# The Daily Drip: World Cup Week Takes the Whole Top Ten
With the 2026 World Cup now five days from kick-off, DRIPDAQ's board has stopped pretending anything else matters. Nine of today's top ten are tournament kits or World Cup collabs, and the only outsider in the leading group is a Jordan retro that refuses to cool down.
**Argentina holds the crown.** The reigning champions' 2026 home kit sits at number one on a drip score of 94.6, even after easing back a few points as the early-week frenzy levels out. Travis Scott's Pink Pack for Jordan (93.4) is the highest non-kit on the board, proof that a genuine cultural co-sign still beats brand prestige every time. Behind them, Morocco's Puma home shirt (92.2) and the maroon Adidas Liverpool 26-27 home kit (92.0) round out a top five completed by Germany's 2026 home jersey.
**Today's movers tell the real story.** The biggest riser is the Moncler x Adidas Originals NMD, up a capped 15 points to 73.0 as luxury-meets-sport chatter builds. PSG's home kit (+14.1) and the Nike Air Foamposite One Tianjin 2.0 (+12.7), fresh off its 4 June drop, both surge into contention. Momentum is genuinely cross-category today: luxury, kit culture and sneakers all firing rather than the usual sneaker monopoly.
**The fallers are mostly club football paying the tax.** With every eye on international shirts, new-season Premier League kits are sliding. Arsenal and Manchester United's 2026-27 home kits both shed the full 15-point daily limit, and Iran's World Cup home shirt (-11.7) cools as the smaller nations get drowned out by the marquee names.
**Two new entries crash straight into SURGING.** Portugal's aquamarine away kit, the wave-pattern Puma shirt that broke kit-culture forums on launch, enters at 82.3. Alongside it, the Caitlin Clark x Nike Kobe 5 Protro "Scrabble" lands at 77.4 ahead of its 27 June release, extending the most reliable sell-out streak in basketball.
The shape of the market is honest: 22 products genuinely ON_FIRE, a broad RISING and STEADY middle, and only a handful of truly slept-on stock. For the next month, if it is not stitched with a national crest, it is fighting uphill.