EA Sports gave Morgan Rogers an 84 overall in EA FC 26, up from 82 at launch after his performances forced a mid-cycle upgrade. At the time that felt generous. Now it looks like they missed by a significant margin. Rogers has scored in a Europa League final, been named UEFA Europa League Player of the Season, helped Villa into the Champions League, and got called into England's World Cup squad. EA FC 27 has a genuine problem on its hands when ratings time comes around.
The conversation in the gaming community is already running. What does EA do with a player who has had one of the best seasons of any English attacking midfielder in European football, is currently at a World Cup, and is the subject of a £100 million transfer saga? The sportsbook reviews and transfer analysis coming out of Goal and other outlets this week paint a picture of a player who has left his current card far behind. What club he ends up at matters as much as the rating itself when it comes to squad building in Ultimate Team.
What Rogers' Season Means in EA FC Terms
In EA FC 26, Rogers is a CAM with 84 overall, 86 potential, four-star skill moves, four-star weak foot, and right-footed. His pace and dribbling are the headline stats. His physicality is rated better than most players at his position. His shooting from distance is a standout. All of that was accurate when the game launched. The season he has just had makes the 84 look like something EA would apply to a solid player, not to the Europa League Player of the Season.
For context, EA Sports' official ratings page for Rogers shows how far his numbers have already moved mid-cycle. Players who win individual awards in European competition typically receive ratings bumps in the following titles. Kylian Mbappe, Vinicius Jr, and Erling Haaland have all seen their overall ratings climb sharply in the year after tournament-defining performances. Rogers winning UEFA's top individual prize in the Europa League is exactly the kind of achievement that drives EA's ratings methodology.
The Transfer Saga Complicates the Card
Here is where FIFA 27 gets genuinely interesting. If Rogers moves to Arsenal this summer, his card in the new game will show the Arsenal badge. If he stays at Villa, he stays in claret and blue but almost certainly gets a Champions League card for the first time in a Villa shirt. Either way, his card in the next EA Sports title is going to look meaningfully different from the one sitting in people's Ultimate Team squads right now.
Arsenal have confirmed interest, Fabrizio Romano reported on June 17 that the deal is on, and talkSPORT reported today that Rogers is keen. Villa want £100 million. The gap between what Arsenal will open with and what Villa will accept is the story dominating football coverage right now. What that means for FIFA 27 is that EA will be watching this window very closely. If Rogers ends up at a Champions League club on a mega-money deal, his rating in the new title could reasonably sit at 87 or above. The club badge question matters as much as the number itself when it comes to chemistry in Ultimate Team.
Aston Villa's Squad in FIFA 27 Depends on What Happens Next
Villa's FIFA 27 squad card is going to look very different depending on how this summer plays out. If Rogers stays, Villa have a Champions League squad with a potential 87-rated CAM as their creative spine alongside Ollie Watkins. If he goes, Villa will likely reinvest in a replacement, the Daily Mail reports Morgan Gibbs-White is the contingency option from Nottingham Forest, and EA will have to rate a new first choice in that position.
For EA FC players who build European squads, this matters. A high-rated Rogers at Arsenal would link differently than a high-rated Rogers at Villa. The chemistry system in Ultimate Team means the destination of this transfer has real gameplay implications for how squads get constructed next season.
Where to Follow the Ratings Discussion
The EA FC community has been debating Rogers' rating ceiling since January. With the World Cup now underway and every England performance being scrutinised for both football and FIFA 27 implications, the conversation is only going to get louder over the next few weeks.
