nvm
One is Troy Polamalu! Go Steelers!!
The answer is that what one man can do will be limited by logistics, but it is believed that football players have played for more than one country previously. If you mean which countries play American football (or Canadian football - but not soccer), it is played in one form or another in organized leagues, both professional, semi-professional and amateur, in at least 50 countries throughout the world - from the USA and Canada to Japan, Mexico Ireland, Italy, Great Britain, Germany and another 25 countries in Europe.
Coachs get their players through scouts. Scouts go out to collage games and watch for the players that would do good on their teams. they also watch tey videos
5 players have so go to colege
As of now there are only 8 professional test teams. And 9 professional ODI teams. Other teams only feature in world cup matches and they need to go through qualifiers to gain an entry to play in the World Cup. - Vivek Rahul
Go be a loner
#1:on the file select screen, pick a file, then go to 1-5 players to pick as many players in the game(Note:on multiplayer you can ONLY use wii remotes). #2:if you are in the middle of a game, go to the menu and switch to wii remote.Then choose "Number of Players".Add as many players(up to 4 players) in the game once chosen the characters,they will appear in the world map. Enjoy working together:D!
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.
Lots and Lots
3
If this world is like the bring it on movies, then no.
cause of the good games they play