Manchester United have a fair few fans from across the Atlantic, but surprisingly few players from the CONCACAF confederation have actually played Premier League football for the club.
Just four men have played senior minutes for United and earned caps for a North or Central American or Caribbean nation, but the connection goes deeper than that.
When you incorporate those who are or have once been eligible for such a national team, or those who left United without playing for the first team, you're up to more than a dozen. We've ranked them from worst to best.
Kenny Cooper
American forward Cooper left United in 2006, and proceeded to score at a good rate for FC Dallas in Major League Soccer. He spent most of his career in the US, scoring four goals in 10 international caps.
David Johnson
Johnson was a solid second-tier striker, scoring freely for Ipswich (and later for Nottingham Forest) and helping the Tractor Boys up to the Premier League in 2000, but failed to net in the top flight. After a single appearance for England B, the Kingston-born striker made his Jamaica debut in 1999 and scored twice in four friendly appearances.
Jovan Kirovski
Kirovski was a 16-year-old in United's academy when the Class of '92 came through, but strict work permit rules prevented the American from ever stepping up to the first team despite him earning US international caps while on the club's books. He went on to have an impressive career, though, winning more than 60 US caps and a Champions League title with Borussia Dortmund.
Shaun Goater
A club legend at Manchester City, Goater never made the cut at United in the late 80s. More than 100 goals for City, and 32 in 36 Bermuda caps, is testament to his quality.
Paul Rachubka
A California-born England youth international, Rachubka made just one United start, but he did at least add to his single Premier League game when he came up with Blackpool in 2010.
Ravel Morrison
We all know the story of Morrison's United spell, but his international career is spoken about less. The former England under-21 midfielder is also eligible for Jamaica, and earned his first call-up for the Reggae Boyz in February, though he is yet to play minutes for Theodore Whitmore's side.
Jonathan Spector
American utility man Spector played eight games in a United shirt, three of them in the Premier League, before famously scoring twice against them for West Ham in the 2010/11 League Cup. He left West Ham at the end of that season after relegation and remained a steady defensive-minded player until his retirement in 2019.
Fraizer Campbell
Campbell's sole England cap came in a friendly back in 2012, which means he could still technically declare for Jamaica, though there has been no suggestion he will do so. The Huddersfield Town striker played twice for United in the league, and four times in total, after coming through the academy.
Danny Simpson
A current team-mate and one-time United contemporary of Campbell's, 2015-16 Premier League winner Simpson is also eligible for the Reggae Boyz. His eight United games came all the way back in the 2007/08 campaign.
Giuseppe Rossi
Yes, Rossi has Italy caps, but he might have chosen the United States after being born and growing up in New Jersey. The forward, who narrowly missed out on the Azzurri's 2010 and 2014 World Cup squads, scored four times for United and scored freely elsewhere before injuries halted his progress.
Howard has undoubtedly had a great career, though his spell at United was much shorter than he might have hoped. Just one full season as first choice, in which he was in goal as Jose Mourinho's Porto knocked United out of the Champions League, was followed by a decade at Everton, while he ended his international career with more than 100 caps.
Owen Hargreaves
The England midfielder chose the Three Lions above Canada, the country of his birth, while he was also eligible for Wales. Like Howard, Hargreaves' United spell wasn't the longest, but few were more important to their dominant 2007/08 campaign at home and in Europe.
Javier Hernandez
When Hernandez joined in the summer of 2010, he wasn't necessarily expected to have the immediate impact we saw, even after netting for Mexico at that year's World Cup. However, his first campaign with the club was one of three straight seasons under Sir Alex Ferguson in which he hit double-figures in the league. He's now at LA Galaxy in MLS, where he shares a dressing room with international colleague Jonathan dos Santos, brother of former Tottenham midfielder Giovani.
Dwight Yorke
The only treble winner on this list, Yorke more than justified the hefty fee United forked out to bring him over from Aston Villa in 1998. The Trinidad & Tobago striker was a great goalscorer at Old Trafford, and helped United become the first and only club to win three straight Premier League titles in the competition's history. His 66 United goals came at a rate of almost one every two games, and his partnership with Andy Cole was a big part of the club's success in that period.