape Verde's 7.2 is anchored by Vozinha at 9 and the rest around 6. The averages are real, but shallow teams carried by one performer will look similar to deep teams with consistent quality.
Looking ahead to matchday 2
A few matchday 2 fixtures look different through the video lens.
Belgium (6.4) vs Iran (7.0). Belgium were flat against Egypt. Iran competed hard against New Zealand. The model already rates this closer than most people expect. The video data agrees.
Cape Verde (7.2) vs Uruguay (7.0). Cape Verde held Spain to nil and rated higher than Uruguay, who only drew with Saudi Arabia. Uruguay have more talent on paper. Cape Verde have shown they can defend against anyone.
Tunisia (5.3) vs Japan (6.5). Tunisia were poor. Japan twice came from behind against the Netherlands. This one could be straightforward.
USA (8.0) vs Australia (6.6). Both won. Both looked sharp. The USA's video rating is higher, but they were playing much weaker opposition (Paraguay rated 3.0 vs Turkey's 5.8). Context matters.
The video data for every match is available on each fixture page. Click through to see individual player ratings, key moments, and the full breakdown.
