Which league and clubs dominate the 2026 World Cup quarterfinals?
As the World Cup reaches the quarterfinals, the remaining rosters hint at which clubs and leagues have become the biggest talent factories.

With just eight teams left in the 2026 FIFA World Cup, the tournament is also becoming a contest between clubs and leagues.
The list of survivors offers several clear conclusions: Barcelona and Arsenal have the biggest representation, LaLiga and the Premier League once again underline their influence on the international game, and Morocco stands out as the national team drawing players from the widest range of clubs and leagues.
The Premier League leads the way
The Premier League is the competition with the most clubs still represented in the quarterfinals, with 17 different teams supplying players to the eight remaining nations. LaLiga also maintains a significant presence through nine clubs: Barcelona, Atlético Madrid, Real Madrid, Athletic Club, Sevilla, Real Betis, Girona, Real Sociedad and Celta Vigo.

Serie A, the Bundesliga and Ligue 1 also remain heavily represented, reinforcing the dominance of Europe’s five major leagues at the business end of the tournament.
Barcelona and Arsenal set the pace
Barcelona and Arsenal have more players still competing than any other club, with 10 each. Barcelona provides much of Spain’s backbone, contributing eight internationals, along with one player each for France and England. Arsenal’s talent is spread more widely, with players representing England, Spain, France, Belgium and Norway.
They are followed by Atlético Madrid with nine players, Manchester City with eight, and a second tier featuring Paris Saint-Germain, Real Madrid and Aston Villa, all with seven representatives.
Beyond sheer numbers, the spread of those players is equally striking. No clubs have diversified their representation more than Arsenal, Manchester City, Crystal Palace and Real Madrid, each supplying players to five of the eight remaining national teams.
Eight teams, eight different identities
The quarterfinalists also highlight very different squad-building models. Spain has a clearly defined core led by Barcelona’s eight players, followed by Atlético Madrid with four and Athletic Club with three.

Paris Saint-Germain provides France’s largest contingent with five internationals, while Atlético Madrid is Argentina’s biggest contributor with five players.
In England’s squad, Arsenal and Manchester City each supply four players. Belgium leans most heavily on Club Brugge, with three representatives, while Norway maintains a strong domestic connection thanks to three players from Bodø/Glimt. Switzerland’s squad is much more evenly spread, with Young Boys and Sevilla the only clubs contributing more than one player.

Morocco, the most international squad
If Spain represents the most concentrated model, Morocco is the complete opposite. Its players come from 26 different clubs across 12 separate leagues, reflecting the remarkable international reach Moroccan soccer has developed in recent years.

At the other end of the spectrum is Spain. Luis de la Fuente’s squad is the least dispersed of the remaining teams, with players drawn from just 12 clubs and only three leagues – LaLiga, the Premier League and Ligue 1 – highlighting the strength of Spain’s domestic league as the national team’s primary talent pipeline.
With only eight countries left in the competition, the World Cup is no longer just a contest between nations. It has also become a measure of the strength of the clubs and leagues that shape the global game.
| Club | Players remaining |
|---|---|
| Barcelona | 10 |
| Arsenal | 10 |
| Atlético Madrid | 9 |
| Manchester City | 8 |
| Paris Saint-Germain | 7 |
| Real Madrid | 7 |
| Aston Villa | 7 |
| Club Brugge | 6 |
| Bayern Munich | 6 |
| Liverpool | 5 |
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