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List of association footballers who have been capped for two senior national teams

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Diego Costa has represented Brazil in 2013, and Spain from 2014.

In association football, the situation of players being capped for two senior national teams is fairly rare.[1][2] The list of these players includes only those who have been capped by two countries for senior matches. It does not include the far wider scope of those who have played at youth level (U23 or below) for one country then at senior level for another – something which became possible following a 2004 rule change,[3][4] then more common when an age limit was removed in 2009[5] – or those who were eligible for more than one country, but only played for one.[6]

Non-inclusion categories

[edit]
  • Players whose original country ceased to exist and who then played for a successor state, prominent examples being those who had played for the Soviet Union (and/or Commonwealth of Independent States), East Germany, Yugoslavia or Czechoslovakia in the early 1990s, or who played for one national team prior to a region becoming independent and then also played for that new state, for example the secession of South Sudan from Sudan. This contrasts to the situation with Kosovo in the 2010s when it became an official FIFA team: several players who had moved to other parts of Europe in childhood switched from those national teams (or Albania, which granted passports to those displaced ethnic Albanian persons) to play for Kosovo,[7][8] but this change was not automatic based on their birthplace, and as such those who made that choice are listed below (see Football in Kosovo).
  • Players who were capped for one or more countries in a youth match and then a different country in senior matches.
  • Players who appeared for non-affiliated regional teams such as Catalonia. (However, players who played in an official continental tournament, such as the CONCACAF Gold Cup, are included)
  • Players who featured for more than one of the national teams representing Ireland in the second quarter of the 20th century, which are listed separately.
  • Players who featured for a Great Britain team (i.e. at the Olympics and/or Universiade) in addition to one of the Home Nations. (However, players who featured for multiple Home Nations separately, for example England and Scotland, are included)

Eligibility

[edit]

In the 20th century, FIFA allowed a player to play for any national team, as long as the player held nationality of that country. In 2004, in reaction to the growing trend towards naturalisation of foreign players in some countries, FIFA implemented a significant new ruling that requires a player to demonstrate a "clear connection" to any country they wish to represent.[9] Under the rules, in order for a player to switch nationalities, a player must not have played in a competitive fixture (that is, can only have played in friendlies for the first country),[10][11] and FIFA approval is necessary.[12]

In 2021, FIFA published a new set of rules, updating the rules for changes of nationalities. While previously, players were able to switch only if they had appeared in friendly fixture(s) for the first nation, with the growing trend of competitive fixtures such as the Nations League replacing many friendly fixtures, the change was made. Under the new regulations, players can switch national teams, even if they have played in an official competition for the first nation (unless the match was in the tournament phases of the World Cup or a continental competition), provided they played in three or fewer competitive matches and the appearance(s) occurred before the player turned 21. These changes were intended to prevent the 'stockpiling' of players.[13][14][15] If a player is 21 or over, the previous rule remains in place: to be eligible for a switch, any appearance(s) must have been in non-competitive fixtures.

List of players

[edit]

2021–present

[edit]

Beginning in 2021, FIFA adjusted their rules to allow for players to be eligible to represent a new national team if they had played in no more than three competitive fixtures (including none in the tournament phases of the FIFA World Cup and continental competitions) prior to the age of 21 or if they had only played in non-competitive (friendly) matches at any age. Three years must have passed since the date of the previous competitive fixture in order for the player to be eligible to switch; there is no time requirement for friendly matches.

