The Phnom Penh Post

Decision time for changes to World Cup

-

A F T E R much d i s c u s sion, argument and counter-argument, FIFA wi l l deter mine t o d a y whet her P r e s ident Gia nni Infa nt ino ca n force t h roug h h i s v i sion of a n enlarged World Cup.

Infantino’s credibilit­y will be on the line as the world body looks to revamp the four-yearly moneyspinn­er, potentiall­y opening its door to 48 teams in 2026.

That would stretch the action out to 80 matches as opposed to the 2014 format of 32 teams and 64 matches.

Several options stand before the 30-strong FIFA council: maintain the status quo; extend to 40 teams featuring either eight groups of five or 10 groups of four; or go for 48 teams.

That format would involve either a 32-team playoff allowing 16 winners to join 16 already qualified nations, or Infantino’s preferred option of 16 groups of three with the top two in each progressin­g to a round of 32.

The first World Cup in Uruguay featured just 13 countries, and since then the tournament has evolved in a world of consumeris­m and on-demand global communicat­ion.

For the 1982 finals in Spain, the event moved from 16 to 24 teams, then 32 for France ‘98.

Infantino puts forward a raft of arguments to back a further leap to 48, not least that by giving more countries a piece of the finals cake, interest will rise in more viewer markets, generating more revenue.

Infantino option criticised

According to a confidenti­al FIFA report seen by AFP, a 48-team tournament would bring a cash boost of $640 million over and above projected revenues for next year’s finals in Russia.

The report forecasts television rights also rising by $505 million and marketing revenue by $370 million. And even if organisati­on costs would rise, the tournament could still function in a 12-stadium for- mat, as per the 2018 model.

Yet the FIFA forecasts are hard to compare with a 2018 event whose own financial scope is somewhat clouded by the non-replacemen­t, to date, of sponsors such as Sony and Emirates.

The Infa nt i no opt ion has draw n cr it icism, a nd UEFA President Aleksander Ceferin has complained of lack a of infor mation on t he project, pointedly adding t hat in his v ie w t he c u r r ent s y s t em “works”.

The European Clubs Associatio­n, presided by former German internatio­nal KarlHeinz Rummenigge, al s o voiced opposition to expan- sion, citing an already overloaded calendar.

Even so, Spanish daily Mundo Deportivo has since reported that figures including Real Madrid’s powerful president Florentino Perez and Barcelona counterpar­t Josep Bartomeu are backing Infantino.

One of the major facets within the proposed revamp is the attributio­n of extra berths for each confederat­ion, a crucial point to be discussed today in Zurich. Whereas the share-out for a 40-strong event is already known – Europe would gain one slot to 14, Africa two and Asia one – the putative 48-nation distributi­on still has to be agreed on.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia