Brazil thrash Panama 6-2 in FIFA World Cup 2026 send-off

Brazil turned on the style with a 6-2 drubbing of Panama on Sunday in a lopsided FIFA World Cup 2026 send-off at the Maracana Stadium in Rio de Janeiro.

Real Madrid star Vinicius Jr fired the Brazilians into the lead inside the opening minute, collecting a pass from veteran midfielder Casemiro before lashing in a thunderous strike from 25 yards.

The five-time World Cup-winners were jolted, though, in the 14th minute when Panama grabbed a freak equaliser, Michael Murillo’s free-kick taking a wicked deflection off Matheus Cunha and sailing past Brazil keeper Alisson.

The combination of Vinicius and Casemiro restored Brazil’s advantage six minutes before half-time.

Vinicius jinked into space on the left-hand side of the penalty area, and what looked like a curling shot destined for the far corner was helped into the net by a glancing header from Casemiro.

Brazil coach Carlo Ancelotti rang the changes at half-time, replacing his entire starting line-up with the exception of Leo Pereira as the second half got underway.

The new-look Selecao wasted no time in asserting their superiority, rattling in three quick goals to put Brazil 5-1 up.

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Teenager Rayan made it 3-1 in the 53rd minute, the 19-year-old Bournemouth talent collecting a misplaced pass from Panama goalkeeper Orlando Mosquera on the right flank and calmly curling in his shot to the delight of the Maracana crowd.

Lucas Paqueta swept in Brazil’s fourth from the edge of the area in the 60th minute, and Igor Thiago made it 5-1 from the penalty spot three minutes later after being brought down by Mosquera.

Botafogo’s Danilo completed Brazil’s scoring in the 81st minute, controlling Paqueta’s floated pass into the box before wrongfooting the covering Panama defence and burying the finish.

Panama grabbed a late consolation when Carlos Harvey crashed in a 30-yard screamer.

Brazil will face a final friendly against Egypt in Cleveland, Ohio, next Saturday, before opening their World Cup Group C campaign against Morocco on June 13.

The Brazilians will also face Haiti and Scotland in the first round of the tournament.

READ: Brazil teen Fonseca downs Ruud to reach French Open quarters

Brazilian teen Fonseca downs Ruud to reach French Open quarters

Brazilian sensation Joao Fonseca clinched a dramatic four-set triumph against Casper Ruud in the French Open last 16, backing up his win over Novak Djokovic in style.

The 19-year-old powered his way to a 7-5, 7-6 (10/8), 5-7, 6-2 win in the night match at Roland Garros to reach his maiden Grand Slam quarter-final, where he will face Czech youngster Jakub Mensik.

Fonseca showed a different side to his game after coming back from two sets down against both Dino Prizmic in round two and Djokovic on Friday.

He held off a battling Ruud, a two-time French Open finalist, in a gruelling contest that lasted three hours and 55 minutes and finished at 12:27 am local time on Monday morning.

“It was tough, Casper plays good here, he’s a very experienced guy and he knows how to play here on this court,” said Fonseca, who hit 51 winners in another exciting display.

“It was tough in the beginning but I played well in the important moments in the first and second sets.”

After Rafael Jodar’s victory over Pablo Carreno Busta on Sunday, Fonseca’s win means it is only the fifth time in the last 40 years two teenagers have reached the quarter-finals of a men’s Grand Slam competition.

He is the fourth Brazilian man to reach the Roland Garros last eight in the Open era, and the first since three-time champion Gustavo Kuerten, who was watching on from the players’ box on Court Philippe Chatrier.

“I just try to be me on court, try to be happy, try to hit winners, try to hit good shots, try to be entertaining,” added Fonseca, the 28th seed.

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Ruud was quickly put onto the back foot by Fonseca’s ferocious hitting and had to stave off three break points in the fourth game.

The vocal Brazilian fans dotted around Chatrier were on their feet again though in game 12, as Fonseca brought up a second set point with a brilliant backhand up the line before Ruud found the net.

The momentum was firmly with the teenager and he broke in the second game of the second set with a rasping passing shot, but Ruud hit back straight away.