Player First cap Switched allegiance to Year of switch Ref.
Elizabeta Ejupi (female)  Albania (women)  Kosovo (women) 2022 [16][17]
Anissa Lahmari (female)  Algeria (women)  Morocco (women) 2023 [18]
Elber Binha  Angola  Cape Verde 2022 [19]
Rogelio Funes Mori  Argentina  Mexico 2021 [20]
Indiah-Paige Riley (female)  Australia (women)  New Zealand (women) 2022 [21]
Angela Beard (female)  Australia (women)  Philippines (women) 2023 [22]
Joris Kayembe  Belgium  DR Congo 2023 [23]
Denis Odoi  Belgium  Ghana 2022 [24]
Samuel Nlend  Cameroon  Central African Republic 2022 [25]
Ahmad Ngouyamsa  Cameroon  Chad 2024 [26]
Jaclyn Sawicki (female)  Canada (women)  Philippines (women) 2022 [27]
David Sambissa  Congo  Gabon 2021 [28][29]
Christian Martínez  Costa Rica  El Salvador 2021 [30]
Brayan López  Costa Rica  Nicaragua 2022 [31]
Filip Ozobić  Croatia  Azerbaijan 2021 [32]
Nikola Katić  Croatia  Bosnia and Herzegovina 2024 [33]
Jonathan Richard  Curaçao  Aruba 2021 [34]
Lobi Manzoki  DR Congo  Central African Republic 2022 [35]
Drew Spence (female)  England (women)  Jamaica (women) 2021 [36]
Sandy MacIver (female)  England (women)  Scotland (women) 2023 [37]
Steven Caulker  England  Sierra Leone 2022[note 1] [38]
Houssem Aouar  France  Algeria 2023 [39]
Marine Dafeur (female)  France (women)  Algeria (women) 2023 [40]
Oumar Sako  Ivory Coast  Niger 2024 [41]
Roger Aholou  Ivory Coast  Togo 2021 [42]
Mirlind Daku  Kosovo  Albania 2023 [43]
Arbër Hoxha  Kosovo  Albania 2024 [44]
Agon Sadiku  Kosovo  Finland 2023 [45]
Liridon Krasniqi  Kosovo  Malaysia 2021[note 2] [46]
Uran Bislimi  Kosovo   Switzerland 2023 [47]
Julio Donisa  Martinique  Madagascar 2022 [48]
Alejandro Zendejas  Mexico[note 3]  United States 2023 [49][50][51]
Vurnon Anita  Netherlands  Curaçao 2021 [52]
Joshua Brenet  Netherlands  Curaçao 2024 [53]
Pothin Poma  New Caledonia  Tahiti 2024 [54]
Hélder Costa  Portugal  Angola 2021 [55]
Lucas João  Portugal  Angola 2022 [56]
Ricardo Ferreira  Portugal  Canada 2021 [57]
Edgar Ié  Portugal  Guinea-Bissau 2023[note 4] [58]
Stefanie da Eira (female)  Portugal (women)  Switzerland (women) 2021 [59][60]
Kaïlé Auvray  Saint Martin  Trinidad and Tobago 2023 [61]
Jason Cummings  Scotland  Australia 2022 [62]
Khadim Diaw  Senegal  Mauritania 2022 [63]
Iñaki Williams  Spain  Ghana 2022 [64]
Brahim Díaz  Spain  Morocco 2024 [65]
Munir El Haddadi  Spain  Morocco 2021 [66]
Damaris Egurrola (female)  Spain (women)  Netherlands (women) 2022 [67]
Armin Gigović  Sweden  Bosnia and Herzegovina 2024 [68]
Kristopher Da Graca  Sweden  Cape Verde 2023 [69]
Omar Faraj  Sweden  Palestine 2024 [70]
Moustafa Zeidan  Sweden  Palestine 2024 [70]
Hosam Aiesh  Sweden  Syria 2022 [71]
Daleho Irandust  Sweden  Syria 2024 [72]
Aiham Ousou  Sweden  Syria 2024 [73]
Maria Khan (female)  United Arab Emirates (women)  Pakistan (women) 2022 [74]
Esmir Bajraktarević  United States  Bosnia and Herzegovina 2024 [75]
Ayo Akinola  United States  Canada 2021 [76]
Aaron Herrera  United States  Guatemala 2023 [77]
Rubio Rubin  United States  Guatemala 2022 [78][79]
Fafà Picault  United States  Haiti 2023 [80]
Julián Araujo  United States  Mexico 2021 [81]
Jonathan Gómez  United States  Mexico 2022 [82]

2004–2020

[edit]

Between 2004 and 2020, FIFA permitted players to play for a new association if the player had only played in non-competitive fixtures (friendlies) for the original nation or if the new association was a newly-formed nation.

