- FIFA and FIFPRO reveal Men's and Women's World 11 at The Best FIFA Football Awards in London, England
- The World 11 is the only global player award decided exclusively by professional footballers
- Lionel Messi makes record 17th successive Men's World 11 appearance; Spain and England stars dominate Women’s World 11
The FIFA FIFPRO Men’s World 11 and FIFA FIFPRO Women’s World 11 have been revealed at The Best FIFA Football Awards in London, England after over 28,000 professional footballers voted for their global team of the year.
Lionel Messi made it a record 17th successive FIFA FIFPRO Men’s World 11 appearance; the Argentinian ace has been voted into every team of the year by his peers since 2007.
Six of Manchester City’s treble-winning side were voted into the men’s team of the year: Kyle Walker, John Stones, Ruben Dias, Bernardo Silva, Kevin De Bruyne and Erling Haaland.
Two of Spain’s Women’s World Cup-winning heroes – Aitana Bonmati and Olga Carmona – made it into the FIFA FIFPRO Women’s World 11 for the first time. They were joined by seven England internationals: Mary Earps, Alex Greenwood, Lucy Bronze, Ella Toone, Keira Walsh, Alessia Russo and Lauren James.
Since 2005, FIFPRO has invited the world’s professional footballers to choose their World 11. It is the only global player award decided exclusively by footballers.
FIFPRO and FIFA congratulate the following winners:
2023 FIFA FIFPRO WOMEN’S WORLD 11
Goalkeeper
Mary Earps (Manchester United, England)
Defenders
Lucy Bronze (Barcelona, England)
Olga Carmona (Real Madrid, Spain)
Alex Greenwood (Manchester City, England)
Midfielders
Aitana Bonmati (Barcelona, Spain)
Ella Toone (Manchester United, England)
Keira Walsh (Barcelona, England)
Forwards
Lauren James (Chelsea, England)
Sam Kerr (Chelsea, Australia)
Alex Morgan (San Diego Wave, USA)
Alessia Russo (Manchester United/Arsenal, England)
2023 FIFA FIFPRO MEN’S WORLD 11
Goalkeeper
Thibaut Courtois (Real Madrid, Belgium)
Defenders
Ruben Dias (Manchester City, Portugal)
John Stones (Manchester City, England)
Kyle Walker (Manchester City, England)
Midfielders
Jude Bellingham (Borussia Dortmund/Real Madrid, England)
Kevin De Bruyne (Manchester City, Belgium)
Bernardo Silva (Manchester City, Portugal)
Forwards
Erling Haaland (Manchester City, Norway)
Kylian Mbappe (Paris Saint-Germain, France)
Lionel Messi (Paris Saint-Germain/Inter Miami, Argentina)
Vinicius Jr (Real Madrid, Brazil)
How did the voting work?
The 2023 FIFA FIFPRO World 11 was voted for by professional footballers from 69 countries. FIFPRO and affiliated player unions distributed unique links that gave players access to a digital voting platform.
Men’s football players were asked to vote for their peers based on their performances from 19 December 2022 to 20 August 2023 inclusive. Players in the World 11 must have appeared in at least 23 official matches during that period.
Women’s football players were asked to vote for their peers based on their performances from 1 August 2022 to 20 August 2023 inclusive. Players in the World 11 must have appeared in at least 25 official matches during that period.
Footballers picked the three players who, in their opinion, were the most outstanding in each of the following positions: goalkeeper, defence, midfield and forward.
The goalkeeper, three defenders, three midfielders and three forwards with the most votes in their position made it into the World 11. The 11th spot was assigned to the outfield player with the next highest number of votes.
Players were free to choose any of their peers. The voting tool contained a suggestion list, but players were allowed to add other names if they were not mentioned on that list.