Goals galore - how dominant is Premier League wealth at World Cup?
21 players have won the World Cup while playing in the Premier League so far [Getty Images] Players from 75 different domestic football divisions have appeared in the 2026 World Cup so far. They have hailed from EFL League One and the Irish Premier League to the Indonesian Super League and Costa Rican Primera Division. But in terms of impact on the tournament, no division can compete with the Premier League. A total of 154 players who finished the 2025-26 season with Premier League clubs were named in squads for the tournament, far more than from any other domestic league. They have made more than 500 appearances at the World Cup between them so far, playing just shy of 40,000 combined minutes. As the competition reaches the quarter-final stage, BBC Sport takes a look at just how dominant the English top flight - and the enormous wealth underpinning it - has been in the USA, Canada and Mexico. Premier League regulars scoring more than rivals The golden boot race is an all-time classic, with some of the game's biggest stars competing at the top of the charts. And they're nicely split between different domestic divisions too, with current leader Lionel Messi representing the USA's Major League Soccer, Kylian Mbappe playing in Spain's La Liga, Erling Haaland terrifying Premier League defences and Harry Kane breaking records in the Bundesliga in the Germany. But overall, Premier League players have scored just under double the amount of the next highest scoring league, La Liga. The Premier League total of 67 is powered by impressive scoring returns for players whose quality is clear but sit below the elite tier of Messi and co. They include the likes of Arsenal's Kai Havertz (three for Germany), Crystal Palace's Ismaila Sarr (four for Senegal), Liverpool's Cody Gakpo (three for Netherlands), Manchester United's Matheus Cunha (three for Brazil), Newcastle's Yoane Wissa (three for DR Congo), Sunderland's Brian Brobbey (three for Netherlands). In their most recent transfers, those six players cost a combined total of around £260m, or an average of just under £45m. A total of 17 Premier League players have scored twice or more in the tournament. No other division possesses an array of clubs, whether title challengers or occupying lower mid-table, which can spend that kind of money on reliable international-quality goal scorers. La Liga still possesses some of the world's best players, and England's Jude Bellingham, Brazil's Vinicius Jr. and Spain's Mikel Oyarzabal have each scored four. But there is a big drop off in output beyond that, with only three other La Liga players - Ivory Coast's Nicolas Pepe, Morocco's Azzedine Ounhai, and Switzerland's Ruben Vargas - scoring more than once. Only Kane, Germany's Deniz Undav, Switzerland's Johan Manzambi, and USA's Malik Tillman have scored more than once and play in the Bundesliga. The total for Serie A has been heavily dented by Italy's failure to qualify for the tournament for a third successive edition. Premier League dominates creativity too So far, nine players have earned three or more assists, and five of them play in the Premier League. Overall, Premier League players have contributed more than double the number of the assists of the Bundesliga, which is second in the standings. Newcastle's Bruno Guimaraes may have missed a penalty during Brazil's elimination by Norway, but he was one of the few players who impressed for Carlo Ancelotti's men, creating four goals. Only France's Michael Olise, who plays for Bayern Munich in the Bundesliga has more than the Magpies' skipper. Arsenal pair Bukayo Saka and Martin Odegaard, and Liverpool duo Florian Wirtz and Alexander Isak all have three assists, though the latter two have been knocked out of the tournament. Saka has only ever played for the Gunners at a professional level, but the most recent transfer values of the other four total a whopping £310m or so. Liverpool broke their transfer record twice last summer to purchase Wirtz and then Isak, and though the pair made a negligible contribution in a disappointing season for the Reds, they demonstrated quality during the World Cup, which leagues with less financial power struggle to match. With seven goals and two assists, Real Madrid striker Kylian Mbappe's nine goal involvements are two higher than anybody else at the World Cup so far [Getty Images] Clean sheet race close but Premier League joint top Though 12 were selected for the tournament, only four Premier League goalkeepers have been regular starters at the World Cup, but all have performed well enough to ensure the division ranks highest for clean sheets too. Everton's Jordan Pickford has kept the opposition out twice, while Aston Villa's Emiliano Martinez and Liverpool's Alisson have matched that total for Argentina and Brazil respectively. Netherlands' Bart Verbruggen, the only other first-choice Premier League stopper, earned one before the Dutch were eliminated. Level with the Premier League - pretty surprisingly - is Mexico's Liga Mx, thanks to the three kept by Mexico goalkeeper Raul Rangel and Camilo Vargas' four for Colombia. La Liga is only one behind, but its total of six belongs entirely to Athletic Club's Unai Simon, who has yet to concede a single goal for Spain during the tournament and is keeping Arsenal's David Raya on the bench. Vozinha's heroics for fan-favourites Cape Verde mean the Portuguese second division has as many clean sheets as the country's top flight. Whether it be scoring goals or keeping them out, the cash Premier League clubs have at their disposal is having a huge influence on the biggest stage of all. Aston Villa's Emiliano Martinez earned the award for best goalkeeper at the 2022 World Cup, and could be in contention again if Argentina progress to the latter stages [Getty Images]
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