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2026 MLB Mock Draft: Rays take college catcher at No. 2, three shortstops go in top four

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The 2026 MLB Draft is now only two weeks away. Five years ago, MLB pushed the draft back from the first week of June to the All-Star break to better market the event, and it will remain there moving forward, though many executives don’t like it. The two-day draft begins Saturday, July 11, this year.

At 60-102, the White Sox had baseball’s second-worst record last season, yet Chicago won the lottery and moved up to the No. 1 pick. This is the third time in franchise history that the White Sox have held the No. 1 selection. They selected Danny Goodwin with the No. 1 pick in 1971 (but did not sign him) and Hall of Famer Harold Baines with the No. 1 pick in 1977.

The Giants also won big in the lottery, moving up from the No. 15 pick to No. 4. It will be San Francisco’s highest selection since taking Joey Bart with the No. 2 pick in 2018. The 119-loss Rockies moved back to the No. 10 pick. They had the No. 3 pick in 2024 and the No. 4 pick in 2025, and teams cannot have lottery picks (Nos. 1-6) in three consecutive years.

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2026 MLB Mock Draft: Pirates take power college arm at No. 5 to form formidable duo with Paul Skenes

Mike Axisa

2026 MLB Mock Draft: Pirates take power college arm at No. 5 to form formidable duo with Paul Skenes
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All first-round picks are protected from free-agent compensation. Teams forfeit later draft picks (and international bonus pool money) to sign qualified free agents. The Blue Jays, Dodgers, Mets, Phillies, and Yankees all exceeded the $281 million third competitive balance tax threshold in 2025, and the penalty moves their first 2026 pick back 10 spots. They’re now out of the first round.

Here are our first (May 29) and our second (June 12) mock drafts. Here now is our third, updated to reflect the latest chatter, speculation, and rumors. We’ll have one last mock draft in two weeks, the day before the draft begins.

1. White Sox: SS Roch Cholowsky, UCLA

Still no change at the top, which isn’t to say Cholowsky to the White Sox is a lock. It just remains the most likely outcome with the draft two weeks away. Cholowsky is the best college shortstop in some time, probably since Dansby Swanson and Alex Bregman went off the board with the first two picks in 2015, and he should reach the big leagues relatively quickly. He’s a very talented player and his MLB arrival should align nicely with Chicago’s contention window opening very wide.

June 12 mock pick: Cholowsky

2. Rays: C Vahn Lackey, Georgia Tech

Cholowsky and Grady Emerson are the consensus top two prospects in the draft class, though Lackey is no slouch as a well-rounded catcher who projects to hit in the middle of the order and play strong defense. The Rays have seemingly been cursed behind the plate since passing on Buster Posey with the No. 1 pick in the 2008 Draft (they took Tim Beckham instead). Selecting whichever of Cholowsky or Emerson the White Sox don’t take is the easy move here, but there is more and more buzz that Tampa could opt for Lackey.

June 12 mock pick: SS Grady Emerson, Fort Worth Christian HS (TX)

3. Twins: SS Grady Emerson, Fort Worth Christian HS (TX)

In a sense, the Twins have the easiest decision on draft day. Cholowsky, Emerson, and Lackey are the consensus three best prospects available this year, so Minnesota can simply take whichever one is still on the board here. Cholowsky is unlikely. He’s almost certain to go to the White Sox or the Rays. Picking between Emerson, who some believe has the highest ceiling in the draft, and Lackey is a great consolation prize.

June 12 mock pick: C Vahn Lackey, Georgia Tech

4. Giants: SS Jacob Lombard, Gulliver Prep (FL)

It is no secret the Giants covet Cholowsky. They added the No. 29 pick in the Patrick Bailey trade and have a very large bonus pool (over $17 million), so they could do something like float a record bonus offer for Cholowsky (the current record is $9.25 million) and hope that scares away the White Sox, Rays, and Twins. That doesn’t happen in this mock draft and is unlikely to work in real life (assuming the Giants try it), so San Francisco has to look elsewhere. They’ve been connected to Lombard consistently this spring. He is one of the draft’s most electric players and is the son of Tigers bench coach George Lombard Sr. and the younger brother of Yankees top prospect George Lombard Jr.  

June 12 mock pick: Lombard

5. Pirates: SS Tyler Bell, Kentucky

There have been rumors that the pitching-rich Pirates would prefer to add a bat, and Bell could go in the top five picks despite a torn labrum in his non-throwing shoulder. The injury is likely to require surgery that will sideline him into 2027. Pittsburgh has a Competitive Balance draft pick (No. 34) and could sign Bell below slot here, then spend big on a top talent that falls to No. 34. They’ve used a similar strategy in the past. Bell would come out ahead financially by signing below slot at No. 5 rather than taking a slot bonus later in the first round. 

