World Cup Draw Pots 2022: List of Teams, Seeds and Format for Draw
The World Cup draw will be held on Friday, April 1 at 12 p.m. ET and streamed on Peacock, taking us one step closer to the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.
The tournament will be a unique one, as it will be held in the autumn and winter months between Nov. 21 to Dec. 18.
And soon, we'll have a good idea of how the groups that comprise the competition will look. Below, we'll break down all the information you need heading into the draw.
How It Works
Teams are placed into four pots based on FIFA's rankings. Qatar were automatically put in Pot 1 as the host nation. One team per pot will be selected to make up the eight groups for the World Cup.
There are a few caveats. No group can have two teams from any confederation except for UEFA, since Europe will have 13 guaranteed berths. However, no group can have more than two UEFA teams.
Qualified Countries and Pots
Pot 1
Qatar, Brazil, Belgium, France, Argentina, England, Spain, Portugal
Pot 2
Netherlands, Germany, Mexico, United States, Switzerland, Denmark, Croatia, Uruguay
Pot 3
Senegal, Iran, Japan, Morocco, Serbia, Poland, South Korea, Tunisia
Pot 4
Cameroon, Canada, Croatia, Ecuador, Ghana, Saudi Arabia, Wales/Scotland/Ukraine, Australia/United Arab Emirates/Peru, Costa Rica/New Zealand
Qualifying Playoffs Remaining
Wales vs. Scotland/Ukraine
Australia/United Arab Emirates vs. Peru
Costa Rica vs. New Zealand
These games will be decided in June.
Top Teams And Players Missing Out
It's hard to believe that the defending European champions, Italy, will be missing out on this year's World Cup, let alone for the second time in a row. But the Italians lost to North Macedonia in Europe's playoff round, leaving one of the most iconic footballing nations out of the competition.
Quite a few big names won't be around for the competition, either. Superstar forwards like Norway's Erling Haaland, Egypt's Mohamed Salah and Sweden's Zlatan Ibrahimovic will be watching from home.
The Favorites
France won it all in 2018, so Kylian Mbappe and co. will be expected to be in the running yet again. The runners-up in that tournament, Croatia, still boast a dangerous side as well, though a dip in form has left them as a Pot 2 team in 2022.
Will this perhaps be the tournament that an extremely talented Belgium side, led by Kevin de Bruyne, finally emerges on top?
Then there's England's talented core that finished as runners-up to Italy in the most recent Euros. The English won just one World Cup, back in 1966, but have a group of players talented enough to end that drought.
Outside of Europe, you can never count out Neymar's Brazil or Lionel Messi's Argentina, in what will likely be Messi's final attempt to win a World Cup title. The only "blemish" on Messi's incredible resume is that he's never won a World Cup, like Diego Maradona did in 1986.
A triumph in Qatar would only further bolster the argument that Messi is the greatest player ever.