2. Bundesliga

2025-10-08T16:36:38Z

Where are the Bundesliga stars on national duty?

Kane, Guirassy & Co.: The Bundesliga's finest are representing their national teams during the domestic break.
Kane, Guirassy & Co.: The Bundesliga's finest are representing their national teams during the domestic break.

The Bundesliga's finest have left their clubs during the international break to help their national teams in FIFA World Cup qualification, friendly matches more. Find out who has been called up and where they're playing...

Information correct as of 8 October 2025

Bundesliga

Bayern Munich

Aleksandar Pavlović, Leon Goretzka, Joshua Kimmich, Jonathan Tah, Serge Gnabry (all Germany), Harry Kane (England), Michael Olise, Dayot Upamecano (both France), Konrad Laimer (Austria), Luis Díaz (Colombia), Minjae Kim (South Korea), Nicolas Jackson (Senegal) 

Bayer Leverkusen

Robert Andrich (Germany), Alejandro Grimaldo, Aleix García (both Spain), Mark Flekken (Netherlands), Jarell Quansah (England), Edmond Tapsoba (Burkina Faso), Eliesse Ben Seghir (Morocco), Claudio Echeverri (Argentina), Ibrahim Maza (Algeria), Malik Tillman (USA), Ernest Poku (Netherlands U21), Alejo Sarco (Argentina U20)

Bayern's Luis Díaz has already secured World Cup qualification with Colombia.

Eintracht Frankfurt

Robin Koch, Nathaniel Brown, Jonathan Burkardt (all Germany), Farès Chaibi (Algeria), Arthur Theate, Michy Batshuayi (both Belgium), Rasmus Kristensen (Denmark), Hugo Larsson (Sweden), Aurèle Amenda (Switzerland), Can Uzun (Turkey), Ritsu Dōan (Japan), Elias Baum (Germany U21), Oscar Höjlund (Denmark U21), Jean-Mattéo Bahoya (France U21), Noah Fenyö (Hungary U21), Ellyes Skhiri (Tunisia)

Borussia Dortmund

Karim Adeyemi, Waldemar Anton, Maximilian Beier, Nico Schlotterbeck, Felix Nmecha (all Germany), Ramy Bensebaini (Algeria), Serhou Guirassy (Guinea), Julian Ryerson (Norway), Marcel Sabitzer (Austria), Daniel Svensson (Sweden), Gregor Kobel (Switzerland), Salih Özcan (Turkey), Jobe Bellingham (England U21), Cole Campbell (USA U20), Filippo Mané (Italy U20), Almugera Kabar (Germany U20)

Freiburg

Philipp Lienhart (Austria), Johan Manzambi (Switzerland), Cyriaque Irié (Burkina Faso), Noah Atubolu (Germany) Bruno Ogbus (Switzerland U21)

Mainz

Nadiem Amiri (Germany), Kaishu Sano (Japan), Philipp Mwene (Austria), Silvan Widmer (Switzerland), Jae-sung Lee (South Korea), Andreas Hanche-Olsen (Norway), Nelson Weiper (Germany U21), Konstantin Schopp (Austria U21), William Bøving (Denmark U21)

Watch: Dortmund and Germany's Adeyemi wins September Goal of the Month

RB Leipzig

David Raum, Ridle Baku (both Germany), Maarten Vandevoordt (Belgium), Willi Orbán (Hungary), Christoph Baumgartner, Nicolas Seiwald (both Austria), Antonio Nusa (Norway), Yan Diomande (Ivory Coast), Amadou Haidara (Mali), Conrad Harder (Denmark U21), Assan Ouédraogo (Germany U20), Ezechiel Banzuzi (Netherlands U21)

Werder Bremen

Marco Grüll, Romano Schmid, Marco Friedl (all Austria), Felix Agu (Nigeria), Karl Hein (Estonia), Isaac Schmidt (Switzerland), Samuel Mbangula (Belgium U21), Patrice Čović (Croatia U21)

VfB Stuttgart

Alexander Nübel, Jamie Leweling, Angelo Stiller (all Germany), Ermedin Demirović (Bosnia Herzegovina), Bilal El Khannouss (Morocco), Badredine Bouanani (Algeria), Atakan Karazor (Türkiye), Luca Jaquez (Switzerland), Lazar Jovanović (Serbia U21), Chema Andrés (Spain U21)

Borussia Mönchengladbach

Tiago Pereira Cardoso (Luxembourg), Nico Elvedi (Switzerland), Grant-Leon Ranos (Armenia), Jens Castrop (South Korea), Shuto Machino (Japan), Kevin Diks (Indonesia), Haris Tabaković (Bosnia and Herzegovina), Lukas Ullrich (Germany U21), Oscar Fraulo (Denmark U21)

VfL Wolfsburg

Mohammed Amoura (Algeria), Christian Eriksen, Jonas Wind, Joakim Mæhle (all Denmark), Konstantinos Koulierakis (Greece), Lovro Majer (Croatia), Patrick Wimmer (Austria), Kamil Grabara (Poland), Dženan Pejčinović (Germany U21), Sael Kumbedi (France U21)

Augsburg

Finn Dahmen (Germany), Fabian Rieder (Switzerland), Elias Saad, Ismaël Gharbi (both Tunisia) Samuel Essende (DR Congo), Dimitrios Giannoulis (Greece), Elvis Rexhbeçaj (Kosovo), Kristijan Jakić (Croatia), Aiman Dardari (Luxembourg), Mert Kömür (Germany U21)

Mohamed Amoura's goals have helped Algeria seal their spot in North America.

