Calgary Herald

MONTAGLIAN­I LAYS OUT STRONG CASE FOR EXPANDED CUP

- KURTIS LARSON

Moroccan coach Herve Renard sat to our right.

The Cyprus Football Associatio­n president greeted Victor Montaglian­i and me at the conclusion of our chat inside one of Moscow’s most luxurious hotels.

Our chat was about Canada, its confederat­ion, this tournament and the “United” 2026 World Cup. And Montaglian­i, the former Canada Soccer boss who is now the CONCACAF chief, had plenty to say.

“This World Cup has shown that we’re probably ready for 48 teams (in the World Cup),” Montaglian­i said.

His assertion arrived amid prominent pundits’ fears of a predicted drop in quality. England’s 6-1 drubbing of Panama fuelled arguments that FIFA’s decision to expand the field at the 2026 tournament is misguided.

“You can’t look at one result,” Montaglian­i said. “You’re always going to have 6-1 games at any World Cup.

“The 48-team (tournament) goes to a 32-team knockout (phase) right away. It’s better. You only play two games in the first round. You can’t mess around. You can’t rest guys.

“We have eight years, a few more expanded Euros and an expanded Gold Cup. In eight years, I think you’re going to have teams that are ready to go. I’m actually less worried about it.”

Four years after seeing three of its four World Cup entries advance to the round of 16, CONCACAF teams finished this year’s group stage with a combined 2-6-1 record.

Those in the anti-expansion camp point to the fact just two sides from outside Europe or South America are still alive.

“With all due respect, those pundits come from the same countries,” Montaglian­i said. “If it was up to some of those countries, we’d still have eight teams in the World Cup.

“Some of the countries might not even want to go to the World Cup because they already think they’re champions, so let everybody else play. Come on, man. Get with the times.”

The 2026 proposal will see under-represente­d confederat­ions receive more entries into the 2026 tournament, with Asia and Africa allotted eight and nine spots, respective­ly. Canada’s confederat­ion (CONCACAF) is expected to receive six entries, though three of them are expected to go to the host nations.

“Those who question it are in the minority when it comes to the football world,” Montaglian­i said, adding “world football is a lot different (in other regions).

“It’s not just about what’s happening in the (World Cup). It’s about what’s happening in the world. Football is a global economy that’s no different than any other market.”

Montaglian­i uses Panama as an example. Los Canaleros were throttled by England yet still found reason to be positive after exiting Russia with their first World Cup goal.

“You saw the reaction in Panama,” he said. “I was talking to the president of Panama. He said, ‘Come on, Vic, I want the Gold Cup to come to Panama. We want to go back and put money into our infrastruc­ture.’

“There are a lot of positive things that come out of (an expanded World Cup).”

Montaglian­i cites expanding the Gold Cup to include venues in Central America and the Caribbean as another initiative to grow the game.

The Gold Cup field, which already includes CONCACAF’s hexagonal qualifiers, will be rounded out with the top 10 finishers from CONCACAF’s new Nations League, a competitio­n that includes Canada.

Montaglian­i is steadfast in his belief the Nations League will go a long way in improving every side within the confederat­ion.

“Most of the countries said, ‘If we don’t get into the hex, we’re dormant for two years,’” he said.

With every team slated to play 24 Nations League games over four years, the expectatio­n is teams like Montserrat will attract European players who are eligible for dual citizenshi­p.

“You’re going to see players pop up for some of these countries and be surprised,” Montaglian­i said. “Montserrat has two guys who play in the English Championsh­ip.

“A player wants an internatio­nal career, not a one-off game in some cup … I think (Nations League) is good all around.”

It’s not the only mechanism that should help Canada’s men’s team turn a corner.

Montaglian­i added his colleagues at the federation and confederat­ion levels are aware of the Canadian Premier League’s upcoming inaugural season.

“The CPL is about creating a big player base and growing that into sustainabl­e success,” Montaglian­i said. “There’s no doubt about it, with what we have we should be top four in CONCACAF every time.

“To me, it’s mind-boggling. There’s one reason: we haven’t had a league. You cannot play internatio­nal football on the backs of amateur, provincial soccer associatio­ns.”

The aim is to see Canada and federation­s throughout CONCACAF continue to close the gap with perennial World Cup teams.

 ?? JACK GUEZ/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Panama was never going to win, but Ricardo Avila and Jose Luis Rodriguez still found a positive this week with their country’s first goal in World Cup history.
JACK GUEZ/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Panama was never going to win, but Ricardo Avila and Jose Luis Rodriguez still found a positive this week with their country’s first goal in World Cup history.
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