There is no minimum age, as long as you are good enough and are chosen to play.
There will be 828 players in the world cup do the maths 23x36=828 simple
As of now 26_05_2010 till the world cup ends, they would be practising in South Africa. However, otherwise they'd be with their respective clubs
Because they need to distinguish themselves from the players on the pitch to avoid interfering in play.
No, Scotland did not play in the 1966 World Cup.
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Some great players not to play a world cup are David Ginola, Eric Cantona, Giovanni Elber.
Bolivia have twice qualified for the World Cup: 1950 and 1994.
depends which country they play for
Irs because olympics is U23 and world cup is any age :)
It was the teams of Mexico and South Africa.
Each team are allowed only 23 players.
As there are 32 countries and each country were allowed 23 plyers it 736 players. But all the 23 players did not play.
There will be 828 players in the world cup do the maths 23x36=828 simple
Because it's the best league in the world and they want to compete with the best players in the world. And because of the Stanley Cup.
xai, alonso, cassilas, villa,
Yes and no - there is no contractual requirement to pay the players. For example, FIFA pays the FAs of the countries that play but those FAs have no obligation to pay the players and FIFA does not mandate that the players get paid by their FAs. Like the Rugby World Cup, the Football World Cup prize money is designed to develop the game in the country of the winner, not specifically to pay the players. But because established countries like Brazil, Argentina, Germany and Italy are often winning the World Cup, those countries don't need to develop game with that prize money so they tend not to. They pay the players incentives. There are no set payments and no "salaries" for the players. So while the short answer to this question might be yes, the technical answer is no in terms of knowing what they'll get or that they'll get anything at all. That is, players do not go to World Cup knowing they will get paid or knowing how much they will get. It's not like their club agreements where they know they will get 150,000 pounds a week. The reality is that if you told World Cup players that they won't get a dime, the great majority would go happily. The World Cup is not about getting paid, it's about winning the World Cup.
The five footballers to play in the 2010 world cup are Diego Forlan, Thomas Muller, Iker Casillas,, Lionel Messi and Wayne Rooney.