Issue link: https://maltatoday.uberflip.com/i/1545412
12 maltatoday | WEDNESDAY • 17 JUNE 2026 SPORTS WORLD CUP 2026 Who gets to wear the shirt? A new question of belonging THE 2026 World Cup is the larg- est in history, with 48 countries, 1,248 players and also the most diasporic. Around one in four of the players were born in a differ- ent country from the one whose shirt they will wear, a share that has almost tripled since the 1994 World Cup. Some qualify for nationality through parents or grandpar- ents, others through migration, naturalisation or the long af- terlife of empire. None of this makes them fake nationals; that argument is too lazy. National identity has nev- er been as clean as the shirt makes it look. Nations are not natural facts but constructs of language, memory, ancestry, law and shared feeling, and a player born in Paris to Moroc- can parents, or in Amsterdam to Surinamese grandparents, may feel the pull of more than one story. Identity does not be- gin and end at the maternity ward. But the question still matters. If identity is fluid, how fluid should national selection be? And at what point does legiti- mate diaspora representation start to feel like elite-level out- sourcing? Odsonne Edouard, a 28-year- old striker born in French Guiana and raised in Paris, revived his season at RC Lens. He represented France at the youth level but was eligible for Haiti through his parents. Haiti, reaching only their sec- ond World Cup and their first in 52 years, would gladly have welcomed him. He declined, unwilling to take a place at the final stage after others had fought through qualifying: "I didn't feel legitimate to play in this World Cup. The players fought to qualify. I wasn't going to arrive at the last minute to enjoy this World Cup. If I have to play it, I have to deserve it." His refusal may not be wholly noble; some read it as holding out for France, but the principle cuts through the legal language of eligibility. FIFA can say who is allowed to play; it cannot say who has earned the shirt. But even the legal line is messier than it looks. DR Congo is at this World Cup only because a challenge to their squad failed. Nigeria and Cameroon pro- tested that several of their dual national, European-passported players were wrongly cleared, since Congolese law bars dual citizenship. FIFA's rules said one thing, national law another; FIFA sid- ed with DR Congo. Where the line is genuinely crossed, it punishes Malay- sia for illegally obtained pass- ports, docking Ecuador points for a forged one. Eligibility is not a clean baseline but con- tested terrain in three tiers: Documented heritage, per- mitted-but-disputed cases, and fraud. The moral question floats above all of them. For smaller nations, diaspora players raise standards. They can correct inequality, since a child with Cape Verdean heritage may have had coach- ing abroad that the homeland could never provide. To dis- miss such a player as foreign ignores why talent moves at all. Migration is not separate from national history; it often is na- tional history. But two distinct things lie beneath diaspora. One is heritage: A grandpar- ent, a language at home, a pass- port carried since childhood, Morocco's model, the Euro- pean-born run from Achraf Hakimi to Brahim Díaz to Canada-born Yassine Bounou. The other is convenience: The manufactured tie, the passport handed to an unconnected talent, as with Qatar's 14 for- eign-born players from nine countries. Both are legal, yet morally miles apart. The test is simple: Did the player have a real prior tie, or was the tie built for the occasion? Two former Dutch territories show the model's reach and its limits. Curaçao, debutants in this World Cup, built almost their whole squad from the Dutch system, with 25 of 26 born in the Netherlands, with only Tahith Chong born on the island. Suriname tried the same, arriving to the intercon- tinental play-offs where they lost to Bolivia and stayed home. The diaspora route is not a cheat code; it can take a tiny nation to within 90 minutes of a World Cup and still leave it short. A shop window with no house There is another side, and it is not mere bitterness. Imagine a player raised in the country, training on poor pitches, who believes the national team is the reward for local commit- ment, only to watch the federa- tion call up foreign-based play- ers who skipped the long, ugly work of reaching the nation's top. The message can feel bru- tal—work hard, but someone with a better passport and a grandparent from here may ar- rive ahead of you. Motivation depends on trust, and if the national team looks like a glob- al recruitment project rather than the summit of a domes- tic pyramid, local players may start asking why they bother. The answer is not to close the door, which would misread na- tionality and punish players for their family histories. The real issues are timing, transparen- cy, and development. A player who commits early, plays qualifiers and invests in the project expands the nation. A last-minute addition risks consuming it. Recruitment should strengthen domestic football, not replace it, as part of a wider plan of academies, coaching and facilities. Oth- erwise, the national team be- comes a shop window with no house behind it. The shirt can- not be only a legal document; it must mean participation, sacri- fice and connection. Edouard's refusal reminds us that the right to play and the standing to play are not the same. A player can be eligible and still ask whether taking the place is fair. The strongest teams will not choose between homegrown and diaspora play- ers; they will build a relation- ship between the two so do- mestic players feel challenged rather than replaced, and dias- pora players arrive as relatives, not tourists. In 2026, the question is no longer whether national iden- tity is fluid—it is. The harder question is whether football can make that fluidity feel fair. Jean Claude Randon Athlete and physical trainer In 2026, the question is no longer whether national identity is fluid— it is. The harder question is whether football can make that fluidity feel fair Odsonne Edouard