The Norwegian started to put Fonseca under pressure, but the youngster saved five further break points in the set, including three in a marathon 11th game.

Ruud had to dig deep himself to force a tie-break, seeing off two set points on his own serve.

A dramatic breaker saw Ruud see a 5-2 lead slip away, miss three set points and then Fonseca finally take it with a blistering forehand.

Ruud showed all his battling qualities in his attempts to extend the match, saving break points in two separate games and then picking the perfect moment to break and force a fourth set.

Fonseca immediately refound his range, though, moving quickly into a 2-0 advantage.

Ruud’s resistance was finally broken when he dropped serve again to slip 4-1 behind, and Fonseca wrapped up victory on his first match point with a deft volley.

READ: IPL 2026: Vaibhav Sooryavanshi win multiple awards after record-breaking season

Canada suffer blow as injured Flores ruled out of World Cup 2026

Canada midfielder Marcelo Flores was ruled out of the FIFA World Cup 2026 on Sunday after suffering a knee injury during Saturday’s CONCACAF Champions Cup final, head coach Jesse Marsch confirmed.

Flores, who plays for Mexican side Tigres UANL, suffered a ruptured cruciate ligament in his team’s defeat to Deportivo Toluca, Marsch said.

“Obviously, we’re devastated for him,” Marsch said after confirming the 22-year-old’s exit from the World Cup.

Marsch has not yet decided on a replacement for Flores as he prepares for Canada’s friendly against Uzbekistan in Edmonton on Monday.

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Flores formally switched his allegiance to represent Canada earlier this year after previously playing for Mexico in friendly games. Flores, who was born in Canada, was eligible to play for El Tri due to his Mexican father.

Marsch, meanwhile, had a more encouraging injury update concerning Bayern Munich star Alphonso Davies, who was named as captain of the Canadian squad on Friday despite carrying a hamstring injury.

“He has had an MRI last week and it shows there has been really good progress, he’s typically a good healer so it’s a good sign,” Marsch said.

Canada, one of the three co-hosts of the World Cup, open their tournament against Bosnia-Herzegovina in Toronto on June before further Group B games against Switzerland and Qatar.

READ: Luca Zidane named in Algeria’s provisional squad for World Cup 2026

Luca Zidane named in Algeria’s provisional squad for World Cup 2026

Goalkeeper Luca Zidane has been included in the 27-man provisional squad of Algeria for the FIFA World Cup 2026, despite sustaining a fractured jaw in late April, coach Vladimir Petkovic announced on Sunday.

However, the 28-year-old’s place is not yet guaranteed, with four goalkeepers named in the squad, which must be reduced to 26 players ahead of the tournament.

The son of former France great Zinedine Zidane suffered a concussion as well as fractures to his jaw and chin while playing for Spanish second-division side Granada.

He featured at the Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) in Morocco in January after opting to represent Algeria.

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As expected, Bosnian coach Petkovic also called up defender Ramy Bensebaini, midfielders Nabil Bentaleb and Houssem Aouar, and forwards Amine Gouiri and Riyad Mahrez.

Mahrez, 35, a former Manchester City star, now plays in Saudi Arabia.

Algeria’s World Cup campaign begins on June 16 against champions Argentina. They are in Group J with Austria and Jordan.

Algeria preliminary squad for FIFA World Cup 2026

Goalkeepers: Oussama Benbot (USM), Melvin Mastil (Nyon), Abdelatif Ramdane (MC Alger), Luca Zidane (Granada)

Defenders: Achref Abada (USM), Rayan Ait-Nouri (Manchester City), Zinedine Belaid (JS Kabylie), Rafik Belghali (Verona), Ramy Bensebaini (Borussia Dortmund), Samir Chergui (Paris FC), Jaouen Hadjam (Young Boys), Aissa Mandi (Lille), Mohamed Amine Tougai (Esperance)

Midfielders: Houssem Aouar (Al-Ittihad), Nabil Bentaleb (Lille), Hicham Boudaoui (Nice), Fares Chaibi (Eintracht Frankfurt), Ibarhaim Maza (Bayer Leverkusen), Yacine Titraoui (Charleroi), Ramiz Zerrouki (Twente)

Forwards: Mohamed Amoura (Wolfsburg), Nadhir Benbouali (Gyor), Adil Boulbina (Al-Duhail), Fares Ghedjemis (Frosinone), Amine Gouiri (Marseille), Anis Hadj Moussa (Feyenoord), Riyad Mahrez (Al-Ahli)

READ: Ibrahima Konate leaves Liverpool on a free transfer

Ibrahima Konate leaves Liverpool on a free transfer

Ibrahima Konate’s five-year stay at Liverpool will end when his contract expires next month after failing to agree a new deal, the club confirmed on Sunday.

