World Cup 2026 rosters, ranked: The strongest squads among title favourites at 2026 finals


World Cup 2026 rosters, ranked: The strongest squads among title favourites at 2026 finals originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

With 48 teams convening in North America to contest this summer’s World Cup, the field of nations is bursting with world-class talent and football icons.

Advertisement

While one player can elevate a nation from contender to title-winner, as Lionel Messi did for Argentina in 2022, it’s been proven time and time again that one or two superstars can not drag a team to victory on their own.

Instead, it takes an entire squad, from the captain down to the third-string goalkeeper, to make a World Cup winner truly hum.

The Sporting News takes a look at the strongest overall squads in the 2026 World Cup field, analysing the talent within the team from top to bottom.

MORE: Complete 2026 World Cup schedule | Injured players in danger of missing the World Cup

Advertisement

Best teams at the 2026 FIFA World Cup

10. United States

There is no debating that the USMNT roster is full of talent. What remains to be seen is whether they can reproduce their strong recent club performances on the international stage.

Christian Pulisic was arguably the best player in Serie A through the first half of 2025/26, and even as he dipped in form through the second half, he has proven since joining up with the national team that he remains a quality threat in attack. He is joined by the likes of Weston McKennie, Antonee Robinson, Folarin Balogun, Chris Richards, Joe Scally, Tim Weah, and Brenden Aaronson, who are all established starters in ‘big five’ European league sides. Meanwhile, Ricardo Pepi and Sergino Dest have been strong performers for Dutch giants PSV, Haji Wright led Coventry City back to the Premier League, and Alejandro Zendejas is arguably the most in-form player at Liga MX giants Club America.

Advertisement

Head coach Mauricio Pochettino has supplemented these individuals with strong domestic-based players, spending the last two years cultivating a depth chart that did not exist prior to his arrival.

Unfortunately, Pochettino – in his first international job but well regarded as one of the top club coaches in the game — made a controversial roster decision to leave presumed starting midfielder Tanner Tessmann off the roster, a dangerous risk that lowers the talent level of the squad and leaves them dangerously thin in the middle of the field.

Head coach: Mauricio Pochettino (Argentina)

MORE:A complete breakdown of USA’s 2026 World Cup squad

Pos

No.

Name

Club

Age

Caps

GK

25

Chris Brady

Chicago Fire (MLS, United States)

22

0

GK

1

Matt Freese

NYCFC (MLS, United States)

27

14

GK

24

Matt Turner

New England Revolution (MLS, United States)

31

53

DEF

18

Max Arfsten

Columbus Crew (MLS, United States)

25

18

DEF

2

Sergino Dest

PSV Eindhoven (Eredivisie, Netherlands)

25

37

DEF

16

Alex Freeman

Orlando City (MLS, United States)

21

15

DEF

22

Mark McKenzie

Toulouse (Ligue 1, France)

27

27

DEF

13

Tim Ream

Charlotte FC (MLS, United States)

38

80

DEF

3

Chris Richards

Crystal Palace (Premier League, England)

26

36

DEF

5

Antonee Robinson

Fulham (Premier League, England)

28

52

DEF

12

Miles Robinson

FC Cincinnati (MLS, United States)

29

38

DEF

23

Joe Scally

Borussia Monchengladbach (Bundesliga, Germany)

23

24

DEF

6

Auston Trusty

Celtic (Premiership, Scotland)

27

5

MID

11

Brenden Aaronson

Leeds United (Premier League, England)

25

57

MID

4

Tyler Adams

Bournemouth (Premier League, England)

27

52

MID

14

Sebastian Berhalter

Vancouver Whitecaps (MLS, Canada)

25

11

MID

7

Gio Reyna

Borussia Monchengladbach (Bundesliga, Germany)

23

36

MID

8

Weston McKennie

Juventus (Serie A, Italy)

27

64

MID

15

Cristian Roldan

Seattle Sounders (MLS, United States)

30

45

MID

17

Malik Tillman

Bayer Leverkusen (Bundesliga, Germany)

23

28

MID

26

Alejandro Zendejas

Club America (Liga MX, Mexico)

28

13

FWD

20

Folarin Balogun

AS Monaco (Ligue 1, France)

24

25

FWD

9

Ricardo Pepi

PSV Eindhoven (Eredivisie, Netherlands)

23

35

FWD

10

Christian Pulisic

AC Milan (Serie A, Italy)

27

84

FWD

21

Timothy Weah

Marseille (Ligue 1, France)

26

49

FWD

19

Haji Wright

Coventry City (Championship, England)

28

20

9. Norway

Any side with Erling Haaland — the world’s best pure No. 9 — in the mix is sure to have a head start, but this Norway side is not here to mess around. Indeed, they have a deep mix of talent that has the potential to spark a surprisingly deep run in this summer’s World Cup.

