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Best 2026 World Cup Stars Representing Nation Different From Their Birth

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There is much excitement with the 2026 World Cup nearly upon us. One of the greatest things about football is it’s abilty to unite. Just look at the way Arsenal’s Premier League triumph was celebrated just as joyously in north London as it was in New York and Kampala.

While the world can be a difficult place, sport provides an escape for many. Take, for example, Alphonso Davies. The left-back was born in Buduburam, a Ghanaian refugee camp, after his parents had fled the civil war in Liberia, but is now the face of Canadian football.

He will no doubt represent one of the three host-nations with great pride this summer, but Davies isn’t the only footballer who will play for a World Cup nation different to the one of his birth. The 20 best have been named and ranked below.

Players Who Will Represent World Cup Nation Different From Their Birth

Rank

Player

Country Playing For

Country of Birth

20.

Jonathan David

Canada

United States

19.

Nicolas Jackson

Senegal

The Gambia

18.

Rayan Ait-Nouri

Algeria

France

17.

Kalidou Koulibaly

Senegal

France

16.

Giuliano Simeone

Argentina

Italy

15.

Josip Stanisic

Croatia

Germany

14.

Riyad Mahrez

Algeria

France

13.

Aymeric Laporte

Spain

France

12.

Nico Paz

Argentina

Spain

11.

Marcus Thuram

France

Italy

Mateo Kovacic – Croatia (Born in Austria)

Croatia's Mateo Kovacic sings during the national anthem

Croatian midfielder Mateo Kovacic has enjoyed a stellar career, playing for many of the best clubs in Europe. He started Dinamo Zagreb before joining Inter Milan, and then spent four years with Real Madrid – winning La Liga and three Champions League titles – before moving to Chelsea, where he won another Champions League trophy.

Now 32, Kovacic plays for Manchester City and won the Premier League under Pep Guardiola in 2024. With Croatia, his best moment came in 2018, as he was part of the side that went all the way to the World Cup final in Russia, before losing to France. However, the midfielder was actually born in Linz, Austria, although represented Croatia at multiple youth levels before making his debut for the senior national team in 2013.

Hakan Calhanoglu – Turkiye (Born in Germany)

Hakan Calhanoglu celebrating for Turkiye
Hakan Calhanoglu celebrating for Turkiye

He may be 32 now, but Hakan Calhanoglu remains one of the best central midfielders on the planet, and proved that this season as he helped Inter Milan with Serie A, making 22 appearances and scoring nine goals. It’s the second time he won the league with Inter, while he’s also lost two Champions League finals with the club, in 2023 and 2025.

Although representing Turkiye, Calhanoglu was born in the German city of Mannheim. His parents were both Turkish, however, and he’s played for the country at international level from the under-16s onwards.

Kenan Yildiz – Turkiye (Born in Germany)

Kenan Yildiz

As is the case with Calhanoglu, Kenan Yildiz was also born in Germany but now will play for Turkiye at the 2026 World Cup. Unlike his international teammate, though, only one of his parents, his father, is Turkish, with his mother a German native.

The Regensburg-born star now plays for Juventus and is widely seen as one of the most exciting young attacking players on the planet. Already linked with big Premier League clubs like Manchester United and Liverpool, he could make a real name for himself this summer if all goes to plan.

Alphonso Davies – Canada (Ghana)

Alphonso Davies in action for Canada

As mentioned in the intro, Alphonso Davies has gone on to establish himself as one of the finest left-backs in the world at Bayern Munich, having been born in a Ghanaian refugee camp. When he was five years old, his family moved to Canada, and this helped set him on a path to future Bundesliga and Champions League glory. Speaking about his parents’ decision to flee Liberia, he said:

“From what my parents told me, it was a tough road. It wasn’t easy for them to leave a war-torn country in Liberia and then go to a refugee camp. There were struggles to find food, find water, and then having a kid as well, but they fought through it.”

Scott McTominay – Scotland (Born in England)

Napoli's Scott McTominay during the warm up before a 2026 game vs Parma

It’s interesting that Scott McTominay’s ability to get away from England has helped his reputation within the game explode. Indeed, he struggled to shine for a number of years at Manchester United, but has blossomed into a brilliant midfielder since joining Napoli in 2024, leading them to a Serie A title in his debut season.

