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⚽ While No Southeast Asian Nation Qualified for the World Cup, Their Club Teams Told a Different Story

GenevaTimes by GenevaTimes
June 28, 2026
in Business
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⚽ While No Southeast Asian Nation Qualified for the World Cup, Their Club Teams Told a Different Story
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Five players from ASEAN clubs—representing Iraq, Jordan, and Curaçao—will compete at the 2026 FIFA World Cup, despite no Southeast Asian nation qualifying. Their presence highlights growing global recognition of leagues in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand as legitimate talent pathways.

Key Points

• The 2026 FIFA World Cup features no ASEAN nations, with Indonesia falling short of qualification, yet five players from ASEAN clubs including Persib Bandung, Selangor FC, and Port FC earned spots representing Iraq, Jordan, and Curaçao.

• These players bring international visibility to Southeast Asian leagues, strengthening the region’s reputation as a legitimate global talent pathway while helping clubs attract better players, larger audiences, and increased investment.

• ASEAN football is gradually gaining global recognition, with clubs serving as stepping stones toward World Cup competition, signaling that Southeast Asia’s role in international football continues to grow beyond being merely a consumer market.

ASEAN’s Growing Role in Global Football

The 2026 FIFA World Cup in North America will proceed without a single ASEAN representative, marking yet another missed opportunity for Southeast Asian football. Indonesia, considered the region’s strongest contender during qualification, ultimately fell short. Despite this setback, the tournament still carries regional significance. Five players from ASEAN-based clubs — representing Iraq, Jordan, and Curaçao — have earned their places on the world stage, demonstrating that Southeast Asian football is quietly contributing to international competition in meaningful ways.


ASEAN Clubs as Legitimate Talent Pathways

Clubs including Persib Bandung, Selangor FC, Port FC, and Terengganu FC have become recognized stepping stones toward elite international football. Frans Putros, a Danish-born centre-back, became a defensive leader at Persib Bandung before representing Iraq. Rebin Sulaka anchors Port FC’s defense with 49 international caps, while Noor Al-Rawabdeh has accumulated 69 appearances for Jordan after excelling in the Malaysian Super League. Gervane Kastaneer, formerly of both Persib Bandung and Persis Solo, now represents Curaçao internationally. These players collectively validate the competitive quality developing across ASEAN leagues.


Visibility, Investment, and the Road Ahead

The presence of World Cup participants from ASEAN clubs strengthens the region’s reputation as a credible talent pipeline rather than merely a football consumer market. Greater international exposure helps clubs attract higher-caliber players, expand their audiences, and secure increased investment. Mohammad Abualnadi’s progression from Selangor FC to Romania’s FC Corvinul Hunedoara before representing Jordan exemplifies this upward trajectory. While Southeast Asia has yet to claim a consistent World Cup berth, these connections suggest that regional leagues are steadily building the foundation for a historic breakthrough in global football.

Source : ⚽No ASEAN Team Made to The World Cup, but ASEAN Clubs Did

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