WORLD CUP 2026 INJURY CRISIS: EVERY STAR PLAYER’S FITNESS STATUS — TRAINING, WARM-UPS & FINAL UPDATES
From Training Ground to Tournament: The Complete World Cup 2026 Injury Crisis Explained

The Injury Picture That Will Define This World Cup
The 2026 FIFA World Cup kicks off today, June 11, in Mexico City — and the injury crisis that has been building for months has now delivered its final, brutal reckoning. Players have gone down in training sessions, been helped off in warm-up friendlies, missed final tune-ups entirely, and in some cases been replaced in squads hours before the tournament began.
This is not a list of early-season setbacks that have long been resolved. These are live, tournament-shaping injury situations confirmed within the past week — in training camps, final friendlies, and pre-match medical assessments across three continents. This is the definitive, fully updated World Cup 2026 injury tracker, built on what actually happened, not what was feared weeks ago.
🔴 RULED OUT — CONFIRMED ABSENTEES
Lennart Karl — Germany | Ruled Out In Training, June 5
This is the injury story that crushed an entire nation’s mood the week of the tournament. Germany’s 18-year-old Bayern Munich attacking midfielder — who scored nine league goals this season and had become one of Julian Nagelsmann’s most trusted options — went down during Germany’s final training session in Chicago, just hours before their last warm-up friendly against the United States on June 6.
The injury occurred on the very last action of the session. “It happened during a shot — in the very last action of the final training session,” teammate Deniz Undav recounted. “When he then touched that spot, we realised ‘okay, something is wrong there.'” Nagelsmann was visibly emotional at the post-training briefing. “It doesn’t look good. He has gone to the hospital,” the manager said. The German Football Association later confirmed a muscle bundle tear in Karl’s left thigh. He was replaced in the squad by RB Leipzig’s 20-year-old midfielder Assan Ouédraogo, called up under World Cup rules that allow emergency replacements until 24 hours before a team’s opening game. “I feel incredibly sorry for Lenny,” Nagelsmann said. “With his light-heartedness, his creativity, his pace and his personality, he fit into the team perfectly.” Germany open against Curaçao on June 14.
Wesley — Brazil | Ruled Out in Friendly vs Egypt, June 6
Brazil’s preparations turned grim in Cleveland on June 6 when right-back Wesley sustained a thigh injury during their friendly against Egypt at Huntington Bank Field, forcing him off the pitch and out of the tournament entirely. The Brazilian Football Confederation confirmed Wesley would not travel to North America. He was replaced by Atalanta’s Ederson, who joined the squad immediately and appeared in training at the New York Red Bulls facility. The loss of Wesley compounds Brazil’s defensive situation, already stretched by earlier absentees. “Wesley is an athlete loved by the group and will always be considered part of this team that seeks the six-time world championship,” the confederation said.
Jurrien Timber — Netherlands | Ruled Out After Champions League Final
The Arsenal defender had been included in the Dutch squad on the hope he would recover in time from a groin injury. Timber did make an appearance as a substitute in the Champions League final against PSG, but it quickly became clear that he had not progressed sufficiently. The Netherlands issued a statement confirming his withdrawal: “The 24-year-old defender has not recovered sufficiently from a groin injury to take part in the World Cup in a medically responsible manner.” He was replaced by Lutsharel Geertruida. An agonising outcome for a player who had played through pain simply to be on the pitch for one of club football’s biggest nights.
Rodrygo Goes — Brazil | Torn ACL, March 2 (La Liga vs Getafe)
Brazil’s most devastating pre-tournament injury came early. Rodrygo suffered a torn anterior cruciate ligament and a torn lateral meniscus in his right knee during Real Madrid’s 1-0 loss to Getafe on March 2. Recovery was estimated at seven to nine months — a brutal, tournament-ending blow confirmed months before the squad was even assembled.
Estêvão — Brazil | Hamstring, April (vs Manchester United)
The brightest young talent in Brazilian football pulled up against Manchester United in April with a hamstring injury that left him in tears on the pitch. The initial prognosis was cautiously optimistic, but it soon became clear the damage was more serious than first feared, and he was left off Brazil’s preliminary squad entirely.
Xavi Simons — Netherlands | Long-Term Injury
The PSG midfielder was one of the most dynamic players in Europe this season before a long-term injury ended his club campaign. He was never a realistic World Cup hope after the timeline became clear. The Netherlands lose their most creative midfield option for a tournament they were widely expected to go deep in.