Player First cap Switched allegiance to Year of switch Ref.
Fidan Aliti  Albania  Kosovo 2017 [83]
Besart Berisha  Albania  Kosovo 2017 [84]
Mërgim Brahimi  Albania  Kosovo 2015 [85]
Debatik Curri  Albania  Kosovo 2014[note 5] [86]
Besnik Hasi  Albania  Kosovo 2007 [87]
Alban Meha  Albania  Kosovo 2016 [88]
Milot Rashica  Albania  Kosovo 2016 [89]
Amir Rrahmani  Albania  Kosovo 2014 [90]
Herolind Shala  Albania  Kosovo 2016 [89]
Samir Ujkani  Albania  Kosovo 2014 [88]
Fitore Govori (female)  Albania (women)  Kosovo (women) 2017 [citation needed]
Qendresa Krasniqi (female)  Albania (women)  Kosovo (women) 2017 [citation needed]
Arta Rama (female)  Albania (women)  Kosovo (women) 2017 [citation needed]
Egzona Zeka (female)  Albania (women)  Kosovo (women) 2017 [citation needed]
Aïmen Demai  Algeria  Tunisia 2009 [91]
Gastón Giménez  Argentina  Paraguay 2020 [92]
Denzel Dumfries  Aruba  Netherlands 2018 [93]
Mehdi Carcela  Belgium  Morocco 2011 [94][95]
Kenny Kunst  Bonaire  Curaçao 2011 [96]
Adis Nurković  Bosnia and Herzegovina  Kosovo 2017 [97]
Thiago Motta  Brazil[note 6]  Italy 2011 [95]
Mário Fernandes  Brazil  Russia 2017 [99]
Diego Costa  Brazil  Spain 2014 [100][95]
Adriana Parente (female)  Brazil (women)  Equatorial Guinea (women) 2008[note 7] [citation needed]
Vânia (female)  Brazil (women)  Equatorial Guinea (women) 2011[note 7] [citation needed]
Solomon Asante  Burkina Faso  Ghana 2012 [85]
Innocent Mbonihankuye  Burundi  Djibouti 2019 [102]
Quillan Roberts  Canada  Guyana 2019 [103]
La'Vere Corbin-Ong  Canada  Malaysia 2019 [104]
Tiffany Cameron (female)  Canada (women)  Jamaica (women) 2019 [105]
Francisco Flores  Costa Rica  Nicaragua 2018 [85]
Mato Jajalo  Croatia  Bosnia and Herzegovina 2016 [106]
Arijan Ademi  Croatia  North Macedonia 2014 [107]
Rugenio Josephia  Curaçao  Bonaire 2013 [108]
Simon Anthony  Dominica  Anguilla 2008 [109]
Dodi Lukebakio  DR Congo  Belgium 2020 [110]
Ilombe Mboyo  DR Congo  Belgium 2012 [107]
Jean-Paul Eale Lutula  DR Congo  Rwanda 2009 [111]
Wilfried Zaha  England  Ivory Coast 2017 [112]
Salimata Simporé (female)  Equatorial Guinea (women)  Burkina Faso (women) 2011 [citation needed]
Mehmet Hetemaj  Finland  Kosovo 2014[note 8] [113]
Lum Rexhepi  Finland  Kosovo 2014 [85]
Paul-Georges Ntep  France  Cameroon 2018 [114]
Geoffrey Kondogbia  France  Central African Republic 2018 [115]
Florent Malouda  France  French Guiana[note 9] 2017 [116]
Jocelyn Angloma  France  Guadeloupe[note 9] 2006 [117]
Julien Faubert  France  Martinique[note 9] 2014 [118]
