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2026 FIFA World Cup
16JUL

Gordon, 43, Leads Oldest World Cup Field

3 min read
10:33UTC

Scotland's Craig Gordon will be 43 years and 162 days at kickoff, the oldest player on record at a World Cup, heading a cluster of over-40s that includes Ronaldo, Modric, Dzeko and Neuer.

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Key takeaway

The expanded 48-team field has produced the oldest World Cup squad pool on record.

Scotland goalkeeper Craig Gordon will be 43 years and 162 days old when the tournament begins, the oldest player in any World Cup since modern records started 1. Cristiano Ronaldo, at 41, is the oldest outfield player and about to feature at a record sixth World Cup; Luka Modric and Edin Dzeko are both past 40. Germany's Manuel Neuer, 40, came out of retirement to start in goal 2, his place secured when Nagelsmann named the squad in May .

That cluster of over-40s has no modern precedent. At the other end sits Mexico's Gilberto Mora, 17, leaving a 25-year gap between the oldest and youngest players at the same tournament. Goalkeeping carries much of the longevity: Gordon, Neuer and Mexico's Guillermo Ochoa all arrive in their late thirties or forties, positions where reflexes decay more slowly than the legs an outfield career runs down.

The ageing reflects the expanded 48-team format, which adds qualification slots and lets experienced players reach a tournament a smaller field would have closed to them. Manchester City contribute a record 19 players across 12 nations, and Spain alone named a squad drawn entirely from the top five European leagues. Lionel Messi, 38, will appear for Argentina at his own record sixth World Cup .

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Craig Gordon, Scotland's goalkeeper, will be 43 years and 162 days old when the World Cup begins, the oldest player at any World Cup in the modern era. Cristiano Ronaldo, at 41, is the oldest outfield player and is appearing at a record sixth World Cup. Luka Modric and Edin Dzeko are both past 40. Germany's Manuel Neuer, 40, came out of international retirement to play. At the other end, Mexico's Gilberto Mora is just 17, creating a 25-year age gap between the oldest and youngest players. Manchester City have sent 19 players to the tournament across 12 different countries, more than any club in World Cup history.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    The 48-team format's first edition produces the oldest field in modern World Cup history, five players over 40 and a 25-year age gap between oldest and youngest. Future FIFA selection regulations may address squad-age requirements as this demographic shift becomes a tournament-integrity question.

  • Consequence

    Manchester City's 19-player contribution across 12 nations is a record that club ownership will use commercially. But it means City's pre-season 2026–27 preparation will be disrupted for players reaching the semi-finals and final, adding to the systemic fixture-congestion tension between clubs and FIFA that has not been resolved since the Club World Cup expansion.

First Reported In

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BBC Sport· 7 Jun 2026
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