Hugo Ekitiké — France | Champions League Injury
The Liverpool striker suffered his injury during the Champions League quarter-final second leg against PSG on April 14 in Liverpool. He was ruled out of Didier Deschamps’s squad, a loss that is manageable given France’s extraordinary attacking depth but still removes a high-quality option.
Boubacar Kamara — France | Season-Ending Injury
This is the France World Cup 2026 injury that the tactical analysis community has flagged most urgently. Kamara was among the best defensive midfielders in the Premier League this season with Aston Villa — disciplined, tireless, perfectly suited to protecting a high defensive line. His absence is not a headline, but it is a structural gap. France’s back four will be more exposed to direct runners than they would have been with him anchoring the midfield.
Marc-André ter Stegen — Germany | Ongoing Injury Issues
Germany’s first-choice goalkeeper has been plagued by injury all season, including a devastating hamstring tear on loan at Girona. He has not played for Germany since June, prompting the extraordinary decision to recall 40-year-old Manuel Neuer. The veteran will start in goal for Germany at a World Cup — a situation that reflects the cumulative cost of ter Stegen’s injury misfortune.
Kaoru Mitoma — Japan | Long-Term Injury
Japan’s most technically gifted wide player was unable to convince the Japanese selectors of his fitness after suffering a long-term injury. Despite reportedly resuming training in March in a bid to make the tournament, he failed to prove his fitness and was not named in Japan’s 26-man squad. Japan’s chances of a deep run are materially reduced without their Premier League standout.
Dejan Kulusevski — Sweden | Long-Term Injury (Tottenham)
Another Tottenham casualty from what has been a dreadful pre-tournament injury record at club level. Kulusevski’s absence significantly reduces Sweden’s attacking threat in their first World Cup in recent memory.
🟡 MAJOR DOUBTS — RACING THE CLOCK WITH MINUTE RESTRICTIONS
Lionel Messi — Argentina | Left Hamstring Overload (May 24) → SCORED in Iceland Warm-Up (June 9)
This has been the most dramatic injury recovery story of the entire pre-tournament period. Messi left Inter Miami’s 6-4 victory over the Philadelphia Union on May 24 in the 73rd minute, grabbing his left thigh and heading straight to the tunnel. Inter Miami’s medical staff confirmed a muscular overload associated with fatigue in his left hamstring. The timing — less than three weeks before the tournament — sent football into a collective panic.
Argentina were immediately cautious. Messi participated in pre-match warmups for the Honduras friendly on June 6 in College Station, Texas, but did not play. Coach Lionel Scaloni was measured but reassuring: “Leo is doing well. Leo trained for a part with the group, which is important. He’s not fully separated; he’s coming along. He’s doing a lot better and that gives us tranquility.”
The breakthrough moment came in Auburn, Alabama, on June 9. Scaloni confirmed Messi would feature against Iceland in Argentina’s final pre-tournament friendly. “Messi will play, I just don’t know how many minutes,” Scaloni said. “We will decide, but in principle he will play.” The result delivered a relief wave across the entire football world: Messi entered in the 70th minute and scored shortly after coming on, as Argentina won 3-0. Twenty minutes, one goal, one emphatic signal. Argentina’s title defence is alive, and so is their captain. Argentina open against Algeria on June 16 at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City.
Lamine Yamal — Spain | Left Hamstring (April 22, vs Celta Vigo) → Sat Out Iraq Warm-Up (June 5)
The most-watched injury situation in world football belongs to the 18-year-old Barcelona winger who, by many metrics, is already the best player on the planet. Yamal suffered a hamstring injury during a LaLiga match against Celta de Vigo on April 22, pulling up after a penalty kick. “I never had a hamstring injury like that but I knew that it wasn’t going to be a short recovery time,” he said in an interview with the Spanish football federation. “I was afraid that it was something serious or that it could relapse and that I would miss the World Cup.”
The final confirmation of his status came from the training camp itself. Spain held their final warm-up against Iraq on June 5 in A Coruña — Yamal did not play. He remained at Spain’s base in Chattanooga, Tennessee, alongside Nico Williams and Víctor Muñoz, continuing individual rehabilitation. However, coach Luis de la Fuente remained publicly optimistic: “If nothing changes, he could be ready to play on June 15. It doesn’t mean that for sure he will play — maybe a few minutes, maybe just practice so he can improve his condition for the second match. We will have to evaluate.” Barcelona have reportedly advised Spain to limit Yamal to no more than 15 minutes in the opening game against Cape Verde, with minutes increasing gradually if there are no setbacks. Spain’s title defence will begin without its greatest weapon at full fitness — and De la Fuente knows it.
