Premier League

The 3 players to play at 5 World Cups

The 3 players to play at 5 World Cups

Neither Lionel Messi nor Cristiano Ronaldo won the World Cup (yet), but Qatar 2022 will see them join an even more exclusive list – becoming the fourth and fifth player to appear at five different editions of the tournament.

It’s a remarkable achievement and one that is a testament to the longevity of their careers and a reminder of how long they’ve been playing at the top level.

It’s unsurprising that only three people in history have played at five different World Cups, for it requires you to be at the very pinnacle of the sport for at least 16 years, and that’s even assuming your nation qualifies.

But with advancements in sports science, we may see more players hit the mark in the coming years.

Goalkeepers stand the best chance of playing at the World Cup five times, and while Gianluigi Buffon has been at five World Cups he did not make an appearance in 1998.

Likewise, Mexico’s Guillermo Ochoa could attend his fifth World Cup this November with Mexico, but he has only played at the last two.

So here are the only three players to have played at five World Cups in no particular order.

Antonio Carbajal

Carbajal was a Mexican goalkeeper quite literally nick-named El Cinco Copas after, get this, the five World Cups he went to. You’d have never have guessed it.

He played in every World Cup between and including Brazil 1950 and England 1966, playing for Club Leon most of his career.

But the Mexican shot-stopper didn’t have the greatest of international records. He conceded 25 goals in 11 World Cup matches as Mexico generally fulfilled the function of punching bag to Europe’s and South America’s elite. Ouch.

It’s clear that longevity runs through Carbajal’s DNA though – he’s still alive and going strong at the grand old age of 93.

Lothar Matthaus

The most World Cup matches ever, a winner in 1990, and arguably the greatest German footballer of all time. What more can be said about Matthaus?

Well, he’s got a lot to say himself.

“In other countries, they treat idols differently and I am an idol in Germany,” Matthaus said back in 2009 about his frustrations at no German club giving him a management gig. “Germany should be ashamed of the way it treats such an idol.”

Going public didn’t work if you’re wondering; he still hasn’t managed in his homeland since.

Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at Football365…