Advertisement

It all starts with Haaland, of course, who boasts an unbelievable 55 goals in 49 international appearances. Across the past two years of international play, dating back to a 3-0 friendly win in June of 2024, Haaland has scored a truly jaw-dropping 28 goals in 18 appearances, including two hat-tricks and one legendary five-goal haul in a World Cup qualifier against Moldova.

Yet it takes more than just Haaland to make this Norway team formidable. Arsenal playmaker Martin Odegaard wears the captain’s armband, regarded as one of the best passers in the world even coming off a down season at Arsenal where he was forced to do more dirty work than usual. The success of Norwegian side Bodo/Glimt in the Champions League this season provided the national team with good talent depth, while young Benfica winger Andreas Schjelderup is an up-and-coming star in good form.

Look out for the Landslaget this summer.

Head coach: Stale Solbakken (Norway)

Advertisement

MORE:A complete breakdown of Norway’s 2026 World Cup squad

Position

No.

Player

Club

Age

Caps

GK

1

Orjan Nyland

Sevilla (La Liga, Spain)

35

69

GK

13

Egil Selvik

Watford (Championship, England)

28

6

GK

12

Sander Tangvik

Hamburg (Bundesliga, Germany)

23

0

DEF

3

Kristoffer Ajer

Brentford (Premier League, England)

28

50

DEF

15

Fredrik Andre Bjorkan

Bodo/Glimt (Eliteserien, Norway)

27

19

DEF

25

Henrik Falchener

Vikingur (Eliteserien, Norway)

23

1

DEF

17

Torbjorn Heggem

Bologna (Serie A, Italy)

25

13

DEF

24

Sondre Langas

Derby County (Championship, England)

25

2

DEF

4

Leo Skiri Ostigard

Genoa (Serie A, Italy)

26

36

DEF

16

Marcus Pedersen

Torino (Serie A, Italy)

25

31

DEF

26

Julian Ryerson

Borussia Dortmund (Bundesliga, Germany)

28

41

DEF

5

David Moller Wolfe

Wolves (Championship, England)

24

20

MID

19

Thelo Aasgaard

Rangers (Premiership, Scotland)

24

6

MID

14

Fredrik Aursnes

Benfica (Primeira Liga, Portugal)

30

20

MID

6

Patrick Berg

Bodo/Glimt (Eliteserien, Norway)

28

41

MID

8

Sander Berge

Fulham (Premier League, England)

28

64

MID

23

Jens Petter Hauge

Bodo/Glimt (Eliteserien, Norway)

26

14

MID

20

Antonio Nusa

RB Leipzig (Bundesliga, Germany)

21

22

MID

10

Martin Odegaard

Arsenal (Premier League, England)

27

67

MID

21

Andreas Schjelderup

Benfica (Primeira Liga, Portugal)

21

10

MID

2

Morten Thorsby

Cremonese (Serie A, Italy)

30

30

MID

18

Kristian Thorstveldt

Sassuolo (Serie A, Italy)

27

35

FWD

22

Oscar Bobb

Fulham (Premier League, England)

22

18

FWD

9

Erling Haaland

Man City (Premier League, England)

25

49

FWD

11

Jorgen Strand Larsen

Crystal Palace (Premier League, England)

26

26

FWD

7

Alexander Sorloth

Atletico Madrid (La Liga, Spain)

30

70

8. Brazil

For casual fans used to reading a Brazil squad list bursting with glittering superstars and global icons, this 26-man roster will be nothing short of a splash of cold water to the face.

Sure, the likes of Vinicius Jr. and Raphinha give this squad its world-class flair, and the back line is anchored by world-class defenders Gabriel and Marquinhos. But even they have struggled to replicate their title-winning club form for the national team, and beyond that is a list of players who do not measure up to the depth this team once enjoyed.

Advertisement

Given the right circumstances, an ageing Casemiro can pair well with Bruno Guimaraes in midfield, supporting Matheus Cunha. But they have failed to come together for any reasonable stretch of time for Brazil in the past few years, and they still must prove they can stand up to the titans of Europe.

The most glaringly thin position is at full-back, where the team is completely devoid of any notable talent and a host of domestic-based role players will have to do. It’s going to be a difficult job for Carlo Ancelotti this summer in his first national team gig, missing a litany of key players to injury and failing to help himself by omitting Chelsea striker Joao Pedro.

Head coach: Carlo Ancelotti (Italy)

MORE:A complete breakdown of Brazil’s 2026 World Cup squad

Pos

No.