June 12 mock pick: RHP Jackson Flora, UC Santa Barbara

6. Royals: RHP Jackson Flora, UC Santa Barbara

Flora is the draft’s best pitcher thanks to an upper-90s fastball and two distinct sliders, both of which are putaway pitches. Kansas City has a Competitive Balance pick (No. 30) and thus plenty of bonus pool money to give Flora a signing bonus on par with a top-five pick. This would be a terrific outcome for the Royals on draft day.

June 12 mock pick: LHP Gio Rojas, Stoneman Douglas HS (FL)

7. Orioles: OF Eric Booth Jr., Oak Grove HS (MS)

I can’t help but wonder if Flora slipping past the Royals would cause O’s president of baseball operations Mike Elias to select a pitcher in the first round for the first time since Baltimore hired him in 2018. We don’t get to find out in this mock draft. The O’s are, unsurprisingly, linked to hitters — both college and high school. Booth has 30-30 potential and the kind of skill set the Orioles have successfully developed.

June 12 mock pick: Booth

8. Athletics: OF Drew Burress, Georgia Tech

The A’s have been connected to hitters this spring despite an organizational need for pitching, which makes sense at No. 8. Unless Flora gets here, the best players on the board will be hitters. Burress can do everything well and there is some thought that he has a lot of power waiting to be unlocked with a few swing tweaks.

June 12 mock pick: Burress

9. Braves: LHP Gio Rojas, Stoneman Douglas HS (FL)

The Braves have selected a high school player with three of their last four first-round picks (Owen Murphy in 2022, Cam Caminiti in 2024, Tate Southisene in 2025) and Rojas aligns with their draft preferences. He’s a great athlete (think Spencer Schwellenbach) who lights up pitch models (think Caminiti and Hurston Waldrep). Rojas could even sign below slot here, because if he doesn’t go to the Braves, there’s a chance he won’t hear his name called until the end of the first round. It’s better to take a below-slot bonus here than a slot bonus later.

June 12 mock pick: SS Tyler Bell, Kentucky

10. Rockies: C Ryder Helfrick, Arkansas

How the Rockies will use their first-round pick is anyone’s guess after new POBO Paul DePodesta spent the last decade in the NFL. They’re said to be targeting college hitters, who happen to be the best available players in our mock draft. If not Helfrick, who has big-time power and defensive chops, it could be Bell, Burress, Texas A&M second baseman Chris Hacopian or Virginia outfielder AJ Gracia.

June 12 mock pick: 2B Chris Hacopian, Texas A&M

11. Nationals: OF/LHP Jared Grindlinger, Huntington Beach HS (CA)

This has been one of the most consistent connections this spring. Grindlinger is a fascinating prospect who is a first-round talent as a hitter and a second- or third-round talent as a pitcher. He also reclassified from the 2027 Draft and into 2026, so he’s one of the youngest players in the class. I assume that, if the Nationals do select Grindlinger with the No. 10 pick, they will let him continue to be a two-way player in pro ball. They can re-evaluate things in a year or two if it’s not working.

June 12 mock pick: Grindlinger

12. Angels: OF Derek Curiel, LSU

Whoever the Angels take with the No. 12 selection stands a good chance to be the first 2026 pick to reach MLB. An Angels player was the first player to reach the big leagues from the 2021 (Chase Silseth), 2022 (Zach Neto), 2023 (Nolan Schanuel), and 2024 (Ryan Johnson) classes, and Tyler Bremner (No. 2 pick last year) still has a chance to be the first 2025 draftee to reach the show. Curiel is a bat-to-ball specialist with good center field defense and perhaps some power potential waiting to be unlocked.

June 12 mock pick: RHP Cameron Flukey, Coastal Carolina

13. Cardinals: 2B Chris Hacopian, Texas A&M

Hacopian is a divisive prospect. He’s one of the best and most decorated college players of the 2020s, but there is concern that his ground ball swing won’t play at the next level and that his defense will send him to first base or left field. The Cardinals have been linked to bats more than arms the last few weeks.

