The 2026 World Cup may be bigger than ever, but even a 48-team tournament cannot fit everyone. Some stars are missing because their countries failed to qualify. Others were left out by managers with difficult squad decisions to make. A few were removed from the conversation by injuries at the worst possible time.
That mix makes this year’s list of absentees unusually interesting. It is not just one major nation failing, or one superstar injury changing a group. It is a full collection of elite club players, national-team leaders and high-profile names who will be watching the tournament instead of playing in it.
Here are the biggest stars not at the 2026 World Cup.
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1. Cole Palmer — England, Chelsea
Palmer is one of the headline omissions of the tournament. After becoming one of Chelsea’s most important attacking players, his absence from England’s squad immediately became a major talking point. England have exceptional depth, but leaving out a player with Palmer’s creativity and composure still stands out.
2. Phil Foden — England, Manchester City
Foden is another major England name missing from the final squad. His technical ability, movement between the lines and big-club pedigree make him one of the most surprising players not involved. This is less about talent and more about how crowded England’s attacking midfield options have become.
3. Trent Alexander-Arnold — England, Real Madrid
Alexander-Arnold’s exclusion is one of the clearest examples of a tactical debate. Few players can pass from deep like him, but England’s squad balance appears to have moved in another direction. If England struggle to create chances, his name will come up quickly.
4. Eduardo Camavinga — France, Real Madrid
France always leave good players behind, but Camavinga is still a major absence. His versatility, athleticism and experience at Real Madrid would make him a strong squad option for almost any country in the tournament.
5. João Pedro — Brazil, Chelsea
Brazil’s attacking depth creates difficult decisions, but João Pedro missing out is still notable. He had the club form to be in the conversation, and his absence says as much about Brazil’s options as it does about the player himself.
6. Rodrygo — Brazil, Real Madrid
Rodrygo would have been one of Brazil’s most recognizable attacking names, but injury removes him from the tournament. For Brazil, this is not just a depth issue. It takes away a forward with Champions League experience and the ability to decide games in tight moments.
7. Estêvão — Brazil, Chelsea
Estêvão’s absence is a different kind of loss. He may not have entered the tournament as a guaranteed starter, but he would have been one of the most exciting young players to watch. For neutral fans, that removes one of the potential breakout stories.
8. Xavi Simons — Netherlands, Tottenham Hotspur
Simons had the profile of a player who could have brought invention and unpredictability to the Netherlands attack. His injury takes away a creative option and one of the more exciting young stars in Europe.
9. Serge Gnabry — Germany, Bayern Munich
Gnabry’s injury leaves Germany without a proven wide forward who has delivered at the highest level. He may not have been the only attacking option, but his experience and directness would have been useful in tournament football.
10. Gianluigi Donnarumma — Italy, Paris Saint-Germain
Italy missing the World Cup again means Donnarumma is absent too. That alone makes him one of the biggest names on this list. He is not just Italy’s goalkeeper; he is one of the most recognizable goalkeepers in world football.
11. Alessandro Bastoni — Italy, Inter Milan
Bastoni would have been one of the best defenders at the tournament. Italy’s failure to qualify removes a full defensive spine, and Bastoni is arguably the most important outfield piece missing from that group.
12. Nicolò Barella — Italy, Inter Milan
Barella’s energy, pressing and technical quality would have made him a major midfield presence. Italy being absent is not just about one or two stars. It removes a group of players who could have shaped the knockout rounds.
13. Sandro Tonali — Italy, Newcastle United
Tonali is another reason Italy’s absence feels so significant. His midfield profile is different from Barella’s, and together they would have given Italy a strong tournament base.
14. Victor Osimhen — Nigeria, Galatasaray
Osimhen may be the biggest attacking name missing from the World Cup. Nigeria’s failure to qualify keeps out one of the most dangerous strikers in the game, and that is a major loss for the tournament.
15. Ademola Lookman — Nigeria, Atalanta
Lookman gives Nigeria another high-level attacking absence. His movement, pace and big-game ability would have made Nigeria a difficult opponent for many teams. Instead, their forward talent is watching from home.