Frédéric Piquionne  France  Martinique[note 9] 2012 [119]
Roman Neustädter  Germany  Russia 2016 [120]
Jermaine Jones  Germany  United States 2010 [121][95]
Apostolos Giannou  Greece  Australia 2016 [122]
Alsény Këïta  Guinea  Liberia 2011 [85]
Aubrey David  Guyana  Trinidad and Tobago 2012 [123]
Elmer Mejía  Honduras  Nicaragua 2014 [85]
Declan Rice  Republic of Ireland  England 2019 [124]
Alex Bruce  Republic of Ireland  Northern Ireland 2013 [95]
Kenny Saief  Israel  United States 2017 [125]
Franco Vázquez  Italy  Argentina 2018 [126]
Ardian Ismajli  Kosovo  Albania 2018 [127]
Fatoumata (female)  Mali (women)  Equatorial Guinea (women) 2017 [citation needed]
Edgar Castillo  Mexico  United States 2009 [128]
Sofia Huerta (female)  Mexico (women)  United States (women) 2017 [129]
Ina Budestean (Ina Boyko) (female)  Moldova (women)  Azerbaijan (women) 2009[note 10] [citation needed]
 Azerbaijan (women)  Moldova (women) 2015[note 10]
Julian Wade  Montserrat  Dominica 2014 [85]
Nacer Chadli  Morocco  Belgium 2011 [95]
Tyler Boyd  New Zealand  United States 2019 [130]
Taulant Seferi  North Macedonia  Albania 2019 [131]
Valon Berisha  Norway  Kosovo 2016 [88]
Ardian Gashi  Norway  Kosovo 2014 [85]
Nelson David Cabrera  Paraguay  Bolivia 2016 [85]
Mohammed Salem Al-Enazi  Qatar  United Arab Emirates 2009 [85]
Mohsin Nzeyimana  Rwanda  Burundi 2006 [132]
Junior Laurencin  Saint Lucia  U.S. Virgin Islands 2011 [85]
Vladimir Volkov  Serbia  Montenegro 2012 [133]
Anel Ahmedhodžić  Sweden  Bosnia and Herzegovina 2020 [134]
Mikael Dyrestam  Sweden  Guinea 2019 [135]
Pa Konate  Sweden  Guinea 2019 [136]
Saman Ghoddos  Sweden  Iran 2017 [99]
Jiloan Hamad  Sweden  Iraq 2019 [137]
Erton Fejzullahu  Sweden  Kosovo 2015 [90]
David Mitov Nilsson  Sweden  North Macedonia 2015 [138]
Dino Islamović  Sweden  Montenegro 2020 [139]
Louay Chanko  Sweden  Syria 2008 [140]
George Mourad  Sweden  Syria 2011 [141]
Izet Hajrović   Switzerland  Bosnia and Herzegovina 2013 [142]
Heinz Barmettler   Switzerland  Dominican Republic 2012 [143]
Albert Bunjaku   Switzerland  Kosovo 2013 [144]
Florent Hadergjonaj   Switzerland  Kosovo 2019 [145]
Ricky Shakes  Trinidad and Tobago  Guyana 2011 [85]
Oliver Mbekeka (female)  Uganda (women)  DR Congo (women) 2006 [146]
Pavel Pashayev  Ukraine  Azerbaijan 2015 [147]
Tony Tchani  United States  Cameroon 2016 [148]
A. J. DeLaGarza  United States  Guam 2013 [149]
Veronica Zepeda Cashman (female)  United States (women)  Mexico (women) 2004 [150][151]

