The World Cup knockout stars set for MetLife Stadium ahead of the business end. Messi, Mbappé, Haaland, Vinicius Jr—here’s who could deliver in New Jersey.
World Cup fever has swept through New York and New Jersey. The Knicks won the NBA Championship during opening week. From Manhattan through to the Meadowlands, sports fans are everywhere.
The concerns about traffic on I-95, fans walking miles to get to the stadium, and ticket prices from Penn Station inflating have faded. What’s replaced them is atmosphere now the action has really got going.

MetLife, temporarily known as New York New Jersey Stadium, has already hosted group stage drama.
Brazil drew with Morocco. France dominated Senegal. Ecuador shocked Germany. England demolished Panama. Then in the round of 32, France dismantled Sweden 3-0. Now, as the tournament reaches its business end, the stakes change. No room for error. Lose and you go home.
Indeed, this has not only raised the stakes in online sportsbook odds but increased the calibre in players heading over here, with one eye on the final back in New York on July 19. Here’s who we could see before the end of the tournament.
Vinicius Jr
Vinicius Jr has stolen the pre-tournament narrative. Despite all the focus on Neymar’s return, Vini has been the spark that drives Brazil forward.
Four goals already. Terrorizing defenders with pace and directness. When Brazil needed to grind past Japan, he never stopped running, even if it was Gabriel Martinelli who took the spotlight.
For a player criticized for end product both at club and international level, this World Cup has silenced doubts.

If Brazil reach MetLife in the later rounds, Vini will be the reason they got there. His movement creates space. His pace unsettles every defense.
Against elite opposition in knockout football, that kind of directness and those clutch moments matters more than subtle positioning. There’s a reason he’s scored in two Champions League finals, this is a player that shows up in big moments.
Erling Haaland
Norway’s run shouldn’t be possible. Yet here they are. The Viking conquest of North America continues into the round of 16, and Erling Haaland is leading the raid. Brazil are next.
It’s now five goals for Haaland in his first World Cup. A striker who’s conquered English football now conquering the global stage.
MetLife hosts the latest clash between Haaland and familiar Premier League rivals. Gabriel, who’s battled Haaland in countless Manchester City-Arsenal encounters, could face him again on this stage.
That’s the kind of narrative that sells tickets. Haaland has proven he doesn’t need Champions League football to thrive in major tournaments. He just needs service and space.
If Norway continue their Cinderella story and reach the knockout rounds at MetLife, Haaland will be the focal point. The striker who reminds everyone why Manchester City paid what they did.
Kylian Mbappe
Kylian Mbappe arrives at MetLife as the player hunting redemption. The 2022 final. The hat-trick that still wasn’t enough. Now the brackets have separated France and Argentina until the final, and that seems to have only fueled his focus.
France dismantled Sweden 3-0. They’ve got Paris Saint-Germain’s entire attacking line fresh off retaining the UCL. Didier Deschamps has finally built the supporting cast that Mbappe needed to get over the lines, and it’s clear to see why they are one of the favorites.
The Madrid man looks different this tournament. Sharper. He’s more direct while at the same time it looks less like he’s trying to do everything himself.
If the two powers meet again at MetLife before the final, Mbappe will be the reason France got there. His form is undeniable. His hunger is obvious.
Lionel Messi
You can’t discuss MetLife’s potential knockout matches without addressing the possibility of the great Lionel Messi.

At 38, he’s still the tournament’s top scorer. Still directing Argentina’s play with an intelligence that age has only refined. The pace is gone. The jinking movements from his Barcelona days belong to memory. What’s replaced them is a creative eye and an ability to preserve energy for moments that matter.
If Argentina make it back to New Jersey, it’ll be because Messi carried them there. And if he wins the final at MetLife, if he retains the title at 38 in what will probably be his final game for Argentina, it transcends sport. It becomes mythology. The greatest player of his era, on the biggest stage, one last time.
Final Say
MetLife Stadium has hosted sporting drama before. But nothing compares to what could come in the knockout rounds.

The world’s elite arrive with everything to lose and legacies to define. Whether it’s Vinicius dragging Brazil forward, Haaland continuing Norway’s fairytale, Mbappé chasing redemption for France, or Messi writing his final chapter for Argentina, the next two weeks will produce memories that last decades.
The stage is set. The stakes are absolute. Now it’s time for the greatest players in the world to deliver.