Name

Club

Age

Caps

GK

1

Alisson Becker

Liverpool (Premier League, England)

33

76

GK

23

Ederson

Fenerbahce (Super Lig, Turkey)

32

31

GK

12

Weverton

Gremio (Serie A, Brazil)

38

1

DEF

14

Bremer

Juventus (Serie A, Italy)

29

6

DEF

13

Danilo

Flamengo (Serie A, Brazil)

34

68

DEF

3

Gabriel

Arsenal (Premier League, England)

28

17

DEF

24

Roger Ibanez

Al Ahli (Pro League, Saudi Arabia)

27

5

DEF

4

Marquinhos

PSG (Ligue 1, France)

32

104

DEF

15

Leo Pereira

Flamengo (Serie A, Brazil)

30

2

DEF

6

Alex Sandro

Flamengo (Serie A, Brazil)

35

43

DEF

16

Douglas Santos

Zenit St. Petersburg (Premier League, Russia)

32

5

DEF

2

Wesley

AS Roma (Serie A, Italy)

22

6

MID

5

Casemiro

Man United (Premier League, England)

34

84

MID

17

Fabinho

Al Ittihad (Pro League, Saudi Arabia)

32

31

MID

8

Bruno Guimaraes

Newcastle (Premier League, England)

28

41

MID

20

Lucas Paqueta

Flamengo (Serie A, Brazil)

28

61

MID

18

Danilo Santos

Botafogo (Serie A, Brazil)

25

2

FWD

9

Matheus Cunha

Man United (Premier League, England)

26

21

FWD

19

Endrick

Lyon (Ligue 1, France)

19

15

FWD

21

Luiz Henrique

Zenit St. Petersburg (Premier League, Russia)

25

13

FWD

22

Gabriel Martinelli

Arsenal (Premier League, England)

24

22

FWD

10

Neymar

Santos (Serie A, Brazil)

34

128

FWD

11

Raphinha

Barcelona (La Liga, Spain)

29

37

FWD

26

Rayan

Bournemouth (Premier League, England)

19

1

FWD

25

Igor Thiago

Brentford (Premier League, England)

24

2

FWD

7

Vinicius Jr.

Real Madrid (La Liga, Spain)

25

47

7. Germany

While a few stars from the last era of German football remain dotting their roster, this squad is chock full of relatively lesser-known names plucked from mid-table Bundesliga sides. The likes of Nadiem Amiri, Felix Nmecha, Max Beier, Jamie Leweling, and Waldemar Anton are new faces for casual fans who are used to being familiar with Germany’s entire roster.

Advertisement

Even a number of the established stars in this squad have question marks looming over their heads.

Goalkeeper Manuel Neuer is 40 years old and has been poor at the club level for some time now, but still decided to come out of retirement for one more World Cup run. Kai Havertz is one of the most effective and versatile forwards in the world, but the Arsenal man is coming off an injury-riddled season. There’s no debating the talent of playmaker Florian Wirtz, but he struggled to adapt in his first season at Liverpool. And Jamal Musiala is one of the best young No. 10’s in the game, but still doesn’t quite seem himself after returning from a nasty broken leg last summer.

The best player in this squad right now, arguably, is largely underrated centre-back Jonathan Tah, who was one of the few exports from Xabi Alonso’s title-winning side at Bayer Leverkusen who established himself well at his new club, becoming one of the top defenders in the world. There are a ton of questions about this German squad, even if they possess raw talent across the board.

Head coach: Julian Nagelsmann (Germany)

Advertisement

MORE:A complete breakdown of Germany’s 2026 World Cup squad

Position

No.

Player

Club

Age

Caps

GK

12

Oliver Baumann

Hoffenheim (Bundesliga, Germany)

35

11

GK

1

Manuel Neuer

Bayern Munich (Bundesliga, Germany)

40

124

GK

21

Alexander Nubel

Bayern Munich (Bundesliga, Germany)

29

3

DEF

3

Waldemar Anton

Borussia Dortmund (Bundesliga, Germany)

29

12

DEF

18

Nathaniel Brown

Eintracht Frankfurt (Bundesliga, Germany)

22

3

DEF

13

Pascal Gross

Brighton and Hove Albion (Premier League, England)

34

18

DEF

6

Joshua Kimmich

Bayern Munich (Bundesliga, Germany)

31

108

DEF

22

David Raum

RB Leipzig (Bundesliga, Germany)

28

36

DEF

2

Antonio Rudiger

Real Madrid (La Liga, Spain)

33

82

DEF

15

Nico Schlotterbeck

Borussia Dortmund (Bundesliga, Germany)

26

25

DEF

4

Jonathan Tah

Bayern Munich (Bundesliga, Germany)

30

45

DEF

24

Malick Thiaw

Newcastle United (Premier League, England)

24

5

MID

20

Nadiem Amiri

Mainz (Bundesliga, Germany)

29

9

MID

8

Leon Goretzka

Bayern Munich (Bundesliga, Germany)

31

69

MID

25

Lennart Karl

Bayern Munich (Bundesliga, Germany)

18

2

MID

10

Jamal Musiala

Bayern Munich (Bundesliga, Germany)

23

40

MID

23

Felix Nmecha

Borussia Dortmund (Bundesliga, Germany)

25

6

MID

5

Aleksandar Pavlovic

Bayern Munich (Bundesliga, Germany)

22

9

MID

19

Leroy Sane

Galatasaray (Super Lig, Turkey)