June 12 mock pick: C Ryder Helfrick, Arkansas

14. Marlins: OF AJ Gracia, Virginia

The Marlins have prioritized big exit velocity (Owen Caissie, Agustín Ramírez) and high-end bat-to-ball ability (Xavier Edwards, Otto Lopez), and Gracia falls into the latter category. Not that he’s a slap hitter; he has some pop. Defensively, he should stay in center field for at least another few years thanks more to his instincts than blazing speed.

June 12 mock pick: SS Justin Lebron, Alabama

15. Diamondbacks: RHP Cameron Flukey, Coastal Carolina 

Flukey is the consensus No. 2 pitching prospect in the draft class behind Flora, and his fastball/curveball tandem might be able to get big leaguers out in a relief role right now (not that the D-backs would rush him up the ladder). Arizona tends to dip its toe in every pool: hitters, pitchers, college, high school, whatever.

June 12 mock pick: LHP Cole Carlon, Arizona State

16. Rangers: SS Justin Lebron, Alabama

The Rangers have a thing for “famous” prospects in the draft (think Jack Leiter and Kumar Rocker) and Lebron is one of the most famous prospects available this summer. He entered the 2025 season as the favorite to go No. 1 overall, then Cholowsky broke out while Lebron authored some uneven performances. The Alabama shortstop has extremely loud tools (power, speed, athleticism, etc.), but swing-and-miss concerns have scared teams over the last few weeks.

June 12 mock pick: OF Derek Curiel, LSU

17. Astros: 3B Ace Reese, Mississippi State

The Astros received a Prospect Promotion Incentive pick (No. 28) because Hunter Brown finished in the top three in last year’s Cy Young voting, and the expectation is they will use their top two picks on college players who could reach Houston in short order. Reese has enormous power, perhaps the most in the draft class, though he’s likely to wind up at first base and rank among the league leaders in strikeouts. Few players in the draft class can hit the ball out of the park as frequently and effortlessly, though.

June 12 mock pick: OF AJ Gracia, Virginia

18. Reds: RHP Liam Peterson, Florida

Peterson is not the classic quick-moving college starter with polish. He has a very good mid-90s fastball and a promising array of secondary pitches, but he needs a pro team to help him level up. The Reds are quite good at coaching up college starters (Andrew Abbott, Chase Burns, etc.) and stand a good chance of helping Peterson take that next step.

June 12 mock pick: LHP Brody Bumila, Bishop Feehan HS (MA)

19. Guardians: OF Trevor Condon, Etowah HS (GA)

Condon is a scout’s favorite and there’s a chance, albeit a small one, that he’ll hear his name called inside the top 10 on a below-slot deal. He’s a speedy and athletic bat-to-ball guy who is one of the top center-field defenders in the draft class. Condon projects more as an impact leadoff hitter than a middle-of-the-order threat, which is perfectly fine. Teams need leadoff guys, too.

June 12 mock pick: 3B Ace Reese, Mississippi State

20. Red Sox: LHP Brody Bumila, Bishop Feehan HS (MA)

The old saying is you don’t want to miss on the guy in your backyard, and it’s hard to miss Bumila. He’s a 6-foot-9 lefty who has touched 101 mph this spring. The Red Sox have been connected to high school infielder Bo Lowrance about as much as one team can be connected to a player this late in the first round, but Bumila might have the best chance to develop into a true No. 1 starter of any pitcher in this year’s draft.

June 12 mock pick: 3B Bo Lowrance, Christ Church Episcopal School (SC)

21. 3B Bo Lowrance, Christ Church Episcopal School (SC)

The Padres have taken a high school player in the first round in each of the last nine drafts, and they often target upside over polish. I think Bumila is their dream choice here, but since he’s unavailable in our mock draft, we’ll give them Lowrance. The sweet-swinging lefty has climbed draft boards the last few weeks because so many second-tier college hitters limped to the finish this spring.

June 12 mock pick: LHP Hunter Dietz, Arkansas

22. Tigers: IF/C Cole Prosek, Magnolia Heights HS (MS)

Folks within baseball like Prosek more than the public draft prospect rankings may lead you to believe. He has contact skills, some power, and an advanced plan at the plate. Add in the ability to play an up-the-middle position (either catcher or shortstop), and Prosek is right up Detroit’s alley. They used their last three first-round picks on high school hitters (Max Clark in 2023, Bryce Rainer in 2024, Jordan Yost in 2025) with similar skill sets.

