The Teams With the Fewest Naturalized Players in the World Cup
Only eight teams are heading to the 2026 World Cup with rosters entirely made up of players born in their own country, a rarity in today's football.
A World Cup with unique characteristics
Less than ten days before the start of the 2026 World Cup, the official lists delivered by FIFA reveal a phenomenon that sets the participating teams apart: the presence of naturalized players. In a tournament that will bring together 1,248 footballers, only 289 will wear a jersey different from the country where they were born, and only eight teams will compete with squads made up exclusively of players born in their own territory.
The selections that are part of this list
Among them are Saudi Arabia, Austria, Brazil, Colombia, the Czech Republic, Panama, South Africa, and Sweden, which arrive with teams composed of players born in their own countries, without resorting to footballers with dual nationality or naturalized players. This is a condition shared by only 16% of the qualified teams, a trait that speaks of sports projects that rely on local training and national identity as their core foundation.

The opposite case
The contrast is evident if one looks at the other end of the spectrum with the example of Curacao, debutants in the World Cup, who present the most striking case. Out of the 26 called up, 25 were born outside the country. The only player born in Curaçao is forward Tahith Jose Girigorio Djorkaef Chong, an offensive figure who was trained in Europe and today represents the hope of scoring for the Caribbean team.










