The Story

The Goal of the Year. The Copa América. And Then — Nothing. The Alejandro Garnacho FIFA World Cup 2026 Story

There is a version of this article that writes itself easily — a 21-year-old talent, born in Madrid but Argentine at heart, arriving at his first World Cup ready to light up North America alongside Messi, Di María, and the defending champions. The Alejandro Garnacho FIFA World Cup 2026 story, in the version football had been quietly expecting, was supposed to be one of the tournament’s most compelling subplots. Instead, it is the story of one of the most controversial squad omissions in recent memory.

Lionel Scaloni left him out. The man who won the 2024 FIFA Puskás Award — the most beautiful goal on earth, officially — will not be playing at the 2026 World Cup in North America. At 21 years old, with a Chelsea contract running to 2032 and an overhead kick that Argentina fans will be watching on their phones for decades, Garnacho is not on the plane.

The football world has opinions. Strong ones.

To understand why this decision hurts as much as it does — and why it is not entirely indefensible — you need to understand the whole story. You need to understand a boy born in Madrid who chose Argentina over Spain, who idolised Cristiano Ronaldo and played like him at Old Trafford, who scored a bicycle kick so stunning that Roy Keane ran out of words and Gary Neville ran out of superlatives. You need to understand a transfer to Chelsea that promised a fresh start and delivered, by the hard standards of a player of his ability, a season that fell short of what everyone — including Scaloni — needed to see.

This is the full Alejandro Garnacho FIFA World Cup 2026 story. All of it.

🏆 FIFA Puskás Award 2024
“The Most Beautiful Goal in the World”
Bicycle Kick vs Everton — November 2023
Voted best goal on the planet by fans and FIFA legends · Announced by Alessandro Del Piero in Doha · Only the second Argentine to ever win the award (after Erik Lamela, 2021)
 
Biography

Madrid-Born, Argentine-Hearted: The Making of a Phenomenon

Alejandro Garnacho Ferreyra was born on July 1, 2004, in Madrid, Spain — a city that also happened to be the home of two of the clubs that shaped him most profoundly. His mother is Argentine, which gave him the eligibility to choose between two international footballing identities — and eventually, the choice he made would define his entire professional story.

He began his youth career at Getafe’s academy before progressing to Atlético Madrid at the age of eleven, spending five years within one of La Liga’s most demanding development environments. Atlético Madrid’s academy is not a finishing school — it is a pressure cooker. Players who survive it emerge technically complete, tactically disciplined, and mentally resilient. Garnacho survived it. More than that, he thrived.

In October 2020, aged 16, he made the decision that would change everything: leaving Madrid for Manchester, joining Manchester United’s academy after the club identified him as one of the most exciting teenage left-sided attackers in European football. The move required the kind of courage that most teenagers cannot access — leaving home, leaving the city that formed him, arriving in England mid-pandemic, knowing nobody, with everything to prove.

He proved it. Rapidly and emphatically.

“If you want to be a player like Rooney or Ronaldo, you have to score 20, 25 goals in the Premier League. But the potential — he has it.”

— Erik ten Hag, former Manchester United manager, November 2023

 
Club Career

From Old Trafford to Stamford Bridge: The Alejandro Garnacho FIFA World Cup 2026 Club Journey

Garnacho won the FA Youth Cup and the Jimmy Murphy Young Player of the Year award in 2022, before making his first-team debut in April of the same year — a substitute appearance against Chelsea, of all clubs, in a 1–1 draw. He was 17 years old and the Premier League was immediately aware that something different had arrived.

His first full seasons at United were an education in accelerated brilliance. He won the EFL Cup in 2022–23 and the FA Cup in 2023–24, scoring in the latter final — a performance that announced him as a player capable of producing in the biggest domestic moments. In that same season, he delivered the goal that would define his early career and win him global recognition: a bicycle kick against Everton at Goodison Park, in the third minute, from a Diogo Dalot cross. The ball flew over Jordan Pickford and into the far corner. Roy Keane, not a man given to easy compliments, was briefly silenced before offering: “Very few players in the world can do that.” Gary Neville called it “the most beautiful overhead kick” he had ever seen.

FIFA agreed. In December 2024, Garnacho was awarded the Puskás Award — the official recognition of the best goal on the planet between August 2023 and August 2024 — announced by Juventus legend Alessandro Del Piero in Doha. He became only the second Argentine to win the award, following Erik Lamela’s rabona in 2021. The first winner, in 2009, was Cristiano Ronaldo — the player Garnacho had idolised growing up.

In total across his United career, he made 144 appearances and registered 48 goal involvements. In his final season under Ruben Amorim in 2024–25, he played 58 games, scored 11 goals, and provided 10 assists. When Amorim informed Garnacho — along with Rashford, Sancho, and others — that he had no place in the new United structure, Chelsea moved quickly. In August 2025, he joined the Club World Cup champions for approximately £40 million on a contract until 2032.

The Chelsea chapter has been productive but unspectacular. In the Premier League in 2025–26, Garnacho made 24 appearances — 14 starts — contributing 1 goal and 4 assists across all competitions. His xA (expected assists) of 0.30 per 90 minutes placed him in the 97th percentile of all Premier League players — an elite creator by any statistical measure. The goal return, though, fell below what Scaloni needed to see. And in the coldest equation of international football, creation without goals was not enough.

