All-time Columbus Crew SC roster

This list comprises all players who have participated in at least one league match for the Columbus Crew since the team's first Major League Soccer season in 1996. Players who were on the roster but never appeared in a game are not listed; players who appeared for the team in other competitions (US Open Cup, CONCACAF Champions League, etc.) but never actually made an MLS appearance are noted at the bottom of the page.

A "†" denotes players who only appeared in a single match.

As of September 5, 2018

A

B

C

D

E

F

G

H

I

J

K

L

M

N

O

P

R

S

T

U

V

W

Y

Z

By Nationality

Nation Number of players
 United States 155
 Argentina 14
 Costa Rica 9
 Ghana 8
 Trinidad and Tobago 7
 Brazil 6
 Jamaica 6
 Chile 4
 Venezuela 4
 Canada 3
 England 3
 Guatemala 3
 Poland 3
 Colombia 2
 Denmark 2
 New Zealand 2
 Nigeria 2
 Norway 2
 Scotland 2
 South Africa 2
 Uruguay 2
 Austria 1
 Bolivia 1
 Cameroon 1
 Croatia 1
 Curaçao 1
 DR Congo 1
 Egypt 1
 Finland 1
 France 1
 Gambia 1
 Haiti 1
 Honduras 1
 Iceland 1
 Iraq 1
 Mexico 1
 Montenegro 1
 Morocco 1
 Netherlands 1
 Northern Ireland 1
 Panama 1
 Peru 1
 Portugal 1
 Puerto Rico 1
 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 1
 Sierra Leone 1
 Serbia 1
 Spain 1
 Sweden 1
 Uganda 1
 Zimbabwe 1

Miscellaneous

Players that never played in a league match, but appeared in another competition:

Sources

  • "MLS All-Time MLS Player Register". Mlsnet.com. Major League Soccer. Archived from the original on 14 February 2009. Retrieved 2009-02-17.
  • "MLS Number Assignments Archive". Retrieved 2009-03-02.
gollark: I agree, but I don't think we would agree on *what*.
gollark: So in short, it would actually be very bad if we had COVID-19 but twice as infectious and with a 99% death rate, and no extant threat would come close.
gollark: That many people dying would utterly break hospitals (if anyone even turns up when they might just die from trying to treat people) and also everything else.
gollark: People would probably avoid human contact a lot more than they actually have been bothering to with COVID-19, but this hypothetical virus is twice as infectious so that would be a problem.
gollark: No, basically everyone.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.