30

74

MID

16

Angelo Stiller

Stuttgart (Bundesliga, Germany)

25

7

MID

17

Florian Wirtz

Liverpool (Premier League, England)

23

39

FWD

14

Maximilian Beier

Borussia Dortmund (Bundesliga, Germany)

23

7

FWD

7

Kai Havertz

Arsenal (Premier League, England)

26

57

FWD

9

Jamie Leweling

Stuttgart (Bundesliga, Germany)

25

4

FWD

26

Deniz Undav

Stuttgart (Bundesliga, Germany)

29

7

FWD

11

Nick Woltemade

Newcastle United (Premier League, England)

24

10

6. Netherlands

Nobody is talking about the Netherlands coming into the 2026 FIFA World Cup, but they should be, because the Oranje enter this summer’s tournament with a glittering list of players in the prime of their careers and in good club form.

Virgil van Dijk may have lost a step as he crosses 34 years old, but he remains a leader at the back and a strong performer in defence. He is supported by world-class full-back duo Denzel Dumfries and Jurrien Timber on either side, and experienced Manchester City defender Nathan Ake in the middle. Frenkie De Jong’s tumultuous off-field story at Barcelona distracts from what a top midfield distributor he is, and Tijjani Reijnders provides good creativity in the middle.

Advertisement

Cody Gakpo isn’t exactly a true No. 9, but he is a proven goal scorer at international level, and is surrounded by exceptional talent up front, as in-form Donyell Malen is waiting to break out alongside veteran Memphis Depay who continues to churn out international goals no matter what his club situation may be.

The Dutch likely aren’t title contenders, but they have the talent available to make a surprising semifinal run if they can spring an upset or two.

Head coach: Ronald Koeman (Netherlands)

MORE:A complete breakdown of the Netherlands’ 2026 World Cup squad

Position

No.

Player

Club

Age

Caps

GK

23

Mark Flekken

Bayer Leverkusen (Bundesliga, Germany)

32

11

GK

13

Robin Roefs

Sunderland (Premier League, England)

23

0

GK

1

Bart Verbruggen

Brighton (Premier League, England)

23

27

DEF

5

Nathan Ake

Man City (Premier League, England)

31

58

DEF

4

Virgil van Dijk

Liverpool (Premier League, England)

34

90

DEF

22

Denzel Dumfries

Inter Milan (Serie A, Italy)

30

71

DEF

25

Jorrel Hato

Chelsea (Premier League, England)

20

7

DEF

6

Jan Paul van Hecke

Brighton (Premier League, England)

25

10

DEF

2

Jurrien Timber

Arsenal (Premier League, England)

24

23

DEF

15

Micky van de Ven

Tottenham (Premier League, England)

25

19

MID

8

Ryan Gravenberch

Liverpool (Premier League, England)

24

25

MID

20

Teun Koopmeiners

Juventus (Serie A, Italy)

28

27

MID

21

Frenkie de Jong

Barcelona (La Liga, Spain)

29

64

MID

14

Tijjani Reijnders

Man City (Premier League, England)

27

30

MID

3

Marten de Roon

Atalanta (Serie A, Italy)

35

42

MID

16

Guus Til

PSV Eindhoven (Eredivisie, Netherlands)

28

6

MID

26

Quinten Timber

Marseille (Ligue 1, France)

28

6

MID

12

Mats Wieffer

Brighton (Premier League, England)

26

14

FWD

19

Brian Brobbey

Sunderland (Premier League, England)

24

10

FWD

10

Memphis Depay

Corinthians (Serie A, Brazil)

32

108

FWD

11

Cody Gakpo

Liverpool (Premier League, England)

27

48

FWD

7

Justin Kluivert

Bournemouth (Premier League, England)

27

11

FWD

17

Noa Lang

Galatasaray (Super Lig, Turkey)

26

15

FWD

18

Donyell Malen

AS Roma (Serie A, Italy)

27

51

FWD

24

Crysencio Summerville

West Ham (Championship, England)

24

0

FWD

9

Wout Weghorst

Ajax (Eredivisie, Netherlands)

33

51

5. Argentina

Defending champions Argentina do not boast quite the same level of recognisable world-class talent as their European counterparts, but that is what makes Lionel Scaloni the world-class coach he is. Even with legend Lionel Messi in the side, Argentina are less about piecing together Ballon d’Or candidates and more about becoming greater than the sum of its parts.

Advertisement

The likes of Rodrigo De Paul, Giovani Lo Celso, Emiliano Martinez, Cristian Romero, Exequiel Palacios, and Lisandro Martinez play for big European clubs, of course, but they have never been considered amongst the top echelon of superstars in the current generation, yet they are all major contributors of the Argentine national team’s title-winning squad.

Outside of Messi, who is still able to log consistent 90-minute performances at 38 years old when not dealing with hamstring injuries, the real gem of this squad is Chelsea star Enzo Fernandez, who has been flirting with a move to Real Madrid of late. He makes this side go, but has plenty of help in that regard.