The France international said last month he was confident of agreeing terms with the Premier League giants. However, no breakthrough in negotiations was found, and he will become the third high-profile player this season to walk away from Anfield on a free transfer.

Mohamed Salah and Andy Robertson have also departed after a glittering nine years on Merseyside.

“Liverpool FC can confirm Ibrahima Konate is set to leave the club upon the expiry of his contract this summer,” the club said in a statement.

“Konate will depart with our gratitude and appreciation for the contribution he made and everyone at the club wishes him the best for the future.”

Konate was a major part of the Liverpool side that stormed to the Premier League title in the 2024/25 season.

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He also won two League Cups and the FA Cup during his time at Anfield. But the 27-year-old’s form dipped drastically at the beginning of this season during a difficult campaign for the Reds.

It was also a season marked by tragedy for Konate, whose father died earlier this year, and for the club after the loss of forward Diogo Jota in a car accident.

“Representing this club has been an honour. We’ve shared incredible moments together… highs and lows, trophies, challenges, lifelong friendships, and heartbreaking moments that will stay with us forever, none more painful than losing our brother Diogo,” Konate said in a statement.

“Losing my father this year was one of the hardest periods of my life, but even through hardship, my commitment to this club never changed. During the toughest moments, I gave everything I had for this badge.”

Arne Slot was sacked on Saturday after finishing fifth in the Premier League, 25 points behind champions Arsenal.

Paris-born Ibrahima Konate has been linked with a move to European champions Paris Saint-Germain. His departure could force Liverpool into the transfer market for more defensive cover, despite the arrival next season of Jeremy Jacquet in a £60 million ($81 million) move from Rennes.

READ: Virat Kohli stars as defending champions RCB retain IPL title

Marta Kostyuk downs Iga Swiatek in latest French Open upset

Four-time former champion Iga Swiatek endured a miserable birthday as she was eliminated from the French Open fourth round on Sunday by Marta Kostyuk.

The Polish third seed went down 7-5, 6-1 to the 15th seed from Ukraine.

Kostyuk, the Madrid Open winner, moved into the quarter-finals at Roland Garros for the first time in her career.

“I’m still in shock to beat such an unbelievable player who won four times here and I lost four times to her before this, I never took a set off her,” 23-year-old Kostyuk said.

Swiatek will now go another year without the title she first won in 2020 and then three times consecutively between 2022 and 2024.

With her fourth-round exit, it was the joint worst performance at Roland Garros for the 25-year-old, equal with the last-16 departure she suffered on her debut in Paris seven years ago.

The first set went on serve until the seventh game when Swiatek pounced on Kostyuk’s service to move in front.

From there, the Pole’s own delivery deserted her as the world number 15 hit back to level before the pair again exchanged another pair of breaks.

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Kostyuk then dug in to hold and force the former world number one to try and serve to stay in the set.

Two Swiatek double faults gave Kostyuk the chance to claim the opener and she did with a low cross-court backhand that whizzed past her opponent at the net.

Swiatek swiftly departed the court at the interval in a bid to regroup.

She came back out firing as she immediately nosed ahead with a break to 15.

But Kostyuk was not to be denied as she sealed a three-game streak with a bruising forehand winner past a stranded Swiatek to lead 3-1.

A stunning rally concluded with a reflex volley at the net that Swiatek could not equal. In the next game a dominant Kostyuk held to love to move Swiatek to the brink.

The match was up for the six-time major winner as Kostyuk consistently pinned the Pole back with her powerful groundstrokes to win the final two games.

Kostyuk will face either seventh-seeded compatriot Elina Svitolina or Swiss 11th seed Belinda Bencic for a spot in the semi-finals.

