Thomas Tuchel has named a 26-player England squad for the 2026 World Cup, leaving out several established stars such as Cole Palmer, Phil Foden, Trent Alexander-Arnold and Harry Maguire, while rewarding form players including Al-Ahli striker Ivan Toney and Aston Villa forward Ollie Watkins for a tournament England start against Croatia on 17 June.
Nottingham Forest’s Morgan Gibbs-White, Manchester United’s Luke Shaw and Crystal Palace’s Adam Wharton are also absent from the travelling group confirmed on 22 May, with Lewis Hall and Jarrod Bowen missing out as well, and Leeds United striker Dominic Calvert-Lewin overlooked despite a strong domestic season.
Toney forces his way into the attack after scoring 32 league goals for Al-Ahli in the Saudi Pro League, joining captain Harry Kane and Watkins, who helped Aston Villa secure a first major trophy in 30 years with the Europa League title and edges Calvert-Lewin for one of the centre-forward roles.
In midfield, Tuchel trusts the balance of established players and rising talents, with Jordan Henderson preferred ahead of James Garner and Adam Wharton, while Manchester United’s Kobbie Mainoo and Arsenal’s Eberechi Eze both claim spots, and 22 members of the squad have lifted at least one club trophy since the beginning of last season.
At the back, John Stones is selected despite a season disrupted by injuries, reflecting Tuchel’s confidence in the Manchester City defender, while Chelsea’s Levi Colwill is left out, Bayer Leverkusen’s Jarell Quansah is included after only one senior England appearance, and Newcastle’s Dan Burn plus Tottenham Hotspur’s Djed Spence add further defensive options.
One of the most debated omissions is Gibbs-White, who has produced 17 goal involvements for Nottingham Forest in all competitions since the turn of the year, scoring 13 times and providing four assists, a tally bettered only by Kane with 32 and Mason Greenwood with 18 among English players in Europe’s top five leagues.
Across the group, 16 different clubs supply players to England’s 2026 World Cup squad, the highest spread for a major tournament since 1962, when 17 clubs were represented, underlining how Tuchel has drawn on a wide range of domestic and overseas teams, including sides from the Premier League, Bundesliga, La Liga and Saudi Pro League.
Its official. Your #ThreeLions players heading to the @FIFAWorldCup!pic.twitter.com/lqsDBYSP4XEngland (@England) May 22, 2026
England World Cup squad fixtures and tournament schedule
The 2026 World Cup takes place across the United States, Mexico and Canada, starting on 11 June, with England opening Group L against Croatia on 17 June, then meeting Ghana in Foxborough on 23 June before finishing the group phase against Panama on 27 June.
Tuchel’s final list features three goalkeepers, ten defenders, seven midfielders and six forwards, with Everton, Crystal Palace, Manchester City, Chelsea, Newcastle, Aston Villa, Arsenal, Manchester United, Real Madrid, Bayer Leverkusen, Brentford, Bayern Munich, Al-Ahli, Barcelona, Nottingham Forest and Tottenham Hotspur all represented.
{TABLE_1}
| Position | Player | Club |
|---|---|---|
| Goalkeeper | Jordan Pickford | Everton |
| Goalkeeper | Dean Henderson | Crystal Palace |
| Goalkeeper | James Trafford | Manchester City |
| Defender | Reece James | Chelsea |
| Defender | Tino Livramento | Newcastle |
| Defender | Marc Guehi | Manchester City |
| Defender | Ezri Konsa | Aston Villa |
| Defender | John Stones | Manchester City |
| Defender | Jarell Quansah | Bayer Leverkusen |
| Defender | Nico O’Reilly | Manchester City |
| Defender | Dan Burn | Newcastle |
| Defender | Djed Spence | Tottenham Hotspur |
| Midfielder | Declan Rice | Arsenal |
| Midfielder | Elliot Anderson | Nottingham Forest |
| Midfielder | Jude Bellingham | Real Madrid |
| Midfielder | Jordan Henderson | Brentford |
| Midfielder | Morgan Rogers | Aston Villa |
| Midfielder | Kobbie Mainoo | Manchester United |
| Midfielder | Eberechi Eze | Arsenal |
| Forward | Harry Kane | Bayern Munich |
| Forward | Ivan Toney | Al-Ahli |
| Forward | Ollie Watkins | Aston Villa |
| Forward | Bukayo Saka | Arsenal |
| Forward | Noni Madueke | Arsenal |
| Forward | Marcus Rashford | Barcelona |
| Forward | Anthony Gordon | Newcastle |
The final England squad mixes players with recent trophy success and others enjoying standout personal seasons, while several big names stay at home, and Tuchel’s choices, including Toney from Al-Ahli in the Saudi Pro League, offer a blend of experience, form and versatility for the 2026 campaign in North America.
Story first published: Friday, May 22, 2026, 15:47 [IST]