Head coach: Lionel Scaloni (Argentina)

MORE:A complete breakdown of Argentina’s 2026 World Cup squad

Pos

No.

Name

Club

Age

Caps

GK

23

Emiliano Martinez

Aston Villa (Premier League, England)

33

59

GK

1

Juan Musso

Atletico Madrid (La Liga, Spain)

32

3

GK

12

Geronimo Rulli

Marseille (Ligue 1, France)

34

7

DEF

2

Leonardo Balerdi

Marseille (Ligue 1, France)

27

11

DEF

6

Lisandro Martinez

Manchester United (Premier League, England)

28

26

DEF

25

Facundo Medina

Lens (Ligue 1, France)

27

7

DEF

26

Nahuel Molina

Atletico Madrid (La Liga, Spain)

28

58

DEF

4

Gonzalo Montiel

River Plate (Primera Liga, Argentina)

29

38

DEF

19

Nicolas Otamendi

Benfica (Primeira Liga, Portugal)

38

130

DEF

13

Cristian Romero

Tottenham Hotspur (Premier League, England)

28

49

DEF

3

Nicolas Tagliafico

Lyon (Ligue 1, France)

33

75

MID

8

Valentin Barco

Strasbourg (Ligue 1, France)

21

2

MID

7

Rodrigo De Paul

Inter Miami (MLS, United States)

32

85

MID

24

Enzo Fernandez

Chelsea (Premier League, England)

25

40

MID

11

Giovani Lo Celso

Real Betis (La Liga, Spain)

30

65

MID

20

Alexis Mac Allister

Liverpool (Premier League, England)

27

44

MID

14

Exequiel Palacios

Bayer Leverkusen (Bundesliga, Germany)

27

38

MID

5

Leandro Paredes

Boca Juniors (Primera Liga, Argentina)

31

77

MID

18

Nico Paz

Como (Serie A, Italy)

21

8

FWD

16

Thiago Almada

Atletico Madrid (La Liga, Spain)

25

14

FWD

9

Julian Alvarez

Atletico Madrid (La Liga, Spain)

26

51

FWD

15

Nicolas Gonzalez

Juventus (Serie A, Italy)

28

50

FWD

21

Jose Lopez

Palmeiras (Brasileirao, Brazil)

25

3

FWD

22

Lautaro Martinez

Inter Milan (Serie A, Italy)

28

75

FWD

10

Lionel Messi

Inter Miami (MLS, United States)

38

198

FWD

17

Giuliano Simeone

Atletico Madrid (La Liga, Spain)

23

11

4. Portugal

With Portugal not considered amongst the top contenders for the World Cup trophy, their talented squad is flying under the radar. What makes this team so impressive on paper is the midfield, which is probably the best in the World Cup field.

Advertisement

PSG star Vitinha is one of the best three midfielders in the world, and he is joined by club teammate Joao Neves who is one of the best defensive midfielders in the game. Tack on Bruno Fernandes, who just set the Premier League single-season assists record and is a world-class midfielder in all phases of the game, and that trio is unquestionably at a higher level than any other side in the competition.

They also boast a strong back line, but their lack of attacking talent is worrying. Rafael Leao endured a brutal season with AC Milan and could be dumped by the Italian club, and Joao Felix darted for the Saudi Pro League in his prime years. Goncalo Ramos just won the Champions League with PSG, but played a clear second fiddle to Ousmane Dembele and represents a clear drop-off from the talent of the reigning Ballon d’Or winner.

Head coach: Roberto Martinez (Spain)

MORE:A complete breakdown of Portugal’s 2026 World Cup squad

Pos

Name

Club

Age

Caps

GK

Diogo Costa

Porto (Primeira Liga, Portugal)

26

42

GK

Jose Sa

Wolves (Championship, England)

33

4

GK

Rui Silva

Sporting CP (Primeira Division, Portugal)

32

2

GK

Ricardo Velho

Genclerbirligi (Super Lig, Turkey)

27

1

DEF

Tomas Araujo

Benfica (Primeira Liga, Portugal)

24

3

DEF

Joao Cancelo

Barcelona (La Liga, Spain)

31

66

DEF

Diogo Dalot

Manchester United (Premier League, England)

27

33

DEF

Ruben Dias

Manchester City (Premier League, England)

29

74

DEF

Goncalo Inacio

Sporting CP (Primeira Liga, Portugal)

24

24

DEF

Nuno Mendes

Paris Saint-Germain (Ligue 1, France)

23

43

DEF

Matheus Nunes

Manchester City (Premier League, England)

27

19

DEF

Nelson Semedo

Fenerbahce (Super Lig, Turkey)

32

48

DEF

Renato Veiga

Villarreal (La Liga, Spain)

22

11

MID

Samu Costa

Mallorca (Segunda Division, Spain)

