The best 11 players who won't be at Qatar 2022

By Joshua Makepeace / Roar Rookie

Before the World Cup draw on Friday, I thought it would be fun to create a starting XI of players who will not feature in the finals in Qatar.

The players can be from any nation who has failed to qualify and the only restriction I gave myself was I could only have a maximum of two players from one country, so as not to create a team dominated by Italians. Please tell me the names I missed in the comments.

GK: Gianluigi Donnarumma (Italy)

The Euro 2020 player of the tournament and Yashin Trophy (basically the Ballon D’Or for goalies) 2021 winner was an obvious choice as soon as Italy lost to North Macedonia. ‘Gigi’ Donnarumma was far above the rest of his competition, players such as Sweden’s Robin Olsen, Russia’s Igor Akinfeev and David Ospina from Columbia.

LB: Jamal Lewis (Northern Ireland)

I struggled with left-back in particular and in the end selected Newcastle United’s Jamal Lewis. Lewis has 26 international caps, impressive for his age of 24. A once-promising left-back, hype around Lewis has now slowed down but he has locked down his place in the Northern Ireland. Northern Ireland failed to reach the European play-offs, making Lewis eligible for this team.

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CB: Leonardo Bonucci (Italy)

I don’t think Bonucci is Italy’s second-best player, but he is in this team for the sole purpose to make space for other players. However, he isn’t exactly a bad player either. With 115 caps, Bonucci is the seventh-highest-capped Italian player ever and needs just three more caps to be fourth.

CB: Victor Lindelöf (Sweden)

Lindelöf is a solid centre-back and should work well with Bonucci. He captained Sweden as they lost 2-0 to Poland in a play-off final. Bought by Manchester United for €35 million from Benfica in June 2017 and has played 131 times for the Red Devils in the Premier League since then.

RB: Emil Krafth (Sweden)

Lindelöf is joined by his Swedish teammate and Lewis by his fellow Newcastle player. Right-back was a place of weakness for my imaginary squad. Krafth has earned 39 caps for Sweden and his toughness but also skill (I thank him for his Maradona turn in the play-off final, easing the pain of Sweden’s loss to Poland) was enough to start at full-back.

LM: Wilfried Zaha (Côte d’Ivoire)

Zaha played two friendlies for England between 2011 and 2013 before switching to Côte d’Ivoire in 2016 after not being selected by Roy Hodgson, something he said he regretted not doing in 2018. Long been touted for a move to a big club, Zaha has stayed loyal to Crystal Palace since 2015. His country failed to make the final round of the African play-offs. Alexis Sánchez came close to making this team.

CM: Wilfred Ndidi (Nigeria)

Ndidi has been a good defensive midfielder for many years, winning the FA Cup with Leicester in 2021. I picked him over Chile’s Arturo Vidal, for his great passing range. Nigeria lost at the final hurdle, being beaten by Ghana on away goals.

CM: Martin Ødegaard (Norway)

In-form Arsenal attacking midfielder captains his country at the age of 23. He made his international debut when he was just 15 and is a promising young player, in a promising Arsenal side.

Martin Odegaard on the ball for Arsenal. (Photo by Simon Stacpoole/Offside/Offside via Getty Images)

RM: Mohamed Salah (Egypt)

The star of this team, in a rematch of the Africa Cup of Nations, Salah missed a penalty as his side lost to Senegal. Riyad Mahrez can count himself unlucky to not start but the sheer quality of Salah meant he was the first name on the team sheet.

ST: Erling Haaland (Norway)

The second Norwegian inclusion in this team, Haaland has been a prolific goal scorer since he landed on the big stage with Red Bull Salzburg in the 2019 Champions League. He has suffered two injuries this season but has still scored 16 goals in 17 Bundesliga appearances. Norway did not make the European play-offs.

ST: Michail Antonio (Jamaica)

I long debated putting Victor Osimhen as the second striker, but I went for the West Ham forward due to his creativity and being able to supply Haaland in this alternate reality.

He declared for Jamaica in 2021 after not being included in England squads. As an Englishman, I think Antonio is criminally underrated and we should’ve definitely capped him. He has seven assists and eight goals in the Premier League this season and he had an electric start to the season. Jamaica failed to reach the final round of North/Central American qualifying.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2022-04-03T08:52:17+00:00

Joshua Makepeace

Roar Rookie


Rodriguez plays in Qatar now and is past his peak, I did have the Chilean duo in mind. I believe Salah did play in 2018 but missed the first game or maybe first two games due to that injury.

2022-04-03T01:23:20+00:00

Keith Griffen

Guest


Salah was actually injured by Ramos in 2018 which is why he was didn't play. jorhinho is another notable omission...who should have played for the Selecao, but Neymar was the Selecaos pick. James Rodrigues from Columbia plus Vidal, Sanchez from Chile.

2022-04-02T22:27:48+00:00

Ferno

Guest


What about Sturridge? Sage, Tony

2022-04-01T07:14:56+00:00

Aiden

Guest


Wonder if Salah will attend some games with a laser in his pocket.

AUTHOR

2022-04-01T05:53:22+00:00

Joshua Makepeace

Roar Rookie


Oblak is a shout but Donnarumma is great and Oblak has been off-form recently. Coufal is injured and does not always start for West Ham anyway. Luis Diaz could make this team but as mentioned in the article, Mahrez plays right-wing, the same as Mo Salah. Zlatan is not even the best Swedish striker (or even second best according to manager Janne Anderson) and I’ve already got 2 Swedish players. With the Italian players, I do limit myself to a maximum of 2 players per country.

AUTHOR

2022-04-01T05:46:37+00:00

Joshua Makepeace

Roar Rookie


If Wales go out, there is an argument for Lewis to stay in the team, if Scotland go out, Robbo is definitely the superior left-back but as AGO74 has already said, both are not officially out yet.

AUTHOR

2022-04-01T05:45:40+00:00

Joshua Makepeace

Roar Rookie


Yes, he is one I have just remembered. :stoked: He can also play left-back which is where I think I would put him.

2022-04-01T01:11:29+00:00

TheSecretScout

Roar Guru


jan oblak, vladimir coufal, alessandro fiorenzi, jorginho, marco veratti, luiz diaz, riyad mahrez & zlatan ibrahimovic might have issues with the list lol you could make 2-3 different XIs for great players that wont be in qatar

2022-03-31T23:57:39+00:00

Punter

Roar Rookie


One or both will be though. But you have a point.

2022-03-31T22:50:14+00:00

AGO74

Guest


Both Wales and Scotland aren't eliminated as yet.

2022-03-31T22:49:35+00:00

AGO74

Guest


Donnaruma is an interesting choice - unbelievable at Euro 20. Patchy recent form for club and country including in their recent loss to North Macedonia.....

2022-03-31T22:27:26+00:00

Gnasher

Guest


Alaba of Austria at CB, better than Lindelof certainly, Bonucci probably.

2022-03-31T22:13:24+00:00

Gnasher

Guest


You can have one out of Andy Robertson (Scotland) or Ben Davies (Wales) at left back. Both better than Lewis.

2022-03-31T21:25:05+00:00

Franko

Guest


No room for Tom Rogic ?

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