When Fifa released the fastest sprint speeds from the opening round of World Cup 2026, the name at the top of the list was not one many expected. The quickest player at the tournament so far was Australia defender Jordan Bos.
According to Fifa's official physical tracking data, the Feyenoord left-back reached 36.7 km/h during his country's 2-0 opening-game win over Turkey. Only Norway striker Erling Haaland and his Manchester City teammate, Uzbekistan defender Abdukodir Khusanov, came close at 36.5 km/h. Kylian Mbappe, Son Heung-min and Pedro Neto were among the established speedsters trailing behind.
“Australia's Jordan Bos, 36.7 km/h, is the fastest player at World Cup 2026 after sprint data release.”
For followers of Dutch football, it was hardly a surprise for Bos to top the rankings. For everyone else, it was an introduction to the qualities of one of the tournament's emerging stars. The 23-year-old has just completed the best season of his career at Feyenoord, establishing himself as one of the Eredivisie's most productive full-backs. His nine assists were the most by any player in Robin van Persie's side, while his four goals helped the Rotterdam club finish second in the table and qualify for the Champions League.
What makes Bos' rise particularly intriguing is that he was not always the physical specimen he appears today. Australia teammate Connor Metcalfe remembers a very different player from their days together in Melbourne City's academy. While technically gifted and comfortable in possession, Bos was physically small compared to many of his peers.
Then everything changed. "Out of nowhere, just after an off-season, he came back and he was a unit," Metcalfe recalled.
The transformation has invited comparisons with former Tottenham Hotspur and Real Madrid full-back turned forward Gareth Bale. Like the Wales icon, Bos spent much of his youth career as a relatively small left-sided defender before a dramatic growth spurt altered both his physique and his ceiling as a player. Bale also grew around 20 centimetres during his teenage years, evolving from an undersized full-back into one of the most devastating and successful athletes in world football. Bos has, remarkably, followed a similar path.
Without strength or size to rely on, he was forced to develop the technical aspects of his game first. By the time his body caught up, he already possessed balance, ball control and intelligence.
Bos knew his growth spurt would eventually come. His father, Jacco, is tall, and the Socceroos star remembers reassuring friends who doubted him. "I said to my friends, 'Just wait, wait and see'," said Bos, who has become one of Australia's most dangerous attacking outlets from deep.