He was born in Lancaster and first played in the Man Utd development centre in Preston aged five before rising through the academy ranks into the senior set up. Although from England, he qualifies to play for Scotland through his father and has proven to be vital for his nation since making his debut in 2018.

Marc Guehi – England (Born in Cote d’Ivoire)

Marc Guehi and Jude Bellingham in action for England

At Euro 2024, Marc Guehi truly proved himself capable of delivering big performances at the highest level, helping England make the final as a started cente-back alognside John Stones. Since then, his reputation has only improved, winning the FA Cup with Crystal Palace and then securing a big-money move to Manchester City last January.

He’ll have to be at his best if the Three Lions are to have any success this summer, but Thomas Tuchel will certainly be glad Guehi chose to represent England. After all, he was born in Cote d’Ivoire and moved with his family to Lewisham, London, England, at the age of one.


Erling Haaland Norway Declan Rice England Bruno Fernandes Portugal


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Antoine Semenyo – Ghana (Born in England)

Ghana's Antoine Semenyo

Another Premier League star who joined Manchester City in the winter, Antoine Semenyo could have been playing for England at the 2026 World Cup, but has instead decided to represent a different nation. Despite being born in London, the winger’s father is from Ghana and even played as a midfielder for Okwawu United in the Ghana Premier League.

Semenyo may have been able to play for France as well, as he holds French citizenship via his mother, but opted to commit to the Black Stars in 2022 while still on the books at Bristol City. As fate would have it, the Man City ace will come up against England in the group stages this summer.

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Achraf Hakimi – Morocco (Born in Spain)

Achraf Hakimi

At Paris Saint-Germain, Achraf Hakimi has confirmed his status as one of the best attacking fullbacks of the modern era with back-to-back Champions League triumphs. It won’t hurt that he also made it to the 2022 semi-finals with Morocco.

That said, he wasn’t born in Africa, but instead in Madrid, as he grew up in Spain. He was signed up for Real Madrid’s youth academy in 2006 and played with the club until 2020 (although spent two seasons on loan at Borussia Dortmund), when he joined Inter Milan before signing for PSG a season later. His parents are Moroccan, and Hakimi was raised in a household shaped by Arab and Muslim culture, which later influenced his decision to represent Morocco at international level.

Michael Olise – France (Born in England)

Michael Olise
Michael Olise

Michael Olise is a real case of ‘the one that got away’ for England. Indeed, he was born in London and spent time in Arsenal, Chelsea and Manchester City academies before joining Reading. This led to a move to Crystal Palace in 2021, and after three years, he signed for German giants Bayern Munich.

Olise is now one of the best wingers on the planet, and if he has a good World Cup, he could even be in with a shout of winning the Ballon d’Or. Sadly, though, that won’t be with the Three Lions. His father is British-Nigerian, and his mother is Franco-Algerian, but Olise has represented France since the U18 level. When asked why he chose to represent them over England, he explained:

“I have always had a connection with the France national team, that is why I play for France. It’s been my dream since I was a kid.”


24 Players Born in England But Represent Other 2026 World Cup TeamsMixCollage-03-Jun-2026-11-31-AM-132


The 24 Players Born in England But Represent Other 2026 World Cup National Teams

England would have an unstoppable starting line-up if these players had chosen to represent the Three Lions

Erling Haaland – Norway (Born in England)

Norway's Erling Haaland

With his immense physicality and long blond hair, Erling Haaland is about as Nordic as they come and makes no effort to shy away from his Viking-like qualities. However, the Norwegian was actually born in Leeds, England. This is because his footballer father, Alfie, was playing for Leeds United in the Premier League at the time.

That said, Haaland started in the academy of his hometown club Bryne at the age of five and would play for Molde, Red Bull Salzburg, and Borussia Dortmund before returning to England. In 2022, he signed for Manchester City and has since gone on to win numorus trophies, including both the Premier League and the Champions League. With 55 goals for Norway in 49 games, there isn’t a country in the world that would turn down the chance to have him on board.