READ: Mohammad Yousaf picks Pakistan’s greats after 1000th ODI

Son on track for FIFA World Cup with double in South Korea win

Son Heung-min ended his goal drought with a double as South Korea warmed up for the FIFA World Cup 2026 by hammering Trinidad and Tobago 5-0 in a friendly on Saturday.

The 33-year-old has faced growing questions about his faltering form after scoring only twice for his club Los Angeles FC this season.

His last goal for South Korea came in a friendly against Bolivia in November, 2025.

But the captain was back on target as South Korea cruised past the Caribbean team at their training camp in Salt Lake City, Utah, with fellow striker Cho Gue-sung also hitting a double.

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South Korea will face the Czech Republic, South Africa and co-hosts Mexico in Group A and begin their campaign against the Czechs in Guadalajara on June 11.

Son gave his team the lead five minutes before half-time, turning home a low cross in the penalty box.

He doubled their tally minutes later from the penalty spot, drilling the ball into the corner of the net.

It took his international tally to 56 goals in 144 games, two short of Cha Bum-kun’s South Korea record.

READ: Hundreds arrested as clashes erupt in Paris after PSG victory

Hundreds arrested as clashes erupt in Paris after PSG victory

Police on Saturday detained more than 280 people in Paris after violent clashes erupted when thousands poured onto the streets during Paris Saint-Germain’s Champions League final victory.

Some 22,000 police were deployed across France for the game, including 8,000 in Paris, after unrest marred PSG’s win in the competition last year. Paris tram lines were halted, several metro stations shut and bus traffic halted in places in a bid to minimise disturbances.

According to the French interior ministry, 416 people were detained nationwide, including 283 who were apprehended in Paris. It was not immediately clear how many of these individuals were remanded in custody to face further investigation.

Interior minister Laurent Nunez said seven officers had been wounded and called the unrest “absolutely unacceptable.”

Six vehicles and two businesses were damaged.

A group of supporters also stormed the Paris ring road, the peripherique, bringing traffic to a halt for a time and letting off flares, an AFP photographer said.

As fans celebrated the dramatic penalty shoot out victory in the Hungarian capital, Budapest, some 20,000 people converged on Paris’s iconic Champs-Elysees avenue, police said.

Shops boarded up their windows ahead of the match to avoid a repeat of disturbances last year when youths ransacked shops on the Champs-Elysees and other streets. Hundreds of people were arrested.

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Two dozen flares and about 100 fireworks were seized Saturday, while a bus shelter was destroyed near the Champs-Elysees.

The match also came on a hectic evening in Paris, with singer Aya Nakamura performing at the Stade de France national stadium, rapper Damso at the La Defense Arena and the French Open tennis in full swing.

Police said a bakery and a restaurant were damaged near PSG’s Parc des Princes stadium, where tens of thousands gathered inside to watch the match but 4,000 to 5,000 people loitered outside with projectiles which were thrown at officers.

About 150 people “attempted to enter through one of the gates” at the stadium but police pushed them back, a police spokesperson said.

Some also attempted to erect a barricade with rental bikes which was cleared by police.

An AFP reporter at the scene said clashes broke out between police and supporters near the stadium, and officers responded with tear gas when fireworks were thrown at them.

– ‘Only in France’ –

The scenes angered the French far right, with three-time presidential candidate Marine Le Pen writing on X that “only in France does a football club’s victory spark riots.”

“Only in France does everyone feel compelled to lock themselves in their homes on the evening of a victory to avoid being confronted with violence,” she added.

Nunez said there was a “very robust, very solid system in place” to curb violence.

“Our responsibility is to guarantee everyone a festive celebration that is calm and fully secure,” a police spokesperson said.

The players will take part in a parade on Sunday afternoon on the Champs-de-Mars in front of the Eiffel Tower with some 100,000 peopl expected, before being received by President Emmanuel Macron at the Elysee Palace.

READ: PSG edge Arsenal on penalties to retain Champions League title

PSG edge Arsenal on penalties to retain Champions League title

Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) claimed back-to-back Champions League triumphs with a 4-3 shoot-out win over Arsenal following a 1-1 draw after extra time on Saturday in Budapest, with Eberechi Eze and Gabriel missing from the spot.

