What’s up with the 3 bottom ones who are the players and why are they so few?
You should look at the map. Val d’Aosta and Trentino-Alto Adige are small underpopulated alpine regions and they mostly produce skiers and winter sports athletes, or cyclists. Molise is also small but on the Apennines, lots of sheeps. From Val d’Aosta the only good player was Sergio Pellissier, from Trentino there’s Pinamonti now and I can’t remember any other players. By memory I don’t remember any players from Molise, I doubt more than a dozen have made it to the serie A.
Nicolussi Caviglia is from Val d’Aosta & Calvin Bassey was actually born there, interestingly.
Molise it’s a meme in Italy for it’s irrelevance to the Italian landscape (be it political, cultural,sportive,…) and people meme it doesn’t exist and that it’s actually fictional like Atlantis and similar fake regions
Trentino-Alto Adige is the part of Italy that includes South Tyrol and athletes there are more focused on winter sports, some exceptions exist (Sinner with tennis but even him was a grand slalom winner before choosing tennis over skiing) but are rare.
Valle d’Aosta is a fully mountainous region (between France and Switzerland) and has the lowest population in Italy because of its size and rurality. Athletes are rare and like Trentino usually going to practice winter sports instead of footbal.
Missing quite a few notable Argentinians and Brazilians.
I am too lazy to sort these countries into regions
Country Games Goals Argentina 240 69 Brazil 170 21 Scotland 9 7 USA 30 7 Uruguay 49 6 Germany 21 4 England 51 2 South Africa 3 2 Switzlerland 34 2 Libya 71 1 Paraguay 2 1 Algeria 11 0 I used the Wikipedia article linked in the thread
Who was born in England?
Simone Perrotta (48 caps, 2 goals) and Giuseppe Wilson (3 caps)
We’re massive 💪
Also 7th by number of capped players with 47; 10 more than Campania with 1/5 of their population.
I’m not familiar with my Italian regions but is this just another “people live in cities” or is this actually meaningful or adjusted