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Iraq World Cup Star Held For Nearly 7 ​Hours After Arriving at US Airport

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With less than a week to go before the 2026 World Cup kicks off, participating nations have been arriving in the United States. It will come as no surprise to hear that this has been difficult for some fans, staff members, and even players.

President Donald Trump currently has 39 countries on his travel ban list, while Iran appear to have had their training camp moved to Mexico, from the originally planned location of Tucson, Arizona, due to the nation’s ongoing conflict with the US. Getting visas into North America is no easy task either.

South Africa recently had to hold an emergency meeting after players and officials were denied visas, preventing them from arriving into Mexico as planned. Iraq have reportedly been the latest nation to have difficulties, this time coming after they’ve made it into the US.

Iraq Star Held For Hours in Chicago’s O’Hare Airport

Iraq's Aymen Hussein points vs Bahrain

As per Reuters, Iraq’s World Cup striker, Aymen Hussein, was held and questioned for nearly seven ​hours at Chicago’s O’Hare airport after arriving with the squad ‌early on Saturday morning (6 June). According to an Iraqi sporting official, the 30-year-old was finally allowed in, but the team’s photographer was barred from entering the United States.

While no official comment has yet been made by Iraq on the matter, an official explained that Hussein’s phone was inspected after he arrived. He then added:

“National team photographer Talal Salah was held ​for more than 10 ​hours, underwent ⁠similar phone checks, and was ultimately denied entry into the United States.”

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Considering Hussein is currently his nation’s fifth all-time top goal scorer – and netted the goal that secured qualification for the World Cup finals – Iraq will be relieved that he was eventually allowed into the host country. After all, Swiss striker Breel Embolo has been denied entry into the US, although that visa issue is said to be related to a past issue with the law.

However, this is far from a warm welcome or ideal preparation for Iraq, who come up against Norway in Foxborough, Massachusetts, on 16 June. They will also play France and Senegal in Group ​I.

Iraq are returning ​to the World Cup for the first time ​since making ⁠their debut 40 years ago, and it’s understood that fans came out in the early hours of the morning to ​greet the squad at the O’Hare airport, holding flags and asking players to ‌pose ⁠for pictures. At this point, Hussein and team photographer Salah were held for hours.


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According to Reuters, U.S. Immigration ​and Customs Enforcement and the Homeland Security Department did not immediately respond when quizzed about the incident.

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Pep Guardiola Named Jurgen Klopp’s Liverpool as ‘Nightmare’ to Face

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Over the years, Pep Guardiola has come up against many worthy adversaries from within the world of football. It would be wrong to suggest he’s not gotten the better of all of them at one point or another.

Twice, for example, he beat Sir Alex Ferguson’s Manchester United side in the Champions League final. In fact, Mikel Arteta is the only manager to finish ahead of Guardiola in the league twice with Arsenal – doing so in 2024/25 and then again in 2025/26 (although only the latter led to a Premier League title).

With that in mind, it’s no shock to learn that the Catalan coach has won three La Liga titles, three Bundesliga titles, six Premier Leagues, and the Champions League twice during his career as a manager. Talking more recently about his time in England, however, he has revealed one man was a ‘nightmare’ to come up against.

Guardiola Had Many Battles Against Premier League Icon

Pep Guardiola

In an interview with Oasis musician Noel Gallagher on Manchester City’s website, Guardiola said that Jurgen Klopp was a nightmare to come up against when he was in charge of Liverpool. Even though he enjoyed a ‘good’ relationship with the German, he revealed how hard he found it to cope at Anfield, explaining:

“For the quality of the opponent we faced, we faced a lot but Liverpool was a nightmare. Every time, it was a nightmare.

“It [the relationship] was really good. It has always has been really good, even back in Germany. We faced each other a lot of times when he was at Dortmund. We have not been for dinner once but now it is going to happen.

“The relationship is one of the things I am proud of the most, I would say. They were really, really good first of all. But in the moment when they faced us they know that is the game that is the best of them and the best at Anfield.”


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Guardiola Had a Lot of Respect For Anfield

Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola with Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp

Not only was Klopp hard to come up against, but his iconic Liverpool team were boosted by an intimidating home ground. Indeed, Guardiola praised the stadium’s history:

“Anfield has a history that no stadium has. Few teams can win in Anfield. It’s a really tough place for me for the fact of the way they play, not just for the stadium.

