FIFA revealed its World Cup groupings at a star-studded event in Washington, D.C., on Friday.With the help of President Donald Trump, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, NFL legend Tom Brady, NBA great Shaquille O’Neal, New York Yankees superstar Aaron Judge, and the NHL’s greatest player of all time, Wayne Gretzky, all 12 groups were announced. All the aforementioned individuals selected random balls that contained the countries' names, and their selections assigned them to their groups. Trump, Sheinbaum and Carney all picked their own countries’ names to begin the process. CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COMBrady selected the teams in Pot 1, O’Neal picked Pot 2’s teams, and Judge and Gretzky had Pots 3 and 4, respectively. While the groups were created on Friday, six of the 48 teams participating will only be known in March 2026. Four of them will come from the 16-team UEFA playoffs.The countries competing in the UEFA play-offs are: Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Czechia, Denmark, Italy, Kosovo, Northern Ireland, North Macedonia, Poland, Republic of Ireland, Romania, Slovakia, Sweden, Turkey, Ukraine and Wales.The remaining two spots will be decided at the FIFA World Cup 2026 Play-Off Tournament. The six teams competing in that tournament are Bolivia, Congo DR, Iraq, Jamaica, New Caledonia and Suriname. US MEN'S NATIONAL TEAM GETS FAVORABLE GROUP MATCHUPS AT WORLD CUP DRAWBelow are all 12 groups:Mexico South Africa Korea Republic Winner UEFA Play-off DCanada Winner UEFA Play-off A Qatar SwitzerlandBrazil Morocco Haiti ScotlandUSA Paraguay Australia Winner UEFA Play-off CGermany Curaçao Côte d'Ivoire EcuadorNetherlands Japan Winner UEFA Play-off B TunisiaBelgium Egypt IR Iran New ZealandSpain Cabo Verde Saudi Arabia UruguayFrance Senegal Winner FIFA Play-off 2 NorwayArgentina Algeria Austria JordanPortugal Winner FIFA Play-off 1 Uzbekistan ColombiaEngland Croatia Ghana PanamaFollow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.