Prior to 2004

[edit]

Prior to 2004, players could play for a new nation provided they were citizens of that country.

Player First cap Switched allegiance to Year of switch Ref.
Colin Campbell  Argentina  Chile 1910 [85]
Miguel Ángel Lauri  Argentina  France 1937 [85]
Héctor De Bourgoing  Argentina  France 1962 [85]
Antonio Angelillo  Argentina  Italy 1960 [85]
Renato Cesarini  Argentina  Italy 1931 [85]
Attilio Demaría  Argentina  Italy 1932 [85]
Enrique Guaita  Argentina  Italy 1934[note 11] [85]
 Italy  Argentina 1937[note 11]
Julio Libonatti  Argentina  Italy 1926 [85]
Francisco Lojacono  Argentina  Italy 1959 [85]
Rinaldo Martino  Argentina  Italy 1949 [85]
Humberto Maschio  Argentina  Italy 1962 [85]
Luis Monti  Argentina  Italy 1932 [85]
Raimundo Orsi  Argentina  Italy 1929[note 12] [85]
 Italy  Argentina 1936[note 12]
Alejandro Scopelli  Argentina  Italy 1935[note 13] [85]
Omar Sívori  Argentina  Italy 1961 [85]
Alfredo Di Stéfano  Argentina  Colombia 1949[note 14] [95]
 Colombia  Spain 1957[note 14]
Ken Hough  Australia  New Zealand 1958 [85]
Kristy Moore (female)  Australia (women)  England (women) 2002 [152]
Josef Bican  Austria  Czechoslovakia 1936[note 15] [85]
Karel Koželuh  Austria  Czechoslovakia 1923 [85]
Josef Sedláček  Austria  Czechoslovakia 1920 [85]
Jan Vaník  Austria  Czechoslovakia 1920 [85]
Karl Kanhäuser  Austria  Czechoslovakia 1931 [85]
Rodolphe Hiden  Austria  France 1940 [85]
Henri Hiltl  Austria  France 1940 [85]
Franz Binder  Austria  Germany 1939[note 16] [85]
Franz Hanreiter  Austria  Germany 1940[note 16] [85]
Matthias Kaburek  Austria  Germany 1939[note 16] [85]
Josef Pekarek  Austria  Germany 1938[note 16] [85]
Peter Platzer  Austria  Germany 1939[note 16] [85]
Willibald Schmaus  Austria  Germany 1938[note 16] [85]
Stefan Skoumal  Austria  Germany 1938[note 16] [85]
Karl Sesta  Austria  Germany 1941[note 17] [85]
 Germany  Austria 1945[note 17]
Wilhelm Hahnemann  Austria  Germany 1938[note 17] [85]
 Germany  Austria 1946[note 17]
Hans Mock  Austria  Germany 1938[note 16] [85]
Leopold Neumer  Austria  Germany 1938[note 17] [85]
 Germany  Austria 1945[note 17]
Hans Pesser  Austria  Germany 1938[note 16] [85]
Rudolf Raftl  Austria  Germany 1938[note 16] [85]
Josef Stroh  Austria  Germany 1938[note 17] [85]
 Germany  Austria 1946[note 17]
Johann Urbanek  Austria  Germany 1941[note 16] [85]
Franz Wagner  Austria  Germany 1938[note 16] [85]
Rudolf Rupec  Austria  Yugoslavia 1920 [85]
Anfilogino Guarisi (Filó)  Brazil  Italy 1932 [85]
José Altafini  Brazil  Italy 1961 [85]
Karel Burkert  Bulgaria  Czechoslovakia 1934[note 15] [85]
Kiril Simonovski  Bulgaria  Yugoslavia 1946 [85]
Bozhin Laskov  Bulgaria  Czechoslovakia 1953 [85]
Joe Kennaway  Canada  Scotland 1933 [85]
Gordon Burness  Canada  United States 1926 [85]
Hernán Bolaños  Costa Rica  Chile 1940 [153]
Željko Vuković  Croatia  Austria 2001 [154]
Josip Weber  Croatia  Belgium 1994 [95]
Sejad Halilović  Croatia  Bosnia and Herzegovina 1996 [155]
Gregor Židan  Croatia  Slovenia 1992 [85]
Géza Kalocsay  Czechoslovakia  Hungary 1940 [85]
Gejza Kocsis  Czechoslovakia  Hungary 1937 [156]
Ferenc Szedlacsek  Czechoslovakia  Hungary 1928 [85]
László Kubala  Czechoslovakia  Hungary 1948[note 18] [85]
 Hungary  Spain 1953[note 18]
Alberto Spencer  Ecuador  Uruguay 1964*[note 19] [85]
Ken Armstrong  England  New Zealand 1958 [85]