“They were a special team. You sleep one second and they will punish you. The margins like that, it could have happened to us.”

Guardiola was pushed right to his limit in a number of title races, notably beating Liverpool by just one point during the 2018/19 season when Klopp’s men earned 97 points but still lost out. More pain happened for the Reds in 2019/20 when Man City managed 93 points, once again beating the German’s side by one point.

The former Barcelona manager has faced Klopp on 30 occasions across his career in total, coming up against Borussia Dortmund and Liverpool as Bayern Munich and Man City boss. In that time, he’s won 11 matches, drawn seven and lost 12. He’s never drawn or lost more times against any other manager.

They certainly had some legendary battles over the years.

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Iran Accused USA of ‘Discriminatory Actions’ Ahead of World Cup

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Iran have launched a furious accusation against the USA in a fresh statement released just days before the start of the 2026 World Cup. Team Melli’s conflict with the host nation is nothing new, with complications previously arising over visa issues, safety concerns, and the ongoing tensions in the Middle East during Donald Trump’s presidency.

Despite all of that, Iran will be competing in this summer’s major international tournament. They will base themselves in Mexico rather than Arizona in an effort to make their preparations as straightforward as possible given the geopolitical tensions. They face Egypt, Belgium and New Zealand in Group G, with their opener against the latter coming in Inglewood, California, on June 16.

According to the White House, Iran’s players have already been granted visas allowing them to enter the United States. However, several members of the travelling party’s backroom staff are still awaiting theirs, renewing hostilities at the worst possible time.


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Iran Launch Furious Accusation Against USA Ahead of World Cup Opener

Iran football team
Iran football team

As reported by Iran’s state media agency Tasnim, a number of officials, including executive director Mehdi Kharati, the secretary-general of the football federation, Hedayat Mombini, and media director Mohsen Motamedkia, are yet to receive their visas. In a statement on Saturday afternoon, it has accused the USA of “hostile actions”:

“The US government, continuing its hostile actions against the national team, made a non-sporting and completely political decision to refuse visas for key managerial and administrative members of the Iranian national football team.

“This issue will definitely be pursued by the Football Federation through FIFA. As the responsible body, [FIFA] has the duty to follow up and finalise the visas for the managerial, executive, technical and support staff of the Iranian national team who are currently in camp and whom the national team urgently needs.”

Meanwhile, the Turkey-based Iranian Embassy also took to X, posting a similar statement slamming the US for ‘deliberately’ blocking staff members’ visas. “Why do you not say that visas were denied to a large portion of the managerial and executive staff, technical advisers and others who are an integral part of any national football team?” the Iranian embassy posted.

The statement continued: “You have now escalated the deliberate and discriminatory treatment against Iran’s national football team to its highest level.”

Journalists Also Facing Visa Complications

Donald Trump
Donald Trump

It turns out that Iranian and African journalists were also coming up against the same struggles as Team Melli this weekend. In a letter set to FIFA, the International Sports Press Association (AIPS) president Gianni Merlo wrote: “We find ourselves facing a long-standing and unacceptable problem for us journalists: the denial of entry visas to regularly accredited colleagues.

“There are many cases: Iranian colleagues, African colleagues, some of whom have been given single entries, so if their team goes to play in Canada or Mexico and they follow it, they can no longer return to the States.

“The cases are countless and, I repeat, unacceptable. Politicians always say that sport unites and builds bridges between young people in countries in conflict, but in this case, we are going in the opposite direction.”

“We believe it is important to allow colleagues to attend the event and work, because their presence will be crucial to the image of sport and what it represents, especially in a country like the United States of America, where freedom of the press is a must.


President Gianni Infantino during the 76th FIFA Congress


World Cup Star Held and Questioned For Nearly 7 ​Hours After Arriving at US Airport

Far from a warm welcome into the host country.

“I hope FIFA can do everything possible to secure visas. We’re already significantly behind schedule, and many colleagues have already lost the opportunity to use plane tickets booked on time, and they’ll also face significant additional expenses.”

A FIFA spokesperson confirmed to The Athletic that the organisation had received the letter before adding that this was an immigration matter controlled by the host nations – the US, Mexico and Canada.

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