The Round of 16 is where a World Cup stops being a group-stage lottery and starts becoming history. It’s also where the boot war gets serious. On the biggest stage football has ever built — 48 teams, three host nations, the entire planet watching — every touch is a billboard, and the brands know it. As the knockouts arrive, the footwear on the pitch has become its own tournament: speed silhouettes against control classics, murdered-out blackouts against chrome-drenched statement pairs, the big two against a pack of insurgents who can smell blood.
Here’s the state of the World Cup 2026 boots game at the Round of 16 — who’s winning the feet, and what it tells you about where football footwear is heading.
Nike still owns the fast lane
The Mercurial remains the most-worn boot among the tournament’s elite attackers, and in 2026 it’s leaner and louder than it’s ever been. Nike’s speed silhouette splits into the low-cut Vapor and the sock-collared Superfly, and between them they cover most of the game’s quickest, most expensive feet. It’s still the boot that says I am going to run past you and there is nothing you can do about it.
Nike’s second play is the Phantom — the control-and-strike boot for the players who’d rather pass a defence to death than sprint through it. Add a leather-touch Tiempo for the traditionalists, and Nike arrives at the knockouts with the deepest, most-worn line-up on the pitch. The tournament palette leans hard into high-shine metallics and full blackouts. Still the brand to beat, by sheer volume of top-tier feet.
adidas came to fight
adidas walked into this World Cup with the strongest boot line-up it’s had in a decade. The relaunched F50 is its answer to the Mercurial — feather-light, retro-coded, and back on some of the game’s fastest players. The Predator — reborn with its spiky, grippy control DNA intact — is doing the heavy lifting for the midfield generals and the set-piece specialists who live and die by whip and swerve. The Copa Pure covers the leather-and-feel purists.
Three boots, three jobs, and a colourway story that swings from stealth black to acid-bright in a single matchday. If Nike wins on volume, adidas is winning on range — and the Predator’s return has genuinely shifted the balance in midfield.
The challengers are the real story
The most interesting footwear at this tournament isn’t at the very top — it’s the insurgency underneath. Puma keeps pushing the Future (its adaptive-fit speed-control hybrid) and the Ultra onto elite feet, and its boots have a way of turning up on exactly the players you least expect to change a game.
New Balance has quietly become a genuine third force. Its Furon and Tekela boots land on more top-tier players every cycle, and the brand’s off-pitch momentum — see our Sport desk — is bleeding straight onto the grass. And then there’s Mizuno, whose Morelia — a buttery, minimalist leather boot with a devoted cult — is the connoisseur’s pick and a neat mirror of the wider heritage over hype mood sweeping the rest of footwear. When the game’s tastemakers start choosing a low-key Japanese leather boot over a chrome speed missile, something is shifting.
The colourway war
Boots are marketing, and the Round of 16 is peak season. Two trends dominate 2026’s pitches. First, chrome — mirror-finish metallics engineered to catch every broadcast light and every slow-motion replay. Second, blackout — the stealth look for players who want the boot to disappear so the football does the talking.
Retro is creeping in, too: ’90s-inspired shapes, throwback branding, and colour-blocking that nods to the boots your dad shouted at the telly in. Even football — the loudest, most tribal corner of sport — is feeling the pull toward heritage. That’s the same current running through sneakers right now, and it’s worth watching where it goes.
What to watch into the quarter-finals
As the field narrows, expect the brands to drop their sharpest “knockout” colourways for the stars still standing. It’s simple maths: the deeper a player runs, the more airtime their boots get, and nobody wastes a semi-final on last season’s pair. The next round is when the marquee tournament editions come out swinging.
Watch the challengers, too. A tournament-defining moment on New Balance, Puma or Mizuno feet is worth more than any billboard money can buy — and a single knockout-round highlight can reset a brand’s entire boot narrative overnight.
The bottom line
The Round of 16 is footwear’s proving ground. The boots that shine here are the boots kids will beg for by August — and the retail silhouettes that follow them into shops. Whatever lifts the trophy at MetLife on 19 July, the real winners are already being decided one blurred, chrome-flashed sprint at a time.
Keep it locked to our Culture and Sport desks for on-feet coverage all the way to the final, and check the release calendar for the retail versions dropping in these boots’ wake.
Loud on purpose.