 
International Career

Eight Caps, A Copa América Medal, and a Devastating Snub: Garnacho’s Argentina Journey

Garnacho’s international story is one of enormous promise never quite fully realised at senior level. Born in Spain, he represented La Roja at youth level before committing to Argentina in 2022 — a decision that felt natural given his heritage and, perhaps, his sense of where his footballing identity truly lay. Lionel Scaloni welcomed him. Lionel Messi played alongside him.

He made his senior debut for the Albiceleste in June 2023 in a friendly against Australia and quickly became a regular face in squads. He was part of Argentina’s Copa América 2024 squad — the squad that lifted the trophy in the United States — though his personal involvement was limited to a single group-stage appearance. Eight senior caps in total. Zero international goals.

When he joined Chelsea and started from behind in Scaloni’s thinking, he reportedly called the Argentina coach directly. According to reports, Scaloni told him: “Yes, there is room for you, but keep in mind you’re starting from behind. You’ll have to prove a lot to return to the national team.” Garnacho proved enough to earn back squad call-ups during the 2025–26 season — but not enough, in the end, to earn a seat on the plane to North America.

The omission was confirmed when Scaloni named his official 26-man squad and Garnacho’s name was absent. In his place: Nico Paz, Valentín Barco, Giuliano Simeone. Players who had done enough. Players who had, by the scorer’s ruthless arithmetic, outperformed him when it mattered.

The football world erupted. Garnacho — the Puskás Award winner, the Chelsea winger, the 21-year-old who had never stopped working — would be watching the World Cup from home.

 
Career Timeline

Alejandro Garnacho FIFA World Cup 2026 — Career Timeline

 
📅 2004
Born in Madrid — A Dual Identity Begins
Born in Madrid to an Argentine mother, Garnacho grows up playing football in Spain and joins Getafe’s academy before moving to Atlético Madrid at 11. The choice of international identity — Spain or Argentina — would shape his entire career.
 
📅 Oct 2020
Manchester United — A Leap of Faith at 16
Leaves Atlético Madrid for Manchester United’s academy at 16, mid-pandemic. Within 18 months he wins the FA Youth Cup, the Jimmy Murphy Young Player of the Year award, and his first-team debut.
 
📅 April 2022
Senior Debut — Against Chelsea, of all Teams
Garnacho makes his Manchester United first-team debut as a substitute in a 1–1 draw against Chelsea. He is 17. Three years later, Chelsea will pay £40 million for him.
 
📅 Nov 2023
The Bicycle Kick — The Goal That Changed Everything
In the third minute at Goodison Park, Garnacho meets a Diogo Dalot cross with a perfectly timed overhead kick. Jordan Pickford is helpless. The world watches in disbelief. Roy Keane runs out of words. Gary Neville calls it “the most beautiful overhead kick” he has ever seen.
 
📅 Dec 2024
FIFA Puskás Award — Best Goal on the Planet
Garnacho wins the 2024 FIFA Puskás Award, confirmed by Alessandro Del Piero at the ceremony in Doha. He becomes only the second Argentine to win the award. The first-ever winner was his idol, Cristiano Ronaldo.
 
📅 Aug 2025
Chelsea Signing — £40M and a Fresh Start
After being told he has no place in Ruben Amorim’s United plans, Garnacho joins Chelsea for approximately £40 million on a contract to 2032. He declares them “the best team in the world” after their Club World Cup triumph. The World Cup is the aim.
 
📅 May 2026
The Snub — Scaloni Leaves Him Behind
Lionel Scaloni names his 26-man World Cup squad. Alejandro Garnacho is not in it. One goal and four assists in 24 Premier League appearances — productive but not decisive enough for the defending champions’ brutal selection process. He will watch from home.
 
2025–26 Stats

Alejandro Garnacho FIFA World Cup 2026 — Season Stats

Chelsea 2025–26 — All Competitions

CompetitionAppsStartsGoalsAssistsxA/90Avg Rating
Premier League2414140.30~7.1
Champions League910~7.0
FA Cup210
All Competitions3534Top 97%

Manchester United Career (2022–2025)

SeasonAppsGoalsAssistsG+A Total
2022–23346410
2023–245216925
2024–2558111021
United Career Total144332348

Argentina Senior International Stats

CompetitionAppsGoalsAssistsStatus
Copa América 2024100Winner (squad)
Friendlies / Qualifiers700
Career Total800WC 2026: NOT SELECTED
 
Playing Style

Alejandro Garnacho FIFA World Cup 2026 — Playing Style Breakdown

1. Attacking Qualities

Garnacho is, at his best, one of the most thrilling left-sided attacking players in the Premier League. His directness in 1v1 situations — the burst of pace off the left flank, the cut inside onto the right foot, the low driven shot across the goalkeeper — is among the most dangerous attacking patterns any winger in English football can produce. His 2023–24 season at United, where he contributed 25 goal involvements in 52 appearances, represents the ceiling of what he can produce when given consistent starts in a functioning system.

2. Technical Skills

The left foot is his primary weapon but his right is functional enough to create unpredictability. His close control at speed is elite — he can carry the ball through pressure at pace in a way that very few wingers at his age can manage. His assist numbers at Chelsea in 2025–26 — an xA of 0.30 per 90 minutes placing him in the 97th percentile of all Premier League players — confirm that his creative qualities remain intact. The issue at Chelsea has been converting that creation into his own scoring output, where his 1 league goal represents a significant dip from his United numbers.