Wales Bolsters Squad with Ramsey’s Return for Crucial Fixtures Wales manager Craig Bellamy has recalled captain Aaron Ramsey to the national team squad for October’s international window, signaling a boost for their 2026 World Cup qualification campaign. The 34-year-old midfielder, who missed recent matches against Kazakhstan and Canada due to a prolonged injury recovery—limited to one substitute appearance in six months—returns after a resurgence at Mexican club Pumas UNAM. There, he has started three games and featured from the bench in two more, demonstrating the fitness Bellamy has long awaited. “He’s fit. I haven’t had that luxury with him,” Bellamy remarked, praising Ramsey’s enduring tactical acumen: “When I look back at that first game against Turkey in September 2024, he was immense. He has the brain. That’s never going to go.” With dynamic legs around him, Bellamy sees Ramsey’s profile as pivotal to Wales’ playing style.
The squad also welcomes back key defenders Ethan Ampadu and Joe Rodon from Leeds United, Coventry City’s Jay Dasilva, and Wrexham’s forward Nathan Broadhead, all sidelined by injuries for the prior fixtures. Leeds winger Dan James earns inclusion despite an ankle injury under club assessment, with Leeds confirming no long-term concerns and manager Daniel Farke set to update Thursday. These returns fortify a group eyeing redemption after mixed results, blending experience with emerging talent.
Wales’ schedule pits them against England in a high-stakes friendly at Wembley on Thursday, October 9, followed by a pivotal World Cup qualifier hosting Belgium at Cardiff City Stadium on Monday, October 13. In Group J, Wales sit third with 10 points from six games, one behind leaders North Macedonia (11 points) and level with Belgium, who hold superior goal difference and a game in hand. Automatic qualification demands Wales win all three remaining matches—against England (friendly), Belgium, and Liechtenstein—while hoping Belgium falters more than once beyond Cardiff. Runners-up secure play-off berths in March, and even third place virtually guarantees one, courtesy of last year’s Nations League triumph.
Bellamy’s full squad reflects a blend of Premier League pedigree and domestic grit: Goalkeepers Karl Darlow (Leeds), Adam Davies (Sheffield Utd), Tom King (Everton); Defenders Ben Cabango (Swansea), Jay Dasilva (Coventry), Ben Davies (Tottenham), Ronan Kpakio (Cardiff), Dylan Lawlor (Cardiff), Chris Mepham (West Brom), Joe Rodon (Leeds), Neco Williams (Nott’m Forest); Midfielders Ethan Ampadu (Leeds), David Brooks (Bournemouth), Jordan James (Stade Rennais), Aaron Ramsey (Pumas), Josh Sheehan (Bolton), Sorba Thomas (Stoke), Harry Wilson (Fulham), Joel Colwill (Cardiff); Forwards Nathan Broadhead (Wrexham), Liam Cullen (Swansea), Mark Harris (Oxford), Lewis Koumas (Birmingham on loan from Liverpool), Daniel James (Leeds), Brennan Johnson (Tottenham), Kieffer Moore (Wrexham).
Recent UEFA updates affirm the group’s tightness, with North Macedonia’s edge from a recent draw, per September 28 standings. Bellamy’s charges, buoyed by Nations League success, eye these fixtures as turning points, where Ramsey’s vision could unlock paths to the 2026 finals in North America.