viz.

⚽ World Cup 2026: Born There, Playing Here

A circular Sankey of player birthplaces. Each ribbon flows from the country where players were born to the national team they represent at the 2026 World Cup, with arrowheads pointing to the team.

Roughly a quarter of the 1,248 players at the tournament were born outside the country they represent — the most ever (289 per the TUDN/Macías census, 310 per Flashscore's count). This chart maps of them by name.

Only show countries playing at the 2026 World Cup
☀ Light mode

Hover an arc or ribbon to isolate a country's flows. Arrowheads point at the national team.

All foreign-born players

Player Born in Plays for Age

Flow summary (birth country → national team)

Born inPlays forPlayers
Highlights: Colombia-born Julián Quiñones scored the opening goal of the tournament — for Mexico. Curaçao's squad is 25/26 Dutch-born (only Tahith Chong was born on the island). France is the world's biggest talent exporter — 13 players for Algeria, 12 for Haiti, 11 for DR Congo, 10 for Senegal. Bosnia's 17 foreign-born trace the 1990s refugee diaspora (Germany, Austria, Sweden…) — and they knocked Italy out in the playoff final, so the Azzurri (and Argentina-born Mateo Retegui) miss a third straight World Cup. Brazil, Colombia, Panama, Austria, Sweden, Saudi Arabia, Czech Republic and South Africa brought fully homegrown squads.

Data notes: ages as of tournament kickoff (June 2026). Dataset merges the TUDN/Jaime F. Macías census with verified corrections: Rafik Belghali born in Mechelen, Belgium; Diogo Costa born in Geneva, Switzerland; Brice Samba born in Linzolo, Congo-Brazzaville; Samed Baždar and Jovo Lukić both born in Serbia (Novi Pazar and Šabac); Martin Baturina born in Zurich, Switzerland.

Sources: Flashscore · Front Office Sports · The Conversation · GiveMeSport · beIN Sports · Bolavip · US Soccer · TUDN / Jaime F. Macías / El Colombiano census · FIFA (playoff review) · Flags by flagcdn.com