June 12 mock pick: OF Trevor Condon, Etowah HS (GA)

23. Cubs: LHP Hunter Dietz, Arkansas

Despite throwing only 1 ⅔ innings from 2024-25 because of an elbow fracture and a setback, Dietz is very likely to be a first-round pick in two weeks. He’s reached the upper 90s with his buzzsaw cutter this year, plus his slider, curveball, and changeup all look like they have a chance to be above-average pitches. Dietz stayed healthy and threw 85 ⅔ innings this spring, and anyway, the Cubs are unafraid of injured draft prospects. Last year’s first-rounder, outfielder Ethan Conrad, had season-ending shoulder surgery not long before the draft.

June 12 mock pick: RHP Logan Reddemann, UCLA

24. Mariners: RHP Cade Townsend, Mississippi

The Mariners excel at developing college pitching. Why deviate from what you do best? Townsend’s fastball does not grade out well analytically (spin rate, etc.) despite mid-90s velocity, and that’s something the Mariners can help him improve. His slider, curveball, changeup, cutter, and competitiveness make it easy to dream on Townsend becoming a top-flight starter if he gets his fastball in order.

June 12 mock pick: RHP Liam Peterson, Florida

25. Brewers: RHP Tegan Kuhns, Tennessee

Teams that lean on analytical models in the draft (like the Brewers) surely love Kuhns, who spins the ball like few others in the draft class. His mid-90s fastball and hammer curveball are wipeout pitches. Help him refine his changeup and mechanics, and the ingredients are there for a frontline starter. The Brewers are as good a bet to max out Kuhns as any team in the league.

June 12 mock pick: IF/C Cole Prosek, Magnolia Heights HS (MS)


The Blue Jays, Dodgers, Mets, Phillies, and Yankees each had their first-round pick moved back 10 spots through CBT penalties. The Mets hold the No. 27 pick, the Yankees the No. 35 pick, the Phillies the No. 36 pick, the Blue Jays the No. 39 pick, and the Dodgers the No. 40 pick. Those picks have all been pushed out of the first round proper.

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Manchester United fans have all agreed about Marcus Rashford at the World Cup

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Man Utd forward Marcus Rashford looked sharp for England as they won their group at the World Cup.

Manchester United fans have all thought the same thing during England’s games at the World Cup. Why did Barcelona sign Anthony Gordon over Marcus Rashford?

Gordon started England’s first two games of the tournament, but Rashford scored off the bench against Croatia and looked like the player the Three Lions had been missing when he came on against Ghana.

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He earned a start in England’s final group match against Panama, and was one of the brightest attacking threats on the pitch.

Gordon should not start for England for the remainder of the tournament. It was a coin toss between the pair before the World Cup began, but Rashford has outshone the player who Barca snubbed him for.

Thomas Tuchel would have pulled his hair out watching Gordon in the opening two games. He ran down blind alleys, offered zero attacking threat and did not play crosses into the box to service Harry Kane.

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Tuchel will like what he’s seen with Rashford. The 28-year-old has been direct and aggressive when he’s been on the ball. He has looked like someone with a major point to prove after missing out on his dream move.

Barcelona paid £70million to sign Gordon from Newcastle when they could have signed Rashford for £26m from United. They have almost paid three times the price for a player half as talented as Rashford.

The decision to sign Gordon over Rashford becomes even more confusing when a closer look at the numbers is taken. Gordon scored 26 goals for Newcastle across the last two seasons, but 11 of those came from the penalty spot.

It’s not difficult to do the math. Gordon has scored 15 non-penalty goals in two years, averaging just over seven per season. Rashford contributed 14 goals and 14 assists during his Barcelona loan spell last term.

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The wage demands of both players must have been a significant factor because the footballing reasons don’t add up. Gordon earned around £150,000 per week at Newcastle, while Rashford’s wages have returned to £325,000-a-week by virtue of United securing qualification for next season’s Champions League.

Barcelona could have doubled Gordon’s salary and still pay him less than Rashford earns. For context, Rashford signed his current United contract in the summer of 2023, following an impressive 30-goal campaign.

Even when the players’ wages are considered, is that enough reason to pay £44m more to sign Gordon? Perhaps Barcelona’s stubbornness in negotiations to sign Rashford again forced their hand.

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United agreed a £26m buy option when Barcelona signed Rashford on loan, but noise emerged during the campaign that claimed the La Liga giants wanted to pay a reduced fee. They wanted to haggle.

Barcelona may have got what they wanted in the past, but United’s board are aware they can no longer be taken for mugs in the transfer market, and insisted that Barca cough up £26m.

Still, it wasn’t a good look for Rashford when Barcelona paid a significantly higher fee to sign Gordon, although, to Rashford’s credit, his performances at the World Cup have flipped the situation, making Barca look daft.

