2026 World Cup Golden Boot picks: Best bets, predictions to score the most goals
Kylian Mbappe and Harry Kane are the favorites to win the Golden Boot at the World Cup.

The tournament kicks off on Thursday in Mexico City. Here’s what newcomers can expect from one of the world’s largest and most watched eventsIt is! Every four years the best men’s teams on the planet gather to see who will be crowned world champions. This year’s tournament will be co-hosted by frenemies Canada, Mexico and the United States in 16 cities as different as Vancouver, Kansas City and Guadalajara. The 48 teams are initially divided into [does arithmetic] 12 four-team groups with each team playing the others in the group once. The top two from each group, along with the eight best third-placed teams – 32 in total – will advance to the knockout stages. Matches from that point on are single-elimination - lose and you’re out. If scores are level at the end of extra-time, the match is decided by a penalty shootout. Continue reading...
Kylian Mbappe and Harry Kane are the favorites to win the Golden Boot at the World Cup.
The NBA Finals matchup between the Spurs and Knicks may be the main focus for collective NBA observers. But in the background, teams throughout the league are working toward improving for the 2026-27 season. Predraft workouts have been taking place for nearly a month ahead of the NBA draft in two weeks — which typically...
Fox Sports is adding some new American faces to this year’s FIFA World Cup broadcast.
Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) is attempting to usher through a party-line immigration enforcement funding bill on Tuesday in what will be a test of party unity despite a slim margin in the House. The $70 billion legislation will give funding to Border Patrol and Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which were left out of a Department […]
I love soccer. But absurd ticket prices and odious politics are keeping me away from the stadiums
A prominent watchdog group is urging the US government to deny or revoke visas for the Iranian national soccer team ahead of the World Cup.
Four teams stand out as strong sleeper picks at the 2026 World Cup.
Jared Kushner's foreign business entanglements make Hunter Biden's overseas dealings look minor by comparison, an investigative author argued this week, accusing Washington of waving through a conflict of interest that dwarfs the one Republicans spent years probing.Casey Michel, whose forthcoming book "United States of Oligarchy" examines oligarchic influence in America, made the case on The Bulwark podcast on Monday alongside host Andrew Egger. He argued that Kushner went from being widely mocked in Middle Eastern diplomatic circles during Trump's first term to a billionaire reliant on money from Gulf autocrats.Asked to compare the two, Michel didn't mince words. "You cannot compare the final numbers, the totality of what Hunter Biden or Jared Kushner have taken in," he said.Hunter Biden was selling paintings for up to $100,000, a sum that would represent a great deal to most Americans. However, compared to Kushner, those figures are "miniscule," said Michel, adding that Kushner is a version of Hunter Biden who made exponentially more money. Kushner is now a billionaire, with Egger noting he's a version of Hunter Biden "who made 10,000 times as much money."At the center of the critique is Affinity Partners, the private equity firm Kushner launched in 2021 after leaving the White House. Reuters reported that the firm's assets jumped 60% to $4.8 billion by the end of 2024, up from $3 billion the prior year, after a cash injection from Gulf investors, including Qatar's sovereign wealth fund.Kushner is now serving as a U.S. envoy in talks covering Gaza, Ukraine, and Iran, all while holding no Senate-confirmed role and carrying no conventional diplomatic credentials. That dual role has drawn scrutiny even from Republicans — and has echoes of the foreign-influence concerns Democrats have raised for years.Republican Sen. Thom Tillis (N.C.) questioned the arrangement in February, telling ABC News that Kushner and fellow envoy Steve Witkoff are "not subject to Senate confirmation, and they're not subject to oversight." Putting the pair in charge of three simultaneous negotiations, he added, "doesn't make any sense to me."According to a March 19 letter from House Oversight Democrats, Affinity has collected roughly $157 million in fees from foreign clients — including about $87 million directly from the Saudi government — while, the lawmakers said, generating little to no return for investors. The letter argued that the structure raised the possibility that Kushner was acting as an unregistered foreign agent.Republicans, by contrast, spent years demanding investigations into Hunter Biden's board seat at Ukrainian energy firm Burisma and his overseas business ties. President Joe Biden pardoned his son in December 2024 before any foreign-influence case was brought.Jared Kushner Makes Hunter Biden Look Like a Boy Scout (w/ Casey Michel) by The BulwarkRead on Substack