Club Leon will receive economic compensation for four players who were called up by their national teams and were registered with the institution during the period considered by FIFA. James Rodríguez, convoked by Colombia, was registered with Club Leon from January to November 2025. Although his stay with the institution was short, he falls within the period that FIFA takes into account to distribute the compensation between the clubs for which each player passed before the World Cup. Ismael Díaz also generated income for the Fiera. The Panamanian striker arrived at the team in July 2025 and currently continues to be part of the esmeralda squad, so León will be one of the clubs benefited by his participation with Panama in the World Cup. Federico Viñas is another important case. The Uruguayan forward arrived at Club Leon in June 2023 and left in August 2024, although he still owns the institution. As he was called up by Uruguay, the esmeralda team will also have the right to receive a part of the corresponding compensation. The list is completed by Jordy Alcívar, Ecuadorian midfielder who played with León from July to December 2024. Despite his brief stint, he also falls within the window that FIFA considers to distribute the money between the clubs in which the player was registered during the last two seasons. The mechanism does not work as an exclusive payment for the current club of the player. The compensation is shared between the institutions in which the player was registered during the two years prior to the tournament. Therefore, León will not necessarily receive 100% of the amount generated by each selected player, but the corresponding proportion of the time each player belonged or was registered with the team. This point is key to understanding the real income that could receive the Fiera. Similar cases occur in other clubs around the world: if a player recently changed teams, the payment is divided between their current club and the previous institutions that also participated in their development or loan during the period established by FIFA. In Qatar 2022, the organization distributed $209 million between 440 clubs from 51 member associations. In that edition, 837 players were called up, who accumulated thousands of days of participation between concentration, tournament, and elimination of their selections. From that calculation, the figure close to $11,000 per day and per player emerged. However, taking that amount as an exact figure for the 2026 World Cup would be an error. For this edition, FIFA increased the program's fund to $355 million, in addition to the tournament having 48 teams, 16 more than in Qatar 2022, and a more extensive calendar. Additionally, for the first time, the program also considers benefits related to players who participated in the World Cup qualifiers. Furthermore, there may still be changes in the final lists due to injury or other circumstances, which can modify the universe of players and clubs benefited. For this reason, Club Leon already has secured