John Hawley Edwards  England  Wales 1876 [85]
Jackie Sewell  England  Zambia 1964 [85]
Jeanny Allott (female)  England (women)  Netherlands (women) 1984 [157]
Mahi Khennane  France  Algeria 1963 [85]
Rachid Mekhloufi  France  Algeria 1963 [85]
Félix Romano  France  Italy 1921 [85]
Michel Platini  France  Kuwait[note 20] 1988 [85]
Abderrahmane Mahjoub  France  Morocco 1961 [85]
Mustapha Zitouni  France  Algeria 1963 [85]
Marius Hiller  Germany  Argentina 1916 [85]
Karl Decker  Germany  Austria 1945[note 21] [85]
Ludwig Durek  Germany  Austria 1945[note 21] [85]
Max Merkel  West Germany  Austria 1952[note 21] [85]
Ernst Sabeditsch  Germany  Austria 1945[note 21] [85]
Abdul Ganiyu Salami  Ghana  Nigeria 1967 [158]
Pavlos Vasiliou  Greece  Cyprus 1970 [85]
Kostas Choumis  Greece  Romania 1941 [85]
Joe Gaetjens  Haiti  United States 1950[note 22] [85]
 United States  Haiti 1953[note 22]
Sándor Nemes  Hungary  Austria 1925 [85]
Ferenc Puskás  Hungary  Spain 1961 [95]
Rezső Patkoló  Hungary  Poland 1949 [85]
Iuliu Baratky  Hungary  Romania 1933 [85]
Francisc Mészáros  Hungary  Romania 1946 [85]
József Pecsovszky  Hungary  Romania 1945 [85]
Zoltán Szaniszló  Hungary  Romania 1935 [85]
Mátyás Tóth  Hungary  Romania 1945[note 23] [85]
 Romania  Hungary 1947[note 23]
Taj Mohammed  India  Pakistan 1950 [159]
Sheikh Abdul Latif  India  Pakistan 1962 [159]
Mohammed Rahmatullah  India  Pakistan 1962 [160]
Jack Reynolds  Ireland  England 1892 [85]
Cecil Moore  Ireland  United States 1953 [161]
Giangos Simantiris  Israel  Greece 1961 [85]
Roberto Porta  Italy  Uruguay 1937 [85]
Jeff Cunningham  Jamaica  United States 2001 [85]
Min Byung-dae  Japan  South Korea 1944 [162]
Kim Yong-sik  Japan  South Korea 1948 [85]
Lee Yoo-hyung  Japan  South Korea 1948 [163]
Vladimir Niederhaus  Kazakhstan  Russia 1994[note 24] [85]
Vitaliy Kafanov  Kazakhstan  Turkmenistan 1996 [85]
Mehmet Dragusha  Kosovo  Albania 2003 [164]
Martín Vásquez  Mexico  United States 1996 [85]
Dries Boussatta  Netherlands  Morocco 2001 [85][165]
Pratap Shankar Hazra  Pakistan  Bangladesh 1973 [166]
Zakaria Pintoo  Pakistan  Bangladesh 1973 [167]
Shahidur Rahman Shantoo  Pakistan  Bangladesh 1973 [168]
Balai Dey  Pakistan  India 1969 [159]
Delfín Benítez Cáceres  Paraguay  Argentina 1934 [85]
Constantino Urbieta Sosa  Paraguay  Argentina 1934 [85]
Arturo Galarza  Paraguay  Bolivia 1977 [169]
Heriberto Herrera  Paraguay  Spain 1957 [85]
Eulogio Martínez  Paraguay  Spain 1959[note 25] [85]
Segundo Castillo  Peru  Chile 1941 [85]
Pablo Pasache  Peru  Chile 1941[note 26] [85]
 Chile  Peru 1942[note 26]
Julio Lores  Peru  Mexico 1935 [85]
Juan Joya  Peru  Uruguay 1965 [85]
Paulino Alcántara  Philippines  Spain 1921 [85]
Ernst Wilimowski  Poland  Germany 1941[note 27] [85]
Stefan Szefer  Poland  United States 1973 [85]
Chris Armas  Puerto Rico  United States 1998 [85]
István Avar  Romania  Hungary 1929 [85]
Iuliu Bodola  Romania  Hungary 1940 [85]
Nicolae Kovács  Romania  Hungary 1941 [85]
Adalbert Marksteiner  Romania  Hungary 1943 [85]
Francisc Spielmann  Romania  Hungary 1940[note 28] [85]
 Hungary  Romania 1945[note 28]
Albert Ströck  Romania  Hungary 1927 [85]
Mihai Tänzer  Romania  Hungary 1929 [85]
Pál Teleki  Romania  Hungary 1933 [85]
Vladislav Lemish  Russia  Azerbaijan 1994 [85]
Aleksei Bakharev  Russia  Ukraine 2002 [85]