The question now is what happens with Rashford. Some United fans who are strongly opposed to the idea of him returning were concerned to read Harry Maguire say he would welcome him back with open arms.

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There are other supporters who would like to see Michael Carrick reintergate him to the squad. Those fans argue that if United want to strengthen their left flank, then why not reintroduce Rashford to the dressing room?

Rashford is set to report for United’s pre-season once he enjoys a break after the World Cup and United are fine with the possibility of him returning.

Carrick has played with Rashford, coached him, and briefly managed him. In April, the Old Trafford boss suggested the door was open for Rashford to return at a press conference, though those comments felt like a stock answer.

United’s bargaining power with Rashford would have been damaged if Carrick had come out swinging and said he wouldn’t return to the club, even though he’s not the kind of character who would make such a statement.

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It feels like Rashford’s future has become a saga, and we’re only two weeks into the transfer window. United are relaxed about the situation and know strong performances at the World Cup can only stir up interest.

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New PGA Tour schedule winners, losers, nitpicks

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Man City complete transfer as forward seals £21m deal before immediate decision made

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Rising star Mathys Detourbet has joined Manchester City from sister club Troyes.

The French outfit, who won promotion back to the top tier this season, announced the 19-year-old’s departure with reports in France putting the fee at around £21.5million.

The Manchester Evening News understands the youngster has penned a five-year contract at the Etihad and is expected to join Monaco on loan for next season.

The teenager has come through the ranks at Troyes – also part of the City Football Group – and impressed last season with three goals and five assists in 33 appearances, most of which came off the bench.

The forward has been playing on the left hand side but is also comfortable through the middle. A move to Monaco, who finished seventh in the French top flight last season and missed out on European qualification, would offer City the chance to see how Detourbet fares in one of Europe’s top five leagues.

The City new boy has been with Troyes since the age of eight and has been capped at youth level by France.

In announcing his exit, Troyes said: “Having come through the club’s youth system and deeply attached to its colours, Mathys perfectly embodies the youth development work carried out by ESTAC for many years. His progression from the Academy to the first team is a source of great pride for the entire club and an example for the young players who are now continuing their journey within the training centre.

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“ESTAC is particularly proud to have supported Mathys in his development as a player and as a man, from his first steps at the club to this major new stage in his career. The entire club warmly thanks Mathys for his commitment, professionalism and dedication to the Troyes colours throughout his career. ESTAC wishes him every success and much success for the rest of his career.”

City have agreed a deal for Elliot Anderson for £116m from Nottingham Forest with that move expected to be completed in the coming days with the player to undergo a medical while on World Cup duty with England.

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2026 Travelers Championship TV coverage: Where to watch Monday playoff live

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The last signature event of the 2026 PGA Tour season was supposed to wrap up on Sunday, but after a weather delay, with 72 holes not enough to crown a champion, the Travelers Championship entered a playoff that darkness decided would require a Monday finish. The best in the game battled it out at the Travelers Championship for the final $20 million purse of the regular season at TPC River Highlands, but only world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler and Viktor Hovland will compete in the playoff.

Scheffler and Hovland will take the course at 9 a.m. ET with coverage airing live on Golf Channel. They will play the 18th hole, repeatedly, until one bests the other in the head-to-head playoff battle.

TPC River Highlands offered a much friendlier venue to a weary group of golfers who just battled through the difficulty of Shinnecock Hills for the U.S. Open, and Scheffler has the opportunity to prevail Monday after entering as the clear favorite. He is seeking his first victory since the opening event of the season, The American Express, while Hovalnd is eyeing his first win in 15 months after going winless in 2025.

Check out the full Travelers Championship prize money breakdown and grades for those who finished below Scheffler and Hovland on the Travelers Championship leaderboard.

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Scottie Scheffler’s clutch par saves set up Travelers playoff vs. Viktor Hovland

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Struggling Lions sack special teams co-ordinator McDiarmid

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The winless B.C. Lions have sacked special teams coordinator Cory McDiarmid.

The CFL club, last in the West Division with three straight losses, made the announcement Sunday, less than 24 hours after dropping a 41-33 decision to the Calgary Stampeders (1-2) at Kelowna’s Apple Bowl.

Lions’ general manager Ryan Rigmaiden said in a statement that McDiarmid’s release was effective immediately and thanked him for his hard work.

McDiarmid previously coached in the CFL with several teams and is a two-time Grey Cup winner with the Lions and Saskatchewan Roughriders.

