Right now, 48 national teams are competing across the United States, Mexico, and Canada. Every player who stepped onto a U.S. field cleared an immigration process most fans never think about. So did the coaches, the trainers, and a long list of staff who make a tournament this size run.
Here is the part worth your attention. The legal framework that brings elite athletes into the United States is the same one that brings elite scientists, engineers, physicians, and founders. It runs on a single idea: extraordinary ability.
How the athletes actually get here
A world-class striker does not get a U.S. work visa because a club likes him. He gets it because he can document that he is among the best at what he does. The temporary route is usually an O-1 or a P-1, both built to recognize international acclaim in a specific field. Those visas are temporary, and they require a petitioner or agent to file on the athlete’s behalf.
The permanent route is the one worth understanding, because it works differently: the EB-1A green card for individuals of extraordinary ability.
Why the EB-1A is different
The EB-1A is one of the only employment-based green card categories that lets you petition for yourself. No team. No employer. No sponsor. You are not waiting on a company to decide your future, file on your timeline, or hold your status over you. You file on your own behalf and you make your own case.
That one feature changes the math for skilled professionals. Most green card paths tie you to an employer who controls the petition, the timeline, and often your ability to change jobs at all. The EB-1A does not. It is yours to build. If you want a second read on whether your record fits, you can book a consultation and we will tell you honestly.
The standard is not “be Messi”
Here is what trips people up. They assume extraordinary ability means global fame. It does not. USCIS does not ask whether you are a household name. It asks whether you have risen to the top of your field and whether others in that field recognize your work.
For an athlete, that recognition shows up as league records, national team selection, press coverage, and major awards. For a cybersecurity engineer, it shows up as patents, published research, adoption of your work by others, speaking invitations, and a documented record of high-level contributions. Different field, same logic.
The legal test weighs your evidence across a set of defined criteria, then evaluates the full record on its merits. The question is never “are you famous.” It is whether the evidence shows sustained acclaim and a place near the top of your field.
Why this matters for you
If you are a researcher, physician, engineer, founder, or specialist with a real record of achievement, you may be closer to this category than you think. The athletes on screen this month are simply the most visible version of a standard that applies across every field the United States wants to attract. We have guided professionals across science, healthcare, tech, and business through exactly this. You can read some of their success stories here.
You do not need to score in front of 80,000 people. You need to show, with evidence, that you are exceptional at what you do and that your work serves U.S. interests.
Where to start
The hardest part of an EB-1A is not the talent. It is presenting the record so an adjudicator sees what you already know about your career. That is the work we do. If you have built a track record in your field and want to know whether it meets the EB-1A standard, book a consultation. We will look at your background honestly and tell you where you stand.
This article is general information, not legal advice.


