[p]Few people in world football straddle two cultures quite like [a href="https://www.flashscore.ca/player/asamoah-gerald/z1a9iZaO/"]Gerald Asamoah[/a]. Born in Mampong, Ghana, and raised in [a href="https://www.flashscore.ca/team/germany/ptQide1O/"]Germany[/a] from the age of 12, he became a trailblazer when he pulled on the white shirt of Die Mannschaft for the first time in 2001.[/p][p]In the process, he became the first Africa-born Black player to represent the German national team. He went on to earn 43 caps, score six international goals, and represent Germany at two World Cups, finishing as runners-up in 2002 and third in 2006 on home soil.[/p][p]Now, as the first major international tournament of his former nation's new generation approaches, Asamoah is watching the build-up to the 2026 World Cup in North America with the eye of someone who has lived at the very intersection of the two football worlds it will bring together this summer.[/p][h2]Favourites for the title[/h2][p]With the 2026 World Cup beginning in June across the United States, Canada and Mexico, Asamoah has been watching form, assessing squads and forming his own verdict on who will be lifting the trophy come the final whistle in July. His assessment is clear, if nuanced.[/p][p][b]"[a href="https://www.flashscore.ca/team/france/QkGeVG1n/"]France[/a] is a strong side and also [a href="https://www.flashscore.ca/team/spain/bLyo6mco/"]Spain[/a],"[/b][i] [/i]he told [b]Flashscore [/b]in an exclusive interview.[/p][p][b]"I wouldn't put Germany right at the top, although they can always surprise. Then you have [a href="https://www.flashscore.ca/team/argentina/f9OppQjp/"]Argentina[/a], with great team spirit, especially with Lionel Messi. [a href="https://www.flashscore.ca/team/brazil/I9l9aqLq/"]Brazil[/a] are always unpredictable, you never quite know what you'll get from them. But if you ask me, I think it could come down to France and Spain. Spain, in particular, are very good at building a team."[/b][/p][image alt="Germany's recent form" id="5ccefd13-0095-4231-b0e6-d9966744b033" credit-line="Flashscore" guid="7de3e79f-a3d2-4fea-af20-9a713cdf89cd" original-width="1200" original-height="1200" /][p]It is a measured take from a man who spent the best years of his career understanding precisely what Germany can and cannot do on the biggest stage. He was there in 2002 when they reached the final, and in 2006 when they captured the hearts of their own nation. He knows both the ceiling and the floor of German football better than most.[/p][h2][a href="https://www.flashscore.ca/player/wirtz-florian/0Q5gjImi/"]Wirtz[/a] and [a href="https://www.flashscore.ca/player/musiala-jamal/nVzSNrOf/"]Musiala[/a]: Germany's young stars[/h2][p]Despite not placing Germany among the outright favourites, Asamoah is far from dismissive of Julian Nagelsmann's side. His eyes light up when the conversation turns to the individuals who could make Germany dangerous, even unpredictable, in a tournament setting.[/p][p][b]"Florian Wirtz is one to watch. He's a very good player although he is having a challenging season with Liverpool. Jamal Musiala is another talent I rate highly,"[/b] he said.[/p][p]Wirtz, who made the high-profile move to Liverpool last summer, carries enormous expectations on his shoulders at just 22 years old. Asamoah clearly believes the talent is real, even if the season at club level has not always reflected it.[/p][p]Musiala, meanwhile, remains one of the most gifted players of his generation. A player whose close control, creativity and composure in tight spaces make him a genuine match-winner. Together, the two represent Germany's most compelling attacking proposition and, Asamoah suggests, a reason to never write Die Mannschaft off entirely.[/p][h2]The African wildcard: [a href="https://www.flashscore.ca/team/senegal/hOIsJLJr/"]Senegal[/a] over [a href="https://www.flashscore.ca/team/morocco/IDKYO3R8/"]Morocco[/a][/h2][p]With 10 African nations in the tournament, Asamoah, a man who holds Ghana close to his heart despite his German career, was asked which of the continent's representatives could cause the biggest upset. [/p][p][b]"It's not just about individuals, the unity in that team is special,"[/b] he said. [/p][p][b]"Players like Kalidou Koulibaly have been key, and even though it's unclear how long some of their stars will remain, that spirit keeps them competitive. Morocco also have a very strong team, but if I had to pick one African side that could surprise again, I would go with Senegal."[/b][/p][p]Morocco reached the semi-finals in Qatar and have lost little of the structural strength that made them the tournament's great story in 2022. But Asamoah's point about Senegal's collective spirit is well made. [/p][h2]A man between two worlds[/h2][p]Asamoah's perspective on this World Cup carries a weight that few analysts can match. He is the man who once made Ghanaian families in Germany proud by running out in a German shirt, who scored on his international debut and who spent the best part of a decade defying both racism and a serious heart condition to represent a country that was not always quick to fully embrace him.[/p][image alt="Gerald Asamoah was on pitchside duties with the media during Ghana's friendly with Germany." id="6dcd14ec-5e29-4e1d-b5bc-ab3c826b0976" credit-line="ČTK / imago sportfotodienst / Bernd Feil/M.i.S." guid="e9ad48a6-94f6-4a1c-99fa-85575daa8311" original-width="1400" original-height="890" /][p]Now at 47, working in football administration, he watches the summer approaching with the enthusiasm of someone who never quite stopped being a player.[/p][p]France and Spain as his favourites. Germany as the dark horse. Wirtz as the name to remember. Senegal as the African wildcard.[/p][p]The World Cup is nearly here. And Gerald Asamoah, as ever, is watching closely.[/p][image alt="Owuraku Ampofo" id="345f5fd0-6a26-4f45-8078-6462582c5da7" credit-line="Owuraku Ampofo" guid="32dbcc0e-0511-4ad8-9c78-d278560eca4d" original-width="1200" original-height="381" /]
EXCLUSIVE: Asamoah tips Wirtz as one to watch, expects Germany to surprise at World Cup
The former Germany international, born in Ghana, shares his World Cup predictions with Flashscore, and believes France and Spain are the ones to beat this summer.
Mentioned
Soccer
· sport
World Cup
· tournament_template
Gerald Asamoah
· participant
Florian Wirtz
· participant
Jamal Musiala
· participant
Germany
· participant
Spain
· participant
France
· participant
Senegal
· participant
Morocco
· participant
African football
· tag
Global
· tag
Exclusive
· tag
Features
· tag
Related stories
⚽ Football
New
Europa League qualifying: CSKA Sofia, Ferencvaros get the job done as Dynamo Kyiv struggle
David Parkes
⚽ Football
New
How Kylian Mbappe and France managed to break down Morocco's wall in quarter-final victory
Josias Pereira, de Boston (EUA)
⚽ Football
New
France find their way past Moroccan pressure in front of Shakira and packed Boston Stadium
Josias Pereira, de Boston (EUA)
⚽ Football
New
Mohamed Ouahbi admits France were the better side in defeat for Morocco
Reuters
⚽ Football
New
Didier Deschamps praises Kylian Mbappe for eighth goal as France make World Cup semi-final
AFP
⚽ Football
New
Late Sarajevo goal denies Inter Turku winning start in Conference League
Anthony Tomas