Oleksandr Horshkov  Russia  Ukraine 2003 [85]
Sergei Kormiltsev  Russia  Ukraine 2000 [85]
Juma Masudi  Rwanda  Burundi 1998 [85]
Avondale Williams  Saint Vincent and the Grenadines  British Virgin Islands 2000 [170]
Jock Aird  Scotland  New Zealand 1958 [85]
Jack Marshall  Scotland  United States 1926 [85]
Rose Reilly (female)  Scotland (women)  Italy (women) 1984 [citation needed]
Razali Alias  Singapore  Malaysia 1985 [citation needed]
Héctor Henman  South Africa  Argentina 1906 [85]
Gordon Hodgson  South Africa  England 1930 [85]
Humphrey Mijnals  Suriname  Netherlands 1960 [85]
Law Adam   Switzerland  Netherlands 1930 [85]
Sergei Mandreko  Tajikistan[note 29]  Russia 1994 [85]
Mukhsin Mukhamadiev  Tajikistan  Russia 1995 [85]
Rashid Rakhimov  Tajikistan  Russia 1994, 1996[note 30] [85]
Alvin Corneal  Trinidad and Tobago  Barbados 1962[note 31] [85]
 Barbados  Trinidad and Tobago 1963[note 31]
Abdelkader Ghalem  Tunisia  Algeria 1964 [85]
Yuriy Nikiforov  Ukraine[note 32]  Russia 1993 [85]
Oleg Salenko  Ukraine  Russia 1993 [85]
Akhrik Tsveiba  Ukraine[note 33]  Russia 1997 [85]
Ilya Tsymbalar  Ukraine  Russia 1994 [85]
Andriy Khomyn  Ukraine  Turkmenistan 1998 [85]
Robert Sidney Buck  Uruguay  Argentina 1912 [85]
Eduardo García  Uruguay  Ecuador 1976 [85]
Pedro Duhart  Uruguay  France 1935 [85]
Alcides Ghiggia  Uruguay  Italy 1957 [85]
Ricardo Faccio  Uruguay  Italy 1935 [85]
Francisco Fedullo  Uruguay  Italy 1932 [85]
Ernesto Mascheroni  Uruguay  Italy 1935[note 34] [85]
 Italy  Uruguay 1936[note 34]
Juan Alberto Schiaffino  Uruguay  Italy 1954 [85]
José Santamaría  Uruguay  Spain 1958 [85]
Windsor del Llano  United States  Bolivia 1975 [85]
Tony Bonezzi  United States  Israel 1961 [85]
Barney Battles  United States  Scotland 1930 [85]
Valery Kechinov  Uzbekistan  Russia 1994 [85]
Andrey Pyatnitsky  Uzbekistan[note 35]  Russia 1993 [85]
Robert Evans  Wales  England 1911 [85]
Sian Williams (female)  Wales (women)  England (women) 198? [171]
Ivan Bek  Yugoslavia  France 1935 [85]
Vilmos Sipos  Yugoslavia  Hungary 1945 [85]
Ján Podhradský  Yugoslavia  Slovakia 1942 [172]
Kanku Mulekelayi  Zambia  DR Congo 2000 [85]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Steven Caulker's one-time switch was approved by FIFA in October 2021, his official Sierra Leone debut occurred in January 2022.
  2. ^ Krasniqi's FIFA one-time switch was approved in 2020, however he only made his debut for Malaysia in 2021.
  3. ^ Zendejas' two caps for Mexico in 2021 and 2022 were non-FIFA sanctioned friendly matches. In January 2023, FIFA deemed the matches as invalidated and Mexico was sanctioned.
  4. ^ Edagr Ié's one-time switch was approved by FIFA in 2021.
  5. ^ Debatik Curri first represented Albania from 2006 to 2014, switched to represent Kosovo then switched back to Albania that same year.
  6. ^ Motta played for Brazil at the 2003 CONCACAF Gold Cup, a senior tournament. However, Brazil were an invited guest and fielded an under-23 team, meaning that their players did not earn official caps for the tournament.[98]
  7. ^ a b In 2017, she was deemed ineligible for Equatorial Guinea.[101]
  8. ^ Hetemaj made his senior debut for Kosovo in a 6–1 loss against Turkey in May 2014, a friendly match. However, he lost his eligibility to switch for Kosovo in competitive matches after accepting new call-ups from Finland in 2016, precisely when Kosovo became a member of both UEFA and FIFA.
