The 2026 FIFA World Cup kicks off on June 11 with 48 nations, 1,248 players, and one question football fans can’t stop arguing about: whose players are doing the heavy lifting?
We’ve gone through every squad, crunched the numbers, and the results are fascinating — with one plot twist nobody saw coming
Manchester City — 19 Players (12 Nations)

Nobody comes close. Not even their rivals want to admit it, but Manchester City is the most represented club on the planet right now, sending a staggering 19 players across 12 different nations to the World Cup.

The list reads like a fantasy football fever dream. Erling Haaland (Norway), Rodri (Spain), Bernardo Silva (Portugal), Joško Gvardiol and Mateo Kovačić (Croatia), Nathan Aké and Tijjani Reijnders (Netherlands), Jeremy Doku (Belgium), Omar Marmoush (Egypt), Rayan Cherki (France), and Rayan Aït-Nouri (Algeria) are all flying the City flag — and that’s before you count their four England representatives.

City are reclaiming the all-time record they lost to Bayern Munich at Qatar 2022, when Bayern led with 17 call-ups. Pep Guardiola may be leaving this summer, but his squad goes to the World Cup as the most globally represented club in football history.
Bayern Munich — 18 Players

Hot on City’s heels are the Bavarian giants, who send 18 players to North America. Under Vincent Kompany, Bayern secured their second consecutive Bundesliga title and reached the Champions League semi-finals, with Germany calling up the most of their players — eight in total — including Jamal Musiala and Aleksandar Pavlović.

Add Harry Kane (England), Alphonso Davies (Canada), and Josip Stanišić (Croatia) to the mix, and Bayern essentially have a mini-World Cup of their own going on at the Allianz Arena’s WhatsApp group right now.
PSG & Arsenal — 16 Players Each

The two Champions League finalists are locked on 16 players apiece — which feels fitting for clubs that couldn’t be separated in Budapest either.

Arsenal send Bukayo Saka and Declan Rice for England, while Viktor Gyökeres goes for Sweden and Martin Ødegaard flies the flag for Norway. PSG contribute Ousmane Dembélé and Rayan Cherki for France, plus Achraf Hakimi for Morocco and Vitinha for Portugal. If the UCL final wasn’t entertaining enough, these two clubs will be competing against each other’s players at every stage of the tournament.
Barcelona (15), Man United (12), Atletico Madrid (12)

Barcelona sit just behind in fifth with 15 players, while Manchester United, Saudi Arabia’s Al-Hilal, and Atlético Madrid are all tied on 12 — with Atlético notably edging crosstown rivals Real Madrid by two players.

Yes, Real Madrid — 15-time Champions League winners — send just 10 players. You’ll want to sit down for the next bit.
The Biggest Shock: Crystal Palace Have More Players Than Real Madrid
Read that again. Crystal Palace. More players. Than Real Madrid.

The Eagles, fresh from Conference League glory, have 12 players heading to the World Cup this summer, while Los Blancos have a mere 10. Palace also have more than Liverpool (11), AC Milan (10), Chelsea (8), and Tottenham (8).

Crystal Palace finished 15th in the Premier League this season, yet still sent 12 players to the World Cup — testament to the incredible recruitment work done at Selhurst Park in recent years. Their representatives include Dean Henderson (England), Chris Richards (USA), Daichi Kamada (Japan), and Chadi Riad (Morocco). It’s genuinely one of the feel-good stories of the tournament before a ball has even been kicked.
The Premier League Rules the World
Step back and look at the bigger picture: Premier League clubs alone are sending 154 players to the World Cup — 12.4% of every single player at the tournament. Every club in next season’s top flight has at least one representative, even if Ipswich Town’s sole entry is Scotland striker George Hirst.

The Premier League isn’t just the world’s best league in terms of entertainment and finances. It’s now quite literally the league the whole world plays in.
Now go and build your World Cup team around as many City players as possible. You won’t regret it.












