MIAMI — Haiti’s men’s national soccer team, Les Grenadiers, will arrive at the 2026 FIFA World Cup with a roster shaped almost entirely with players living outside the country.
Head coach Sébastien Migné unveiled Friday his final 26-man squad for Haiti’s first World Cup appearance in 52 years, selecting players from clubs in Europe, North America, South America and Asia — with only one player from Haiti’s domestic league making the team. His selection is a story that began with the qualifiers.
“This is a special moment for the players. Playing at a World Cup is the supreme reward for their work,” Migné said during a virtual press conference hosted by the Haitian Football Federation (FHF).
“It is a symbolic moment before any major competition — especially a World Cup long-awaited by Haiti after 52 years of absence.”
Migné largely stayed loyal to the core group of 22 players that carried Haiti through qualifying, reflecting the coach’s emphasis on continuity and chemistry. The roster reflects Haiti’s continued reliance on diaspora talent, a longstanding reality for the national team. Except for midfielder Woodensky Pierre from Haiti’s Violette Athletic Club, all players developed abroad, primarily in France, Belgium, England, Portugal, the United States and Canada.
Les Grenadiers’ squad includes three goalkeepers, eight defenders, seven midfielders and eight forwards, with an average age of 24.
This period is particularly important for the future of Haitian soccer. The country has never had a pool of so much young talent playing professionally abroad at such a high level on the same team.
Among the notable additions after the qualifiers are midfielder Pierre, who joined the team in March friendlies, forward Wilson Isidor of the English Premier League club Sunderland A.F.C., and first-time call-ups forward Lenny Joseph and midfielder Dominique Simon, who also play in Europe for top-tier clubs Ferencvárosi TC in Hungary and FC Tatran Prešov in Slovakia, respectively.
Pierre’s inclusion is viewed as a significant achievement for local soccer, especially as Haiti’s national championship continues to struggle with financial instability and gang violence.
For Violette AC, Pierre’s selection could also bring financial rewards through FIFA’s club compensation program, which pays domestic clubs for releasing players to the tournament.
Videos circulating on social media soon after the announcement showed Pierre and his teammates celebrating the midfielder’s selection.
“Wow, wow, wow! This is our time,” they screamed, wearing their shirts, jumping, clapping and high-fiving with drinks on the table. “We are going to make it beautiful.”
Haiti’s 26-man 2026 FIFA World Cup roster
| Player | Regular Club | Country |
| Goalkeepers | ||
| Johny Placide | SC Bastia | France |
| Alexandre Pierre | FC Sochaux-Montbéliard | France |
| Josué Duverger | Cosmos Koblenz | Germany |
| Defenders | ||
| Carlens Arcus | Angers SCO | France |
| Jean-Kévin Duverne | KAA Gent | Belgium |
| Hannes Delcroix | FC Lugano | Switzerland |
| Duke Lacroix | Colorado Springs Switchbacks | United States |
| Martin Expérience | AS Nancy Lorraine | France |
| Wilguens Paugain | SV Zulte Waregem | Belgium |
| Ricardo Adé | LDU Quito | Ecuador |
| Keeto Thermoncy | BSC Young Boys | Switzerland |
| Midfielders | ||
| Jean-Ricner Bellegarde | Wolverhampton Wanderers | England |
| Josué Casimir | AJ Auxerre | France |
| Danley Jean-Jacques | Philadelphia Union | United States |
| Leverton Pierre | FC Vizela | Portugal |
| Dominique Simon | FC Tatran Prešov | Slovakia |
| Carl Fred Sainté | El Paso Locomotive | United States |
| Woodensky Pierre | Violette AC | Haiti |
| Forwards | ||
| Derrick Etienne Jr. | Toronto FC | Canada |
| Wilson Isidor | Sunderland A.F.C. | England |
| Lenny Joseph | Ferencvárosi TC | Hungary |
| Don Deedson Louicius | FC Dallas | United States |
| Duckens Nazon | Esteghlal F.C. | Iran |
| Frantzdy Pierrot | Çaykur Rizespor | Turkey |
| Ruben Providence | Almere City FC | Netherlands |
| Yassin Fortuné | FC Vizela | Portugal |
An unexpected, yet well-earned, qualification
Migné’s announcement marks another milestone in one of the most improbable achievements in Haitian sports history. Les Grenadiers qualified for the World Cup despite never playing a qualifier in Haiti because of the country’s worsening security crisis, which has left armed gangs controlling much of Port-au-Prince, vandalized the country’s sole national stadium and made hosting international matches too dangerous to risk.
Instead, Les Grenadiers played “home” matches in Curaçao, the Dutch Caribbean island, while navigating instability surrounding the FHF, travel challenges and limited resources. Under Frenchman Migné, who became head coach in June 2024, however, Haiti emerged as one of Concacaf’s biggest surprises — securing only its second World Cup berth after its historic 1974 appearance in West Germany.
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