Hooligan Soccer
·22 de junio de 2025
Defining the “World” in the Club World Cup

In partnership with
Yahoo sportsHooligan Soccer
·22 de junio de 2025
To paraphrase the Bard, good ol’ Willie Shakespeare: “All the world’s a pitch, and the men and women soccer players.” While we know the 32 teams represent all six confederations from around the globe, let’s dig into the numbers a bit deeper.
Those 32 teams actually represent 20 different countries. Brazil sent four teams, the U.S.A. has three and Portugal, Spain, Germany, England, Italy, Argentina and Mexico sent two teams each. Single club nations include: New Zealand, Japan, South Korea, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Egypt, South Africa, Tunisia, Morocco, Austria and France.
But within those clubs, how much global diversity is there?
Obviously with soccer being a global sport, players from all over the world move between clubs. No team is comprised of 100% local talent, but here are the teams with the highest local percentages:
And on the opposite end, here are the teams with the fewest local players (national totals exclude the home country):
In total, 76 nations are represented on the rosters of these Club World Cup teams, 35% of the world’s total. That makes the CWC the most nationally diverse soccer tournament in the world. Before you pipe with “what about the Olympics?” remember that only sixteen teams qualify for that contest.
Unsurprisingly, the two largest nations by overall percentage are Brazil (15%) and Argentina (10.5%). Sure, these two nations sent six clubs to the tournament, padding up their numbers. But clubs from abroad also recruit heavily from both. 91% of CWC teams have either a Brazilian, Argentinian, or both on their roster. The only ones who don’t? Al Ahly, Auckland City and Bayern Munich.
The five nations with the most players who did NOT send a club are:
Broken down by confederation, here’s how they look:
En vivo
En vivo