25

4

MID

Bruno Fernandes

Manchester United (Premier League, England)

31

87

MID

Joao Neves

Paris Saint-Germain (Ligue 1, France)

21

21

MID

Ruben Neves

Al Hilal (Pro League, Saudi Arabia)

29

65

MID

Bernardo Silva

Manchester City (Premier League, England)

31

107

MID

Vitinha

Paris Saint-Germain (Ligue 1, France)

26

37

FWD

Francisco Conceicao

Juventus (Serie A, Italy)

23

15

FWD

Joao Felix

Al Nassr (Pro League, Saudi Arabia)

26

52

FWD

Goncalo Guedes

Real Sociedad (La Liga, Spain)

29

33

FWD

Rafael Leao

AC Milan (Serie A, Italy)

26

43

FWD

Pedro Neto

Chelsea (Premier League, England)

26

23

FWD

Goncalo Ramos

Paris Saint-Germain (Ligue 1, France)

24

24

FWD

Cristiano Ronaldo

Al Nassr (Pro League, Saudi Arabia)

41

226

FWD

Francisco Trincao

Sporting CP (Primeira Liga, Portugal)

26

17

3. England

As the home of the richest and most talented club league in the world, it’s no surprise that England boasts one of the most loaded rosters of any World Cup participant.

Advertisement

Striker Harry Kane leads the way, as one of the most in-form goal scorers on the planet, and he is propped up by midfield superstar Jude Bellingham who remains one of the world’s best at his position despite a down season at Real Madrid. A host of title-winning Arsenal stars are in the mix, as Bukayo Saka and Declan Rice are likely to start, and Marc Guehi has become one of the best centre-backs in the world having made a move to Man City.

However, head coach Thomas Tuchel made some highly questionable roster decisions that could leave this squad vulnerable late in the tournament. Tuchel decided to leave Cole Palmer, Phil Foden, and Trent Alexander-Arnold at home, along with a number of other talented snubs. None of those players had particularly strong club seasons, but they all remain proven players at the international and club levels.

Instead of bringing veteran Harry Maguire along after a strong season with Man United, Tuchel selected a potentially vulnerable group of defenders, including Ezri Konsa, Jarrell Quansah, and Djed Spence, while aging veteran Jordan Henderson was bafflingly included despite being cut from a terrible Ajax team a year ago.

There’s plenty for this team to prove despite their status as one of the favourites to lift the trophy.

Advertisement

Head coach: Thomas Tuchel (Germany)

MORE:A complete breakdown of England’s 2026 World Cup squad

Position

No.

Player

Club

Age

Caps

GK

13

Dean Henderson

Crystal Palace (Premier League, England)

29

4

GK

1

Jordan Pickford

Everton (Premier League, England)

32

82

GK

23

James Trafford

Manchester City (Premier League, England)

23

1

DEF

15

Dan Burn

Newcastle (Premier League, England)

34

6

DEF

6

Marc Guehi

Manchester City (Premier League, England)

25

27

DEF

24

Reece James

Chelsea (Premier League, England)

26

22

DEF

2

Ezri Konsa

Aston Villa (Premier League, England)

28

18

DEF

12

Tino Livramento

Newcastle United (Premier League, England)

23

5

DEF

3

Nico O’Reilly

Manchester City (Premier League, England)

21

3

DEF

26

Jarell Quansah

Bayer Leverkusen (Bundesliga, Germany)

23

1

DEF

25

Djed Spence

Tottenham Hotspur (Premier League, England)

24

4

DEF

5

John Stones

Manchester City (Premier League, England)

31

87

MID

8

Elliot Anderson

Nottingham Forest (Premier League, England)

23

7

MID

10

Jude Bellingham

Real Madrid (La Liga, Spain)

22

46

MID

21

Eberechi Eze

Arsenal (Premier League, England)

27

16

MID

14

Jordan Henderson

Brentford (Premier League, England)

35

89

MID

16

Kobbie Mainoo

Manchester United (Premier League, England)

21

12

MID

4

Declan Rice

Arsenal (Premier League, England)

27

72

MID

17

Morgan Rogers

Aston Villa (Premier League, England)

23

13

FWD

18

Anthony Gordon

Newcastle United (Premier League, England)

25

17

FWD

9

Harry Kane

Bayern Munich (Bundesliga, Germany)

32

112

FWD

20

Noni Madueke

Arsenal (Premier League, England)

24

10

FWD

11

Marcus Rashford

Manchester United (Barcelona, Spain)

28

70

FWD

7

Bukayo Saka

Arsenal (Premier League, England)

24

48

FWD

22

Ivan Toney

Al Ahli (Pro League, Saudi Arabia)

30

7

FWD

19

Ollie Watkins

Aston Villa (Premier League, England)

30

20

2. Spain

Spain have a World Cup-winning roster, that much is clear. But there are a few small deficiencies, largely due to injuries they have been forced to endure heading in to the competition.