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The Lions play the unbeaten Edmonton Elks on Saturday in Kelowna.

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Football without borders: Why FIFA World Cup has never been more diverse | FIFA World Cup 2026

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The FIFA World Cup has always celebrated national identity. Players wear their country’s colours, sing the anthem and represent millions of supporters back home.

 


Yet in modern football, nationality is rarely a simple story. The 2026 FIFA World Cup has become perhaps the strongest example yet of how migration, family heritage and evolving FIFA eligibility rules have transformed international football into a truly global competition.

 

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Nearly one in every four players at this tournament was born outside the nation they represent.

 


Far from weakening international football, that diversity has enriched it.

 

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The expanded 48-team tournament has produced stories that would have been impossible a generation ago, players facing the country where they were born, nations discovering talent across continents, and football becoming more representative of the multicultural societies many countries have become.

 
 


A truly global World Cup

 

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Out of the 1,248 footballers selected for the 2026 World Cup, almost 300 represent a country different from their place of birth. Only a handful of participating nations have squads made up entirely of home-born players.

 


For everyone else, international football has become a reflection of modern society, where migration, dual citizenship and multicultural families have created new footballing identities.

 

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Some players were born abroad because their parents emigrated before they were born. Others moved countries as children. Some hold dual nationality through parents or grandparents, while others became eligible after years of residency.

 


The result is a World Cup that reflects the increasingly connected nature of today’s world.

 

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France: Football’s biggest exporter of talent

 


No nation illustrates this better than France. France brought one of the strongest squads to the World Cup, yet it also exported more footballers to other national teams than any country in the tournament.

 

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A remarkable 76 French-born players are representing countries other than France. Many of them will even face France during the competition.

 


Senegal alone included ten French-born footballers in its squad. Algeria selected thirteen. Haiti had twelve.

 

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Ivory Coast and DR Congo also relied heavily on players developed inside the French football system. France’s incredible production line means it effectively contributes talent to almost every continent. It is no coincidence that French academies continue to produce some of world football’s finest players year after year. Paris has become football’s biggest talent factory

 


Much of that production comes from one extraordinary region. Greater Paris has quietly become the world’s greatest football talent hub. Despite accounting for less than one-fifth of France’s population, the Paris metropolitan area continues producing elite footballers at an astonishing rate.

 

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Many of France’s biggest stars began their journeys there. Even more remarkably, countless players who eventually chose other national teams also developed within the same football ecosystem.

 

The region has become an international football production line, supplying World Cup squads across Africa, Europe, North America and the Caribbean. 

 


Eligibility rules have evolved with football

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The modern World Cup would not look like this without FIFA’s evolving eligibility regulations. Earlier generations of players had very little flexibility.

 


Representing one country at youth level often ended any possibility of switching national allegiance later. Over the last two decades, however, FIFA has gradually modernised those rules to reflect changing realities.

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Today, players can represent a nation if they qualify through birth, parents, grandparents or long-term residency. Several amendments have also allowed players to make one-time nationality switches under specific circumstances, particularly if they had not fully established themselves in senior international football.

 


Those changes have allowed footballers to choose the nation that best reflects both their identity and their career. Some of the tournament’s best stories exist because of these rules

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The World Cup has produced countless examples of players balancing multiple identities. England-born striker Folarin Balogun now leads the line for the United States. Jamal Musiala represented England at youth level before choosing Germany.

 


Brian Gutierrez switched from the United States to Mexico. Crystal Palace goalkeeper Owen Goodman eventually became eligible for Canada after successfully proving his residency links.

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Every tournament now features players representing countries connected through family history rather than simply birthplace. Instead of reducing national identity, these stories often strengthen it.

 


Many players speak emotionally about honouring their parents or grandparents by wearing their ancestral country’s shirt. Federations now scout family trees as carefully as footballers

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Finding eligible players has become a specialised process. National associations now employ scouts whose job extends far beyond watching matches. They study family backgrounds, immigration records and youth academies across Europe.

 


Some federations maintain databases tracking dual-national prospects years before they reach senior football. Others rely on personal contacts, local communities and even video games such as Football Manager to identify potential internationals.

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Once a player is identified, convincing them becomes another challenge entirely. Countries regularly organise meetings with players and their families, present long-term sporting projects and build personal relationships before a final decision is made.

 


International recruitment has become almost as competitive as club recruitment.

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Smaller nations are benefiting more than ever

 


Perhaps the biggest winners are countries with smaller footballing populations. Curacao, making its World Cup debut, relied heavily on players born in the Netherlands.

