The Phnom Penh Post

North American bid in pole for 2026 World Cup, Morocco in the running

- Yann Bernal

FIFA’s decision to expand the World Cup to 48 teams sta r t ing with the 2026 tournament prompted one major question: Who can host the globa l showpiece in its revamped format?

North America is t he favourite and i n pole position, with other former candidates relegated to outsiders. Severa l harbour ambitions of organising the 2026 World Cup but certain constraint­s limit the numbers.

While the format for the finals faces an overhaul – 16 groups of three before the last 32 – the basic framework will remain similar, with a 32-day timeframe and 12 venues, assured FIFA chief Gianni Infantino, the man behind the reform.

The main limitation will be the choice of host countries, with the winning bid to be revealed in May 2020, taking into account FIFA’s rotation principle – it said in October the hosts of the 2026 edition would come from different confederat­ions to those hosting the 2018 and 2022 events, effectivel­y excluding Europe (Russia) and Asia (Qatar).

However, a European nation could still be selected “in the case that none of the received bids meet the technical and financial demands”, the FIFA Council added.

China President Xi Jinping’s vision of transformi­ng the country into one of the game’s superpower­s includes the goal of hosting and one day winning the World Cup, but it too will have to wait its turn.

In May 2015 senior Chinese officials spoke of lodging a bid for the 2026 and 2030 events, a source said during the Asian Football Confederat­ion congress in Bahrain.

Joint North American effort

With Asia and Europe sidelined, and South America eyeing a joint bid between neighbours Argentina and Uruguay in 2030 to commemorat­e the competitio­n’s 100th anniversar­y, North America is firmly in the hunt.

With co-hosting a recent trend, and even encouraged by Infantino, a tandem or even tri-nation bid (US, Mexico and Canada) “is a possibilit­y”, CONCACAF chief Victor Montaglian­i confirmed.

Also playing in their favour is the fact the World Cup hasn’t visited the North and Central America region since the US hosted the 1994 tournament, while the three countries in question already boast the required infrastruc­tures.

“To organise such a World Cup is positive on the condition that there aren’t too many constructi­on costs,” said Jean-Francois Brocard, university lecturer and researcher at the Centre for Law and Economics of Sport.

“We saw it with Euro 2016. The expenses incurred were more than offset by the revenues. When you increase the number of teams, that multiplies the costs but the revenues as well.”

Mexican FA supremo Decio De Maria t heir intention to bid for for 2026 last March. Mexico has t wice hosted memorable tournament­s, first i n 1970 when a magnificen­t Bra zil side featuring Pele and t he late Carlos Alberto waltzed to t he title, and the 1986 World Cup won by Diego Maradona’s Argentina.

The US fell short in t heir attempt to land the 2022 showpiece controvers­ia lly awarded to Qatar, but has since made it known they would be interested i n staging t he 2026 finals.

Trump factor

However, Donald Trump’s election as US president could make negotiatin­g a joint bid trickier after angering Mexicans with his antiimmigr­ant rhetoric.

But other failed 2018 and 2022 contenders appear out of the running due to FIFA’s desire to rotate between continents – removing England, Portugal-Spain, BelgiumNet­herlands, South Korea and Japan from the equation.

Whether the same applies to Australia is another point of contention. The Socceroos have establishe­d themselves as a force in Asia since leaving Oceania in 2006 and on that basis would also be ineligible.

But geographic­ally speaking, Oceania is the only continent yet to welcome to the World Cup to its shores.

Morocco is also an option. Overlooked on four occasions (1994, 1998, 2006, 2010), it looks the lone feasible African candidate. South Africa hosted the 2010 World Cup.

In November Infantino said Morocco had “all the resources to host a World Cup”, but it still has issues with the number of suitable venues and the repercussi­ons of backing out from hosting the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations over Ebola fears.

 ?? TIMOTHY A CLARY/AFP ?? Brazilian forward Romario kisses the World Cup trophy as teammates Branco (left) and Dunga look on after Brazil beat Italy in a penalty shootout in the 1994 USA World Cup final at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California, on July 17, 1994.
TIMOTHY A CLARY/AFP Brazilian forward Romario kisses the World Cup trophy as teammates Branco (left) and Dunga look on after Brazil beat Italy in a penalty shootout in the 1994 USA World Cup final at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California, on July 17, 1994.

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