First and foremost, the health of superstar winger Lamine Yamal is in question after he suffered a hamstring injury late in the La Liga season. He could miss time, which robs Spain of their progressive workhorse on the right flank, along with world-class levels of creativity and goal scoring. Starting left winger Nico Williams is also less than fully fit, leaving Spain to dig deeper into their winger depth as they hope to support striker Mikel Oyarzabal off a strong La Liga season with Real Sociedad.

Advertisement

Still, they are loaded at the back and in midfield, where Pau Cubarsi is one of the best young defenders in the world and his Barcelona teammate Pedri has blossomed to become arguably the best midfielder in the game.

They also have easily the best goalkeeping trio in the field. Joan Garcia was strong in his first season at Barcelona, while David Raya was arguably Arsenal’s most important player in a Premier League title-winning campaign…and there’s a good chance neither will start as Unai Simon has established himself as a regular for Spain in net.

Head coach: Luis de la Fuente (Spain)

MORE:A complete breakdown of Spain’s 2026 World Cup squad

Position

No.

Player

Club

Age

Caps

GK

23

Unai Simon

Athletic Club (La Liga, Spain)

28

57

GK

1

David Raya

Arsenal (Premier League, England)

30

12

GK

13

Joan Garcia

Barcelona (La Liga, Spain)

25

1

DEF

24

Marc Cucurella

Chelsea (Premier League, England)

27

23

DEF

3

Alejandro Grimaldo

Bayer Leverkusen (Bundesliga, Germany)

30

12

DEF

22

Pau Cubarsi

Barcelona (La Liga, Spain)

19

11

DEF

14

Aymeric Laporte

Athletic Club (La Liga, Spain)

31

44

DEF

4

Eric Garcia

Barcelona (La Liga, Spain)

25

19

DEF

2

Marc Pubill

Atletico Madrid (La Liga, Spain)

22

0

DEF

5

Marcos Llorente

Atletico Madrid (La Liga, Spain)

31

23

DEF

12

Pedro Porro

Tottenham (La Liga, Spain)

26

16

MID

20

Pedri

Barcelona (La Liga, Spain)

23

40

MID

8

Fabian Ruiz

Paris Saint-Germain (Ligue 1, Spain)

30

41

MID

18

Martin Zubimendi

Arsenal (Premier League, England)

27

25

MID

9

Gavi

Barcelona (La Liga, Spain)

21

28

MID

16

Rodri

Manchester City (Premier League, England)

29

61

MID

15

Alex Baena

Atletico Madrid (La Liga, Spain)

24

15

FWD

21

Mikel Oyazarbal

Real Sociedad (La Liga, Spain)

29

52

FWD

10

Dani Olmo

Barcelona (La Liga, Spain)

28

48

FWD

17

Nico Williams

Athletic Club (La Liga, Spain)

23

30

FWD

11

Yeremy Pino

Crystal Palace (Premier League, England)

23

21

FWD

7

Ferran Torres

Barcelona (La Liga, Spain)

26

55

FWD

26

Borja Iglesias

Celta Vigo (La Liga, Spain)

33

6

FWD

25

Victor Munoz

Osasuna (La Liga, Spain)

22

2

FWD

19

Lamine Yamal

Barcelona (La Liga, Spain)

18

25

1. France

France have the best squad of any 2026 World Cup team, and it’s not particularly close.

Advertisement

Everyone knows about the wealth of world-class attacking talent Les Bleus boast, with reigning Ballon d’Or winner Ousmane Dembele, Ballon d’Or contender Michael Olise, PSG wonderkid Desire Doue, and Man City playmaker Rayan Cherki all supporting superstar forward Kylian Mbappe.

But what most people don’t give France enough credit for is their outlandish depth in defence as well. William Saliba will start if healthy, but there is incredible talent behind him at centre-back in Bayern starter Dayot Upamecano and likely Real Madrid signing Ibrahima Konate, and the full-back position is loaded too, including Barcelona’s Jules Kounde and Malo Gusto of Chelsea.

Midfield is their weakest position, but it still looks solid as Aurelien Tchouameni will be locked in to the roster and Warren Zaire-Emery is a strong performer too.

Head coach: Didier Deschamps (France)

Advertisement

MORE:A complete breakdown of France’s 2026 World Cup squad

Pos

No.