Mikel Arteta’s Premier League champions showed great resilience to take the game beyond 120 minutes, but fell to a second final defeat, 20 years after their first in Paris against Barcelona.

Luis Enrique’s side became only the second, besides Real Madrid, to win the competition in consecutive years in the Champions League era.

PSG’s first triumph was 55 years in the making, 14 of those under Qatari ownership; the second could start what they hope is an era of dominance and dynasty-building.

Luis Enrique rebuilt the team swiftly and efficiently, removing the club’s superstars and building a cohesive and committed attacking side, capable of shredding opposition with terrifying pace.

It was the Spaniard’s third Champions League triumph, making him one of only five coaches to complete a hat-trick, the first coming with Barcelona in 2015.

For a while, it looked unlikely as Kai Havertz powered Arsenal ahead after six minutes, but Ousmane Dembele’s penalty midway through the second half took a tight game to extra time and ultimately penalties.

Arsenal’s Jurrien Timber was fit after a groin injury, but his rust from over two months out led Arteta to deploy Cristhian Mosquera out of position at right-back.

The coach also opted for Havertz in attack over Viktor Gyokeres, and for an hour, it seemed like his calls would pay off.

Luis Enrique selected 10 of the side which demolished Inter Milan 5-0 in last year’s final as PSG finally lifted the trophy they so badly craved.

In Arsenal’s only prior final, German goalkeeper Jens Lehmann was sent off in the opening stages as they were defeated by Barcelona in Paris in 2006.

They got off to a far better start at the Puskas Arena, with Lehmann’s compatriot Havertz firing the Gunners ahead after just six minutes.

Havertz, who scored the winning goal in Chelsea’s 2021 Champions League final victory, could not believe his luck after Marquinhos’s attempted clearance hit Leandro Trossard and bounced into his path.

The forward galloped into open space behind PSG’s defence and towards Matvey Safonov’s goal. Havertz had a tight angle to overcome but rifled a strike into the roof of the net.

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It was the worst possible start for PSG against a miserly Arsenal side who had conceded just six goals on the run to the final.

Their disciplined defending kept the Parisians at bay with consummate ease, as Luis Enrique’s side controlled the ball but could not break through Arsenal’s defensive bastion.

Gabriel Magalhaes made an excellent last-ditch challenge to pick Khvicha Kvaratskhelia’s pocket. The dynamic Georgian has been the tournament’s best player, but in the first half was not allowed room to breathe.

The French champions appealed for a penalty when Bukayo Saka bungled an attempted clearance, and the ball hit both his arms, but referee Daniel Siebert was unmoved.

PSG were reduced to frustrated pot-shots from distance, and after the break, moved the ball more quickly to try and destabilise Arsenal’s rearguard.

Arsenal goalkeeper David Raya saved from Achraf Hakimi’s bouncing free-kick before Kvaratskhelia finally had his say. After the winger’s slick one-two with Dembele, Mosquera bundled him down in the box with a clumsy foul.

Dembele sent Raya the wrong way with a low penalty to level, with PSG fans igniting several flares in celebration. It was their 45th goal of the competition, matching the all-time record.

PSG almost set a new one when Kvaratskhelia hurtled down the left, but teenager Myles Lewis-Skelly deflected his shot against the post.

Substitute Bradley Barcola fired a fine chance wide on the break before extra time, as the French side threatened frequently, a tiring Arsenal suddenly giving them too much space.

The Gunners pleaded for a penalty of their own when substitute Noni Madueke went down under pressure from Nuno Mendes, but it would have been harsh on the PSG defender whom the winger was pulling.

To a shoot-out it went, with PSG confident after already claiming three trophies on penalties this season, and winning their last five. They also took the first spot kick, and at the end, in front of their own supporters.

Arsenal blinked first, with Ebereche Eze firing wide, but Raya then saved from PSG’s Mendes. Declan Rice drilled home to level at 2-2.

After Lucas Beraldo put the Ligue 1 winners 4-3 up, Arsenal defender Gabriel was left with the fifth kick for his side and lashed it high over the crossbar to hand PSG the trophy.