16. Robert Lewandowski — Poland, Barcelona
Lewandowski missing out carries a different weight because of his age and legacy. This may have been one of his final chances to appear on the World Cup stage, which makes Poland’s failure especially notable.
17. Khvicha Kvaratskhelia — Georgia, Paris Saint-Germain
Kvaratskhelia is the face of Georgian football and one of the most entertaining attackers in Europe. Georgia’s absence means the World Cup loses a player who can make neutral viewers care about a match quickly.
18. Dominik Szoboszlai — Hungary, Liverpool
Szoboszlai is Hungary’s captain, creator and most recognizable player. He is exactly the type of star who can define a smaller nation’s tournament identity, which makes his absence feel larger than one missing midfielder.
19. Rasmus Højlund — Denmark, Manchester United
Denmark failing to qualify takes away several strong players, but Højlund is the headline name. His pace, physicality and finishing would have given Denmark a clear attacking reference point.
20. Artem Dovbyk — Ukraine, Roma
Dovbyk is one of Ukraine’s most important attacking players and would have been central to their World Cup hopes. Without Ukraine in the tournament, another strong European forward misses the global stage.
21. Bryan Mbeumo — Cameroon, Manchester United
Mbeumo’s absence is one of the more underrated losses. He has become a high-level Premier League attacker, and Cameroon would have relied heavily on his direct running and end product.
22. Carlos Baleba — Cameroon, Brighton & Hove Albion
Baleba represents the next wave of Cameroonian talent. He may not have the same global name value as some players on this list, but his athletic midfield profile would have been fascinating in a tournament setting.
23. Jan Oblak — Slovenia, Atlético Madrid
Oblak has been one of the defining goalkeepers of his generation. Slovenia’s absence means another World Cup passes without one of Europe’s most respected keepers on the stage.
24. Benjamin Šeško — Slovenia, Arsenal
Šeško would have been one of the young strikers to watch. His size, movement and finishing potential make him a major absence, especially for a Slovenia team that would have been built around moments from him and Oblak.
25. Matthijs de Ligt — Netherlands, Manchester United
Matthijs de Ligt is one of the biggest defensive names missing from the 2026 World Cup. The Netherlands still have quality at the back, but losing a center-back with his experience, physical presence and major-club pedigree is significant. De Ligt has played in the biggest domestic and European matches, and he would have given the Dutch another proven option in the middle of defense. His absence may not generate the same debate as some of the attacking stars left out of squads, but from a pure footballing standpoint, this is one of the more important defensive losses of the tournament.
Honorable Mentions: Stars Who Just Missed the Top 25
| Player | Country | Club |
|---|---|---|
| Harry Maguire | England | Manchester United |
| Gabriel Jesus | Brazil | Arsenal |
| Éder Militão | Brazil | Real Madrid |
| Federico Dimarco | Italy | Inter Milan |
| Riccardo Calafiori | Italy | Arsenal |
| Alex Iwobi | Nigeria | Fulham |
| Samuel Chukwueze | Nigeria | AC Milan |
| Calvin Bassey | Nigeria | Fulham |
| Piotr Zieliński | Poland | Inter Milan |
| Giorgi Mamardashvili | Georgia | Liverpool |
| Milos Kerkez | Hungary | Liverpool |
| Pierre-Emile Højbjerg | Denmark | Marseille |
| Morten Hjulmand | Denmark | Sporting CP |
| Illia Zabarnyi | Ukraine | Bournemouth |
| Andriy Lunin | Ukraine | Real Madrid |
| Georgiy Sudakov | Ukraine | Shakhtar Donetsk |
| Edmond Tapsoba | Burkina Faso | Bayer Leverkusen |
| Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang | Gabon | Marseille |
| Alexis Sánchez | Chile | Sevilla |
| Marcelino Núñez | Chile | Norwich City |
| Serhou Guirassy | Guinea | Borussia Dortmund |