Name

Club

Age

Caps

GK

16

Mike Maignan

AC Milan (Serie A, Italy)

30

38

GK

23

Robin Risser

Lens (Ligue 1, France)

21

0

GK

1

Brice Samba

Rennes (Ligue 1, France)

32

4

DEF

3

Lucas Digne

Aston Villa (Premier League, England)

32

56

DEF

2

Malo Gusto

Chelsea (Premier League, England)

23

9

DEF

21

Lucas Hernandez

Paris Saint-Germain (Ligue 1, France)

30

41

DEF

19

Theo Hernandez

Al-Hilal (Pro League, Saudi Arabia)

28

42

DEF

15

Ibrahima Konate

Liverpool (Premier League, England)

27

27

DEF

5

Jules Kounde

Barcelona (La Liga, Spain)

27

46

DEF

26

Maxence Lacroix

Crystal Palace (Premier League, England)

26

2

DEF

4

Dayot Upamecano

Bayern Munich (Bundesliga, Germany)

27

36

DEF

17

William Saliba

Arsenal (Premier League, England)

25

31

MID

13

N’Golo Kante

Fenerbahce (Super Lig, Turkey)

35

67

MID

6

Manu Kone

AS Roma (Serie A, Italy)

25

12

MID

14

Adrien Rabiot

AC Milan (Serie A, Italy)

31

57

MID

8

Aurelien Tchouameni

Real Madrid (La Liga, Spain)

26

44

MID

18

Warren Zaire-Emery

Paris Saint-Germain (Ligue 1, France)

20

10

FWD

25

Maghnes Akliouche

Monaco (Ligue 1, France)

24

7

FWD

12

Bradley Barcola

Paris Saint-Germain (Ligue 1, France)

23

18

FWD

24

Rayan Cherki

Manchester City (Premier League, England)

22

5

FWD

7

Ousmane Dembele

Paris Saint-Germain (Ligue 1, France)

29

58

FWD

20

Desire Doue

Paris Saint-Germain (Ligue 1, France)

21

6

FWD

22

Jean-Philippe Mateta

Crystal Palace (Premier League, England)

28

3

FWD

10

Kylian Mbappe

Real Madrid (La Liga, Spain)

27

96

FWD

11

Michael Olise

Bayern Munich (Bundesliga, Germany)

24

15

FWD

9

Marcus Thuram

Inter Milan (Serie A, Italy)

28

33

Honorable mentions

Belgium

This squad has multiple strong points, starting with the best goalkeeper in the world in Thibaut Courtois, but their “Golden Generation” is aging out of its prime quickly, leaving the next generation thin and unproven.

Kevin De Bruyne is now 34 years old and played just 1,300 minutes for Napoli this season as he battled injuries. Romelu Lukaku is 33 and himself was unfit nearly all year. Jeremy Doku is a wizard on the wing, and Youri Tielemans is a monster in the middle, but the attacking talent in this squad is otherwise largely on unproven individuals like Charles De Ketelaere and Alexis Saelemaekers who have not been reliable options.

Advertisement

Morocco

Achraf Hakimi is arguably the best full-back in the world, and he leads a strong squad that is fresh off reaching the Africa Cup of Nations final. Their goalkeeper is also exceptional, with Yassine Bounou one of the breakout stars four years ago in Qatar.

Yet outside of those two players, this team is pieced together with European role players and others dotted across the globe. If 32-year-old striker Ayoub El Kaabi had a great season in Greece with Olympiacos, but he faded towards the end of the long season, and if he struggles with little service up front, it could be tough for this African giant to score goals.

Colombia

While Los Cafeteros boast one of the most experienced sides in the World Cup field, there are few truly top-tier playmakers outside of Bayern Munich superstar Luis Diaz.

Advertisement

James Rodriguez is 34 years old and continues to have a mercurial but largely unsuccessful club career, while other veterans like Davinson Sanchez and Jefferson Lerma play various roles at mid-level European sides.

They can be one of the best South American sides in the field, but they are not quite top-10 quality.



Source link

  • Related Posts

    Vaibhav Sooryavanshi, 15, gets first India call-up for England and Ireland tour

    Teenage batting sensation Vaibhav Sooryavanshi has received his first international call-up by making the India T20 squad to tour England and Ireland. If he plays, the 15-year-old would break Sachin…

    Virat Kohli out of India-Afghanistan ODIs with hamstring injury, Yashasvi Jaiswal named replacement

    Kohli’s absence from the series was confirmed by Ajit Agarkar, India’s chairman of selectors, in Mumbai on Saturday. Agarkar also said Kohli could be fit for India’s next ODI assignment…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    You Missed

    A ‘60 Minutes’ veteran gets fired, and a rookie hits an unusual home run: The news quiz

    A ‘60 Minutes’ veteran gets fired, and a rookie hits an unusual home run: The news quiz

    Armenia braces for election as Russia piles pressure on pro-West government

    Armenia braces for election as Russia piles pressure on pro-West government

    Claude Lemieux’s death sparks renewed focus on CTE as family donates brain to research

    Claude Lemieux’s death sparks renewed focus on CTE as family donates brain to research

    Vaibhav Sooryavanshi, 15, gets first India call-up for England and Ireland tour

    Vaibhav Sooryavanshi, 15, gets first India call-up for England and Ireland tour

    The 2026 Way to Wear a Dress With Sneakers

    The 2026 Way to Wear a Dress With Sneakers

    Cathie from Canada: Today’s Round-up plus some Canada good news

    Cathie from Canada: Today’s Round-up plus some Canada good news