Union Berlin

Leopold Querfeld (Austria), András Schäfer (Hungary), Alex Král (Czechia), Andrej Ilić (Serbia), Tom Rothe, Ilyas Ansah (Germany U21)

St. Pauli

Connor Metcalfe (Australia), Nikola Vasilj (Bosnia and Herzegovina), Danel Sinani (Luxembourg), Arkadiusz Pyrka (Poland), Andréas Hountondji (Benin), Joel Chima Fujita (Japan), Karol Mets (Estonia), James Sands (USA)

Hoffenheim

Oliver Baumann, (Germany), Andrej Kramarić (Croatia), Robin Hranáč, Vladimir Coufal (both Czechia), Fisnik Asllani, Leon Avdullahu, Albian Hajdari (all Kosovo), Alexander Prass (Austria), Bazoumana Toure (Ivory Coast), Max Moerstedt, Muhammed Damar (both Germany U21) Lúkas Petersson (Iceland U21)

Heidenheim

Budu Zivzivadze (Georgia), Leart Paqarada (Kosovo), Arijon Ibrahimović (Germany U20)

Cologne

Jakub Kamiński (Poland), Ísak Jóhannesson (Iceland), Saïd El Mala (Germany U21)

Hamburg

Miro Muheim (Switzerland), Giorgi Gocholeishvili (Georgia), Warmed Omari (Comoros), Daniel Peretz (Israel), Luka Vušković (Croatia), Fabio Baldé (Portugal U21)

Poland's Jakub Kamiński has settled in superbly at newly promoted Cologne this season.

Bundesliga 2

Holstein Kiel

Alexander Bernhardsson (Sweden), David Zec (Slovenia), Hamza Muqaj, Leon Parduzi (both Kosovo U21), Lio Rothenhagen (Germany U20)

VfL Bochum

Matúš Bero (Slovakia), Gerrit Holtmann (Philippines), Leandro Morgalla (Germany U21), Kjell Wätjen, Cajetan Lenz (both Germany U20)

Elversberg

Lukas Petkov (Bulgaria), Nicholas Mickelson (Thailand)

Paderborn

Dennis Seimen (Germany U21)

Magdeburg

Eldin Dzogovic (Luxembourg), Lubambo Musonda (Zambia), Luka Hyryläinen (Finland U21), Laurin Ulrich (Germany U20)

Fortuna Düsseldorf

Cedric Itten (Switzerland), Florent Muslija (Kosovo)

Kaiserslautern

Mahir Emreli (Azerbaijan), Simon Simoni (Albania), Naatan Skyttä (Finland), Jisoo Kim (South Korea), Fabian Heck (Luxembourg U21)

Karlsruhe

Dženis Burnić (Bosnia and Herzegovina), Shio Fukuda (Japan U23)

Hannover

Benjamin Källman (Finland), Virgil Ghita (Romania), Mustapha Bundu (Sierra Leone), Husseyn Chakroun (Lebanon), Hendry Blank, Noel Aseko (both Germany U21)

Watch: The Philippines' Gerrit Holtman scored the 2021 Bundesliga Goal of the Year

Nuremberg

Luka Lochoshvili (Georgia), Adam Markhiev (Finland), Pape Demba Diop (Senegal U23), Berkay Yilmaz (Turkey U21), Artem Stepanov (Ukraine U21), Rafael Lubach, Tim Drexler (both Germany U20), Noah Maboulou (Congo U20)

Hertha Berlin

Jon Dagur Thorsteinsson (Iceland), Márton Dárdai (Hungary), Maurice Krattenmacher, Konstantin Heide (both Germany U20)

Darmstadt

Jean-Paul Boëtius (Surinam), Isaac Lidberg (Sweden)

Greuther Fürth

Mathias Olesen (Luxembourg), Aaron Keller (Switzerland U21)

Schalke

Nikola Katić (Bosnia and Herzegovina), Moussa Sylla (Mali), Vitalie Becker (Germany U20), Mauro Zalazar (Uruguay U20)

Preußen Münster

Etienne Amenyido (Togo)

Eintracht Braunschweig

N/A 

Arminia Bielefeld

Jonathan Norbye (Norway U21)

Dynamo Dresden

Claudio Kammerknecht (Sri Lanka), Kofi Amoako (Germany U21), Julian Pauli (Germany U20)

Related news
Discover more

Getting real-time match statistics is as easy as:

  1. Download the Bundesliga app
  2. Click on your favourite match
  3. Get all match stats directly as it happens!