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Canada has expanded its player pool by recruiting footballers with Canadian family connections across Europe. Several African nations continue strengthening their squads through players developed in European academies while maintaining close family ties to their ancestral homeland.

 


Without these eligibility pathways, many emerging football nations would struggle to compete with traditional powers. Instead, they now arrive at World Cups with deeper squads and greater international experience.

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Football’s biggest tournament now reflects the modern world Critics occasionally question whether foreign-born players dilute international football. The evidence from this World Cup suggests the opposite.

 


Every multicultural squad tells a story of migration, heritage and identity. Players proudly represent nations connected to their families, cultures and childhoods, even if those connections stretch across continents. Rather than reducing authenticity, these stories have added emotional depth to the tournament.

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The modern World Cup is no longer simply about where someone was born. It is about where they belong.

 


And in making room for those identities, FIFA’s eligibility rules have helped create perhaps the most inclusive, representative and globally connected World Cup the sport has ever seen.

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Man United handed Manuel Ugarte injury update as scans confirm extent of knee problem

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Manuel Ugarte suffered a knee injury in Uruguay’s World Cup defeat to Spain and the Manchester United midfielder has now received the results of his scan

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Manchester United have confirmed midfielder Manuel Ugarte has suffered a ‘knee ligament injury. The international star is set to return to Europe to quickly begin his recovery under the guidance of United’s medical staff after being injured during the World Cup.

Ugarte was stretchered off the field during his side’s 1-0 defeat to Spain that saw them crash out of the tournament. The former Paris Saint-Germain ace was distressed as he departed the field, with his reaction immediately pointing towards a serious injury.

The 25-year-old is now set for an extended stay on the sidelines, having been spotted in a wheelchair as he left the Estadio Akron. Now, reports in Uruguay say that scans have confirmed the worst news of tearing his ACL.

United say assessment of the injury remains ongoing, however.

They said in a statement: “Manchester United can confirm that Manuel Ugarte has suffered a knee ligament injury whilst representing Uruguay in Friday’s World Cup group-stage match against Spain.

“Assessment of the injury is ongoing to determine the best course of treatment and the rehabilitation timescale. Everyone wishes Manuel a successful recovery and we will be supporting him every step of the way.”

The revelation is bad news for the player and the club, with Ugarte having looked set to leave this summer. The Uruguay international has struggled to make an impression at Old Trafford since joining the club in 2024 for a fee that could reach £50.5million.

Any transfer is now in serious doubt with the star, who has played under Erik ten Hag, Ruben Amorim and Michael Carrick, unlikely to be fit to play a significant role next season. A number of Serie A clubs had been linked to his signature.

United’s primary attention in the transfer market was to be to strengthen their midfield for Carrick ahead of their return to the Champions League. The head coach has already lost Casemiro who departed at the end of his contract.

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Brazil midfielder Ederson is set to join the club from Atalanta. A deal has been agreed to bring the player to the club for an initial fee worth £35million plus £3.8million more in add-ons.

Ederson is set to sign a four-year deal with the club, holding an option to extend the contract by a further year.

Speaking after his late call up to Brazil’s squad following an injury to Wesley, Ederson confirmed the deal was almost complete.

Speaking to Tuttosport, he said: “It’s practically almost all sorted.” Before he added: “I have to make the most of this moment. I am here and it is a wonderful thing, something you must always live to the fullest.”

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Michael Block’s dream senior tour debut ends in disaster

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Michael Block’s first go-round on the PGA Tour Champions went better than he could’ve hoped— until the final hole.

The PGA of America professional who became a cult hero at the 2023 PGA Championship at Oak Hill played this week’s Dick’s Open on an exemption. The 50-year-old head pro at Arroyo Trabuco Golf Club opened with a six-under 66 on Friday.

“For me to come out here today and shoot what I did my first time out, the pressure I had, everyone’s looking at me, I’ve got all those haters out there which, you know, I love you guys. There you go, I hope you guys like that 66,” Block said.

Block fell back with a Saturday 70, but on Sunday, he put a charge into the crowd in Endicott, New York, when he went out in five-under 32 and then made birdies at 14, 15 and 16 to get within one of the lead.

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With the leaders still with several holes to play behind him, Block’s chances of winning were slim despite his late birdie barrage. Then, any hope he had quickly disappeared on the 54th and final hole of his senior tour debut.