Neymar — Brazil | Grade-II Calf Injury → MRI Delay, Still Not Training Fully (June 9)
The emotional centrepiece of Brazil’s World Cup narrative has been Neymar’s race to be fit for what he has described as his final tournament. Brazil’s all-time leading scorer with 79 goals in 128 appearances has not played for his country since October 2023 — an absence now approaching three years. His surprise inclusion in Carlo Ancelotti’s 26-man squad generated enormous excitement, but the injury situation has turned increasingly complicated.
Neymar arrived at Brazil’s training camp carrying a grade-two calf injury, diagnosed by Brazil’s medical staff on arrival. Ancelotti was clear: “To be clear, Neymar will be with us. We believe he can recover in time for the first match, and if not, then for the second one.” But the most recent update from Brazil’s training camp on June 9 was sobering. Neymar was expected to rejoin the squad for the session but was absent after an MRI scan showed he still required additional recovery time before returning to full training. Brazil now hope he can be available for their second group match against Haiti on June 19, or their third against Scotland on June 24. He did not travel with the squad to the Egypt friendly in Cleveland on June 6. Brazil open against Morocco on June 13 in New Jersey — almost certainly without him.
Alphonso Davies — Canada | Hamstring (May 6, Champions League vs PSG) → Confirmed OUT for Opener
Canada’s most important player and captain injured his left hamstring during Bayern Munich’s Champions League semi-final second leg against PSG on May 6 — a match that knocked Bayern out of the competition. He has not played since. He missed Canada’s warm-up against Uzbekistan on June 1, running laps on the field before the match but unable to participate. When asked about his timeline, Davies was honest: “We just have to see how everything goes over the next couple of days. I’ll just continue my rehab, my progression, and see how I’m feeling, day by day, step by step.”
Coach Jesse Marsch then provided the definitive pre-tournament update in an interview with CBC: “No, he won’t play in the first game. But he’ll play in the tournament. We’re going to have to manage the group phase and get out. I think for sure he can be ready once we get out of the group. And I think if we’re smart, and good, and careful, that he can be ready for the third match in the group as well.” Canada open against Bosnia and Herzegovina on June 12 in Toronto — without their best player, in front of their own fans, on home soil. It is the cruellest possible timing.
Bukayo Saka — England | Achilles Injury (March) → Playing Through Pain, Can’t Train on Consecutive Days
England’s most consistent match-winner has been carrying an Achilles injury since March, and it remains unresolved. Saka was limited in his participation in Arsenal’s closing Premier League games, completed 90 minutes just once since March, and was substituted in the 83rd minute of the Champions League final against PSG on May 30. He has not played for England since November. Coach Thomas Tuchel provided a frank assessment after Saka joined camp: “Arsenal brought him back and he was straight away decisive. And then they decided together — Bukayo and Arsenal — to let him play through his pain and discomfort, even if it was not possible to train the whole week in the build-ups. I think it is very unlikely Bukayo starts and finishes all the matches from now on.” Tuchel confirmed Saka was involved in training sessions, but the Achilles situation means his workload will be tightly managed. England open against Croatia on June 17 in Dallas.
🟢 RECOVERED — FIT BUT RECENTLY RETURNED, MONITOR CLOSELY
Kylian Mbappe — France | Hamstring → Expected Fully Fit
France’s captain and the man who needs five World Cup goals to become the tournament’s all-time leading scorer suffered a hamstring injury for Real Madrid in the final weeks of the domestic season. The global panic was significant. The measured reality: he is expected to be fully fit for France’s tournament campaign. There is no current suggestion the injury will affect his availability. Mbappe’s own response to pre-tournament concern was characteristic directness — he was seen in full training with the French squad in their final camp preparations, and France reported no complications. France open their campaign in the group stage in good shape, with their captain healthy.
Cristián Romero — Argentina | Knee → Full Training Resumed
Argentina’s defensive leader suffered a knee injury in the spring that cast doubt over his tournament. The most recent reports from Argentina’s camp are encouraging: Romero has returned to full training with the Albiceleste and is expected to be available for the opener. Argentina had been managing several injury concerns simultaneously — Nico Paz (knee), Nahuel Molina, and Gonzalo Montiel were also training separately at various points. Scaloni confirmed Nico Paz completed his first full training session with the squad before the Iceland friendly. Romero’s recovery softens what had been a worrying window significantly.
