Switzerland is heading to the 2026 World Cup with a 26-man squad built around experience, with coach Murat Yakin relying on established internationals such as Granit Xhaka, Gregor Kobel, Manuel Akanji and Breel Embolo for the tournament in the United States, Mexico and Canada.
The Swiss Football Association unveiled the full squad over two days, presenting a final roster that blends veteran leadership with a few younger additions.
The headline theme is continuity. Switzerland’s squad includes several players with long tournament experience and top-level club pedigree, including Xhaka, Kobel, Akanji, Remo Freuler and Ricardo Rodríguez, as well as attackers Dan Ndoye, Rubén Vargas and Zeki Amdouni. The team also includes a strong Swiss footprint in the Bundesliga, with players such as Kobel, Aurèle Amenda, Nico Elvedi, Luca Jaquez, Miro Muheim, Silvan Widmer, Johan Manzambi, and Fabian Rieder all based in Germany.
That experience will be central to Switzerland’s hopes of making a deep run next summer.
26 Namen – Ein grosses Ziel 🏆 Unser Kader für den Sommer 🇨🇭
26 noms – Un grand objectif. Notre sélection pour l’été.
26 nomi – Un grande obiettivo. La nostra squadra per l’estate. pic.twitter.com/0TbEWMtnot— 🇨🇭 Nati (@nati_sfv_asf) May 20, 2026
The squad was completed on May 18 after a two-day rollout by the SFV, underlining how much emphasis Yakin is placing on players already used to international pressure and high-stakes qualification campaigns.
For a team that has repeatedly reached the knockout stages at recent major tournaments, familiarity and cohesion may matter more than experimentation.
There were also notable selection calls. The squad includes Yvon Mvogo, Aurèle Amenda, Eray Cömert, Luca Jaquez, Michel Aebischer, Fabian Rieder, Christian Fassnacht and Cedric Itten, while young midfielder Johan Manzambi is among the emerging names in the group.
Several players who were discussed in the build-up, including Alvyn Sanches, did not make the final cut. That decision suggests Yakin has opted for proven tournament options over a more experimental group.