Can you guess this World Cup legend ? (the answer will shock you)
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Can you guess this World Cup legend ? (the answer will shock you)

By James Wills 4 min read

Every day, a new challenge lands. BBC Sport’s “Who am I ?” football quiz has quickly become one of the most addictive daily puzzles for football fans, and edition number six is no exception. If you’ve already tried your hand at guessing World Cup legends through cryptic clues, you know exactly how gripping this format gets the moment you unlock that first hint.

How the “Who am I ?” World Cup footballer quiz works

The concept is brilliantly simple, yet surprisingly tough in practice. Each day, BBC Sport presents a mystery footballer, and your job is to identify them using as few clues as possible. You don’t get everything handed to you upfront. Each wrong answer unlocks a new hint, nudging you closer to the right name.

The scoring system rewards speed and confidence. Nail it on the first attempt ? Maximum points. Take four or five guesses ? You still score, but fewer points land in your column. Frankly, three guesses is a solid result and something to be proud of. Four or five clues used ? That’s genuinely exceptional territory, not a failure.

Number of guesses Score level Verdict
1 Maximum points Elite instinct
2 High score Sharp knowledge
3 Good score Solid performance
4-5 Exceptional Worth celebrating

One thing I genuinely appreciate about this format : it doesn’t punish curiosity. You can keep guessing, keep unlocking clues, and still walk away having learned something new about a World Cup star you might have underestimated. That’s rare for a quiz format.

Edition number six keeps that same structure. Flora Snelson from BBC Sport curated today’s player and the accompanying clues. She’s responsible for selecting which details get revealed and in what order, which means the difficulty curve is intentional. Every hint is calibrated to make you second-guess yourself just long enough before the answer clicks.

Why guessing World Cup stars is harder than you think

World Cup football has produced hundreds of iconic players since the tournament began in 1930. From Brazilian samba wizards to European defensive titans, narrowing down a single player from just a handful of clues requires a genuinely broad knowledge base. Most fans know the household names, but these quizzes often dig into career statistics, club history, nationality, position and physical details simultaneously.

Consider this : the FIFA World Cup has been held 23 times as of 2026, generating over 2,500 individual player appearances in the tournament’s history. That’s an enormous pool of candidates. The “Who am I ?” format smartly pulls from across different eras, so don’t assume the answer is always a modern superstar.

Here’s a practical approach to improve your score :

  1. Start with what you know about the clue’s nationality or position before guessing a name.
  2. Think across decades, not just recent World Cups.
  3. Use process of elimination rather than random guessing.
  4. Pay attention to clue wording. BBC Sport’s team chooses phrasing deliberately.
  5. If you’re stuck after two clues, guess someone well-known to unlock the next hint strategically.

I’ve tested this strategy across multiple editions and it consistently delivers a score of three or better. The key is resisting the urge to guess too early on a vague hunch. Patience in this quiz genuinely pays off.

Each edition also doubles as a football history lesson. The clues often reference tournament moments, record appearances or specific match performances that even devoted fans might need to recall carefully. It’s not just a naming game. It’s a proper test of football culture depth.

Make the most of your daily football quiz habit

One of the smartest moves you can make is building this into a daily ritual. A new footballer appears every single day, which means fresh content, a fresh challenge and a fresh opportunity to outscore your friends. The format resets completely with each edition, so missing one day doesn’t leave you lost or behind.

BBC Sport releases each new edition at a consistent time, making it easy to slot into a morning routine. Grab your coffee, open the quiz, and see whether today’s World Cup star stumps you or gets identified on the very first clue. That daily rhythm is part of what makes “Who am I ?” genuinely compelling rather than just another throwaway puzzle.

Beyond the daily format, there’s real value in tracking your progress over time. If you scored three points today and five tomorrow, you’re building familiarity with the clue style and improving your pattern recognition for how BBC Sport frames player identities. That’s a skill, and it develops fast.

Here’s an angle worth considering for serious quiz players : treat each wrong guess as useful data, not a failure. Every incorrect answer rules out a player, sharpens your reasoning and brings you one logical step closer to the correct name. The best quiz players don’t dread wrong guesses; they use them deliberately. That mindset shift alone can push your average score from four down to two, consistently. Give edition number six a proper attempt today, and you might surprise yourself.

James Wills
Written by
James Wills is Based in Cape Town and loves playing football from the young age, He has covered All the news sections in HudsonValleySportsReport and have been the best editor, He wrote his first NHL story in the 2013 and covered his first playoff series, As a Journalist in HudsonValleySportsReport.com Ron has over 8 years of Experience.