William Saliba — France | Back Injury → Cleared by Deschamps
The Arsenal centre-back was listed as a doubt after a back injury raised concerns in the final weeks of the season. France coach Didier Deschamps ended that anxiety directly: “If he had had to play tomorrow, he would play,” Deschamps said on June 3. Saliba is confirmed available, and France’s defensive solidity is restored.
Achraf Hakimi — Morocco | Hamstring Tear (Champions League) → Recovered, Captaining Morocco
Hakimi suffered a hamstring tear during the Champions League campaign but has fully recovered. He is confirmed as Morocco’s captain and is expected to start against Brazil on June 13 in New Jersey. His availability is genuinely significant — Hakimi’s ability to drive forward from right-back at pace is central to how Morocco attack.
The Last-Minute Casualty
Lennart Karl — The Training Ground Horror Story
Of all the World Cup 2026 injury stories, Karl’s stands apart for its timing and cruelty. Not a match injury, not a niggling concern — but a muscle tear sustained on the very last action of Germany’s last training session before their final friendly. A shot. A stumble. A World Cup dream ended. He was 18 years old. Nagelsmann’s grief was visible and genuine. It is the starkest possible reminder that for these players, the injury risk never truly stops until the tournament is actually over.
What the Full Picture Tells Us
Step back from the individual cases and the World Cup 2026 injury crisis reveals a sport under structural pressure. Brazil will play their opening game without Rodrygo, Estêvão, Wesley, and almost certainly Neymar. France have lost their defensive midfielder and a striker before a ball has been kicked. Germany lost their most exciting young player in the last action of their last training session. Netherlands lost Timber after the Champions League final. Spain’s best player will be on a minute restriction for the first week of the tournament. Argentina’s captain played just 20 minutes of pre-tournament football. England’s most important attacker is physically managing pain every time he trains.
This is not a coincidence. It is the predictable consequence of a football calendar that demands elite players complete ten-month domestic seasons, European campaigns, and international windows without adequate recovery provisions — and then deliver immediately at a World Cup that spans another five weeks on top of it all.All 48 FIFA World Cup 2026 Teams in Alphabetical Order: Complete Squads & Schedule
The teams that navigate this injury landscape most intelligently — not just the teams with the best squads when everyone is fit — will be the ones contending on July 19 at MetLife Stadium.
Quick-Reference Status Table
| Player | Country | Injury | Last Update | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lennart Karl | Germany | Muscle tear (training, June 5) | Out — replaced by Ouédraogo | 🔴 OUT |
| Wesley | Brazil | Thigh (vs Egypt, June 6) | Out — replaced by Ederson | 🔴 OUT |
| Jurrien Timber | Netherlands | Groin (post-CL Final) | Out — replaced by Geertruida | 🔴 OUT |
| Rodrygo | Brazil | ACL + meniscus (March 2) | Out all season | 🔴 OUT |
| Estêvão | Brazil | Hamstring (April) | Not in squad | 🔴 OUT |
| Xavi Simons | Netherlands | Long-term | Not in squad | 🔴 OUT |
| Hugo Ekitiké | France | CL injury (April) | Not in squad | 🔴 OUT |
| Boubacar Kamara | France | Season-ending | Not in squad | 🔴 OUT |
| Marc-André ter Stegen | Germany | Ongoing hamstring | Not in squad | 🔴 OUT |
| Kaoru Mitoma | Japan | Long-term | Failed fitness test | 🔴 OUT |
| Dejan Kulusevski | Sweden | Long-term | Not in squad | 🔴 OUT |
| Lionel Messi | Argentina | L. hamstring overload (May 24) | Scored vs Iceland (June 9) | 🟡 MANAGED |
| Lamine Yamal | Spain | L. hamstring (April 22) | Sat out Iraq friendly | 🟡 MINUTE LIMIT |
| Neymar | Brazil | Grade-II calf | Not in full training (June 9) | 🟡 RACE VS TIME |
| Alphonso Davies | Canada | Hamstring (May 6) | OUT for opener — confirmed | 🟡 OUT GAME 1 |
| Bukayo Saka | England | Achilles (March) | Training, cannot do consecutive days | 🟡 MANAGED |
| Kylian Mbappe | France | Hamstring (May) | Full training, expected fit | 🟢 FIT |
| Cristián Romero | Argentina | Knee (spring) | Full training resumed | 🟢 FIT |
| William Saliba | France | Back | Cleared by Deschamps (June 3) | 🟢 FIT |
| Achraf Hakimi | Morocco | Hamstring (CL) | Recovered, captaining team | 🟢 FIT |
Updated June 11, 2026 — tournament Day One. Status will be updated as matches begin.