Block’s tee shot found the fairway, but then things came unraveled when his wedge shot hit a tree and plugged in a bunker, leading to a finishing triple bogey and a T9 finish at 13 under, five back of eventual winner Dicky Pride. In the end, Block would’ve needed a birdie-birdie finish to get into a playoff with Pride and Padraig Harrington. He finished par-triple.

“It was exactly what I had dreamed of and wanted to do, to be honest,” Block said of his Champions Tour debut. “And I didn’t hit a bad shot on 18, that was the most frustrating part about it. I only made a couple bogeys the entire week, and for me to triple bogey the last hole when I hit it down the middle of the fairway, hit a 52-degree wedge directly at the pin, and it hit the tree, which I guess that pin honestly wasn’t in the right spot, to be honest. Then it plugs in the bunker, and then all hell breaks loose. I make a triple bogey.

“But that cost me a lot of points, a lot of money, a lot of everything, which is very frustrating. I’m just here trying to make my way possibly onto this tour and that hurt a lot.”

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Despite the unfortunate finish, Block left the Dick’s Open believing he has what it takes to win on the 50-plus tour, including at next week’s U.S. Senior Open, which Block qualified for.

“I understand that after this week that I can definitely compete here, I can definitely — I can win here,” Block said on Sunday. “My game is pretty good and I look forward to
being out for the next one. Honestly, I’m very fortunate to be playing the [Senior] U.S. Open next week in Columbus at Scioto and I can’t wait to get after it, to be honest, because I’m hitting it pretty good.”

Block said that the reception from his Champions Tour peers was great this week. He said he got “knuckles” from several of his competitors, including Darren Clarke, whom he played with on Saturday.

All in all, Block, ever the showman, called his Champions Tour debut a dream and looked ahead to next week’s major in Columbus with eyes on a prize he says has always been at the top of his list.

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“So my idols right now know me, which is really cool, and we’re going to have so much fun next week in Columbus,” Block said. “Columbus, I’m coming for ya.”

And with that, Michael Block’s senior tour debut ended. The three-day odyssey had everything you’d expect: talk of haters, a dream reveal, electric post-shot reactions, playing it up to the crowd and unfettered self-belief that he can take home a trophy against “his idols.”

The Block Party will arrive in Columbus at Scioto Country Club next week.

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Terence Crawford responds to calls to end retirement for Jaron Ennis fight: “I see holes in his game”

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Many in the sport would like to see Terence Crawford return to the ring to face Jaron Ennis, particularly following the latter’s statement victory over Xander Zayas this weekend in Brooklyn.

Ennis and Zayas thrilled fans at the Barclays Center on Saturday night, a clash ultimately defined by Ennis’ superior skill. Outside of a tense spell in the third round, ‘Boots’ largely dominated, scoring three knockdowns on his way to a 32nd knockout victory.

The seventh-round stoppage made Ennis a unified champion at super-welterweight, having already achieved the same feat at welterweight. Given that Crawford also held titles in both divisions, and the pair were once tentatively linked to a showdown at 147lbs, debate over a fight has inevitably resurfaced.

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Speaking on The Porter Way podcast, Crawford rejected the idea that returning to face Ennis would add anything to his legacy.

“Listen, like I said, man, of course everybody knows the competitive nature in me. But I don’t worry about coming back to prove anything, because me coming back and proving something to people… It never matters. [If I beat Ennis], they would say, ‘Oh, he only fought Xander.’ They’d come up with some type of excuse.”

The five-division world champion then praised Ennis, while making it clear he still believes he would come out on top.

“To credit Boots, he’s a tremendous talent. He’s no walk in the park for no one. He’s a threat to anyone that he steps in the ring with – tremendous speed, great power, reflexes, defence, all that. The only thing that I can say is I’m ten steps ahead of him in smarts … I can see the holes in his game… The shots that Xander was hitting him with, and the shots that Xander couldn’t capitalise on, I would be able to capitalise on. And, when I capitalise, everybody knows I’m probably one of the best counterpunchers there ever was.”

Finally, Crawford put an end to any talk of a comeback – an idea floated by Ennis’ promoter Eddie Hearn during fight week – insisting he has no intention of competing again.

“Never. I’m happily retired. It’s Boots’ era. I pray and hope he take it to the extreme. Nothing but success for him and his family… People want to see this generation, how would they do with the previous generation, the same way people compare me to Floyd. We’ll never fight. I wish him nothing but the best, I want to see him succeed.”

Ennis will now continue his pursuit of undisputed status at super-welterweight, making no secret of his desire to face the division’s other champions, Sebastian Fundora and Josh Kelly.

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