READ: Arafat Minhas shines on debut as Pakistan outclass Australia in ODI series opener

Alphonso Davies in Canada squad for FIFA World Cup 2026 despite injury

Alphonso Davies and Jonathan David were the star names in the final squad of Canada for the FIFA World Cup 2026 as coach Jesse Marsch unveiled the co-host’s 26-man roster on Friday.

Bayern Munich defender Davies was deemed sufficiently fit for inclusion despite battling a hamstring injury, while Juventus forward David leads the line for a side that has never won a World Cup game but has shot up the FIFA rankings in recent years.

Other key names included were Porto playmaker Stephen Eustaquio, box-to-box Sassuolo midfielder Ismael Kone, Villarreal duo Tajon Buchanan and Tani Oluwaseyi, and Southampton attacker Cyle Larin.

Also named despite injury doubts were Nice defender Moise Bombito, Norwich midfielder Ali Ahmed, Los Angeles FC winger Jacob Shaffelburg, and Promise David, a striker for Belgium’s Union SG.

“We have really our best group of 26 players that this country has ever assembled at any one time,” said Marsch.

“Are all of them right now at full 100 percent? No, but they’re close,” he added, signalling frustration at the repeated questions from the media about players’ injuries.

Each squad player’s name was unveiled and displayed on banners displayed on Toronto’s famous CN Tower.

As one of three co-hosts, along with the United States and Mexico, Canada will play all three group games on home turf.

Canada’s Group B campaign begins against Bosnia-Herzegovina in Toronto on June 12, before shifting to Vancouver for clashes with Qatar and Switzerland.

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In two previous appearances at the World Cup, the 1986 finals in Mexico and the 2022 tournament in Qatar, Canada have a perfect record of six defeats in six matches.

But the Canadians surprised many by reaching the semi-finals of the Copa America in 2024, where they only narrowly lost on penalties to Uruguay in the third-place playoff.

Most prominent among the injury concerns has been Canada’s talisman Davies, who faces a race against time to be fit for Canada’s first game. He picked up a hamstring injury in Bayern Munich’s Champions League semi-final clash with Paris Saint-Germain.

That followed a series of muscle injuries after returning from an eight-month layoff with an ACL tear in October.

“We’ve had a pretty good idea of who our core group is for a while. The real X factor in all these decisions was to determine…which players are gonna be healthy, and who could we project to be really close to 100 per cent and in the best form of their life,” said Marsch.

“Luckily, we are on track with a lot of guys. Will everyone be 100 percent for the Bosnia match? No, that won’t be the case. But we will have a really strong core that will be ready for that match, and we believe we can get stronger as the tournament goes on.”

Much will depend on David, the most expensive Canadian footballer in history, with Lille splashing out 30 million euros ($34.8 million) to sign him in 2020.

After climbing to third on the French side’s all-time scoring list, the “Iceman” joined Serie A giants Juventus on a free transfer last summer, where his game time has been more limited.

Canada squad for FIFA World Cup 2026

Goalkeepers: Dayne St Clair (Inter Miami), Maxime Crepeau (Orlando City), Owen Goodman (Crystal Palace)

Defenders: Alistair Johnston (Celtic), Derek Cornelius (Marseille), Richie Laryea (Toronto FC), Niko Sigur (Hajduk Split), Joel Waterman (Chicago Fire), Luc de Fougerolles (Fulham), Moise Bombito (Nice), Alphonso Davies (Bayern Munich), Alfie Jones (Middlesbrough)

Midfielders: Stephen Eustaquio (Porto), Ismael Kone (Sassuolo), Tajon Buchanan (Villarreal), Mathieu Choiniere (Los Angeles FC), Ali Ahmed (Norwich City), Nathan Saliba (Anderlecht), Liam Millar (Hull City), Marcelo Flores (Tigres UANL), Jacob Shaffelburg (Toronto FC), Jonathan Osorio (Toronto FC)

Attackers: Jonathan David (Juventus), Cyle Larin (Southampton), Tani Oluwaseyi (Villarreal), Promise David (Union SG)

READ: Salah headlines Egypt’s final 26-man squad for FIFA World Cup 2026