Ranking shows which club has most Cup call-ups, Brazilian side top 20

ASFN Admin

Administrator
Administrator
Moderator
Supporting Member
Joined
May 8, 2002
Posts
1,150,101
Reaction score
59
You must be registered for see images attach

Ranking shows which club has most Cup call-ups, Brazilian side top 20

The 2026 World Cup, hosted by the United States, Mexico, and Canada, is set to begin on June 11.

Thirteen clubs from the 2026 Brasileirão will be represented at the World Cup, with a total of 32 players from Brazil’s top flight having been called up by their respective national teams.

But have you ever stopped to think about which club has the most call-ups overall? Or which Brazilian club has the most players at the World Cup?

Well, here it is! A survey conducted by the newspaper O Globo mapped the origins of all 1,248 players called up for the tournament, revealing that they are spread across 453 different clubs around the world.

The clear leader of this ranking is England’s Manchester City.

According to the Rio-based newspaper, the blue side of Manchester sent 19 players to 12 different national teams, reclaiming the all-time record it had lost to Bayern Munich in Qatar in 2022 (which had 17 call-ups).

Before that, in Russia in 2018, City itself held the mark with 16 players.

Manchester City’s 19 call-ups by national team:

England: James Trafford (Goalkeeper), John Stones (Center-back), Marc Guéhi (Center-back), and Nico O'Reilly (Full-back).

Portugal: Matheus Nunes (Full-back), Rúben Dias (Center-back), and Bernardo Silva (Midfielder).

Croatia: Josko Gvardiol (Center-back) and Mateo Kovacic (Midfielder).

Netherlands: Nathan Aké (Center-back) and Tijjani Reijnders (Midfielder).

Algeria: Rayan Ait-Nouri (Full-back).

Belgium: Jérémy Doku (Forward).

Egypt: Omar Marmoush (Forward).

Spain: Rodri (Midfielder).

France: Rayan Cherki (Forward).

Ghana: Antoine Semenyo (Forward).

Norway: Erling Haaland (Forward).

Uzbekistan: Abdukodir Khusanov (Center-back).

The Top 5 and the powers outside Europe

The elite pack of call-ups is rounded out by Bayern Munich (18 players), followed by Arsenal and PSG (tied with 16), and Barcelona (15).

Outside the European continent, the biggest standout is Saudi Arabia’s Al-Hilal, which sits in 6th place overall with 12 players.

The club will send major international names such as Bono (Morocco), Darwin Núñez (Uruguay), Théo Hernández (France), Kalidou Koulibaly (Senegal), and Rúben Neves (Portugal), in addition to seven players for Saudi Arabia’s own national team (Hassan Tambakti, Ali Lajami, Moteb Al-Harbi, Nasser Al-Dawsari, Mohamed Kanno, Sultan Mandash, and Salem Al-Dawsari).

The situation of Brazilian clubs

Flamengo is the highest-ranked Brazilian team, sitting 18th overall with 9 call-ups.

With that, the Rio club ranks ahead of European giants such as Chelsea, Tottenham, and Inter Milan.

The Flamengo representatives are: Alex Sandro, Danilo, Léo Pereira, and Lucas Paquetá (Brazil); Plata (Ecuador); Carrascal (Colombia); and Arrascaeta, Varela, and De la Cruz (Uruguay).

Palmeiras comes next, in 39th place, with 7 players called up: Gustavo Gómez, Maurício, and Ramón Sosa (Paraguay); Piquerez and Emi Martínez (Uruguay); Flaco López (Argentina); and Jhon Arias (Colombia).

Other Brazilian clubs on the list:

79th place: Atlético-MG (4 call-ups).

152nd place: Grêmio and Internacional (2 call-ups each).

235th place: Botafogo, Bragantino, Corinthians, Fluminense, Santos, São Paulo, and Vasco (1 call-up each).

Ranking of the clubs with the most World Cup call-ups

1st - Manchester City (England): 19

2nd - Bayern Munich (Germany): 18

3rd - Arsenal (England): 16

3rd - Paris Saint-Germain (France): 16

5th - Barcelona (Spain): 15

6th - Al-Hilal (Saudi Arabia): 12

6th - Atlético de Madrid (Spain): 12

6th - Crystal Palace (England): 12

6th - Manchester United (England): 12

10th - Borussia Dortmund (Germany): 11

10th - Galatasaray (Turkey): 11

10th - Liverpool (England): 11

13th - Fenerbahçe (Turkey): 10

13th - Milan (Italy): 10

13th - PSV Eindhoven (Netherlands): 10

13th - Real Madrid (Spain): 10

13th - Slavia Prague (Czech Republic): 10

18th - Al Ahly (Egypt): 9

18th - Al-Ahli (Saudi Arabia): 9

18th - Al-Nassr (Saudi Arabia): 9

18th - Flamengo (Brazil): 9

18th - Sunderland (England): 9

23rd - Aston Villa (England): 8

23rd - Benfica (Portugal): 8

23rd - Brighton & Hove Albion (England): 8

23rd - Celtic (Scotland): 8

23rd - Chelsea (England): 8

23rd - Eintracht Frankfurt (Germany): 8

23rd - Hoffenheim (Germany): 8

23rd - Lille (France): 8

23rd - Mamelodi Sundowns (South Africa): 8

23rd - Newcastle (England): 8

23rd - Nice (France): 8

23rd - Olympique de Marseille (France): 8

23rd - Orlando Pirates (South Africa): 8

23rd - Stuttgart (Germany): 8

23rd - Tottenham (England): 8

23rd - Villarreal (Spain): 8

39th - Al Duhail (Qatar): 7

39th - Atalanta (Italy): 7

39th - Bayer Leverkusen (Germany): 7

39th - Inter Milan (Italy): 7

39th - Palmeiras (Brazil): 7

39th - Real Betis (Spain): 7

39th - Sporting CP (Portugal): 7

39th - Strasbourg (France): 7

39th - Viktoria Plzeň (Czech Republic): 7

48th - Al-Hussein (Jordan): 6

48th - Al-Qadsiah (Saudi Arabia): 6

48th - Esteghlal Tehran (Iran): 6

48th - Fulham (England): 6

48th - Juventus (Italy): 6

48th - Mainz 05 (Germany): 6

48th - Monaco (France): 6

48th - Persepolis FC (Iran): 6

48th - Roma (Italy): 6

48th - Young Boys (Switzerland): 6


This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in here.

Continue reading...
 
Top