  9. ^ a b c d French Guiana, Martinique, and Guadeloupe are CONCACAF-affiliated, not FIFA-affiliated, which allowed the player to represent the team in after previously playing in official matches for the former nation
  10. ^ a b In 2009, began competing under the fake name Ina Boyko with a fake birthday for Azerbaijan. In 2010, she was deemed ineligible for Azerbaijan and resumed competing with Moldova in 2015
  11. ^ a b Represented Argentina in 1933, then represented Italy between 1934 and 1935, then represented Argentina again in 1937
  12. ^ a b Represented Argentina between 1924 and 1928, then represented Italy between 1929 and 1935, then represented Argentina again in 1936
  13. ^ Represented Argentina between 1929 and 1937, and represented Italy in the middle in 1935
  14. ^ a b Represented Argentina in 1947, then represented Colombia (Not recognized by FIFA) in 1949, then represented Spain from 1957 to 1962
  15. ^ a b Represented Bohemia and Moraivia in 1939 when it was annexed from TCH
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l From 1938 to 1945, Austria was part of Nazi Germany
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h From 1938 to 1945, Austria was part of Nazi Germany. Returned to representing Austria following WWII
  18. ^ a b Represented TCH from 1946 to 1947, then represented Hungary in 1948, then represented Spain from 1953 to 1961
  19. ^ Represented the two nations simultaneously, switching back and forth
  20. ^ Came out of retirement for one day to play in an international friendly match representing Kuwait against the Soviet Union, at the request of the Kuwaiti emir. He did not become a citizen of Kuwait.
  21. ^ a b c d Represented Austria following re-independence from Germany after WWII
  22. ^ a b Represented Haiti in 1944, then represented USA in 1950, then represented Haiti again in 1953
  23. ^ a b Represented Hungary from 1939 to 1943, then represented Romania in 1946, then returned to representing Hungary in 1947 and 1948
  24. ^ Represented Kazakhstan in 1992, then represented Russia in 1994, then returned to representing Kazakhstan
  25. ^ Played for Spain B in 1958
  26. ^ a b First represented Peru in 1938, then represented Chile in 1941, returning to Peru in 1942
  27. ^ Represented Germany following Polish annexation by Nazi Germany in WWII
  28. ^ a b Represented Romania from 1939 to 1940, then represented Hungary from 1940 to 1943, then returned to representing Romania from 1945 to 1949
  29. ^ Represented CIS prior to Tajikistan
  30. ^ Represented Tajikistan in 1992, then represented Russia in 1994 and 1995, then represented Tajikistan again in 1996
  31. ^ a b Totals may not be complete; Barbados joined FIFA in 1968, Trinidad and Tobado in 1964 (CONCACAF in 1962); it is possible he also played for British Guyana (before independence, not FIFA members at the time but affiliated to CONCACAF since 1961).
  32. ^ Represented CIS before Ukraine
  33. ^ Represented Soviet Union and CIS prior to Ukraine
  34. ^ a b Uruguay from 1930 to 1934, then represented Italy in 1935 and 1936, then returned to representing Uruguay from 1936 to 1939
  35. ^ Represented Soviet Union and CIS prior to Uzbekistan

See also

[edit]

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