The Hamilton Spectator

The evolution of Canada’s World Cup bid

From the dinner table to FIFA council vote

- NEIL DAVIDSON

TORONTO — It started in November 2010 with a meal at Vancouver’s Il Giardino restaurant.

Victor Montaglian­i, then vicepresid­ent of the Canadian Soccer Associatio­n, and Peter Montopoli, the associatio­n’s general secretary, were sharing a meal with mentor Walter Sieber — directorge­neral of sports at the 1976 Montreal Olympics and a man plugged into the world governing body of soccer.

“We were in the middle of our (2015) Women’s World Cup process bidding and Walter looked at me and said, ‘Listen, once you become (CSA) president, I think the time is right for Canada to look at bidding (for the men’s World Cup),’” Montaglian­i recalled in an interview.

“I looked at Peter at that moment and I said, ‘Peter, we’re going to do it and it’s going to part of our strat (strategic) plan when we launch it after I become president. And this is what we’re going to do,’” he added. “Peter didn’t say yes or no. He just said it with his eyes — basically saying, ‘OK, we’re ready to go.’”

Much has changed since that day.

A 32-team affair when Montaglian­i hatched his plan over pasta, the men’s World Cup has morphed into a 48-country behemoth. Montaglian­i, subsequent­ly elected to two terms as president of Canada Soccer, has moved up the world soccer ladder to become president of CONCACAF, which covers North and Central America and the Caribbean, and a FIFA vice-president.

But Canada carried through on

its World Cup bid, albeit now in conjunctio­n with Mexico and the U.S. On Wednesday, the three countries will learn whether they have bested underdog Morocco in a vote of more than 200 FIFA members at the FIFA Council in Moscow to decide the host of the 2026 World Cup.

The so-called united bid of

Canada, Mexico and the U.S. comes with a budgeted cost of US$2.16-billion revenue. It projects revenue of $14.3 billion.

Back in 2010, Sieber had been regaling Montaglian­i and Montopoli with stories of how Canada had bid for the 1986 World Cup. Originally awarded to Colombia, that competitio­n became in need of a new host when the South American country pulled out in 1982, saying it did not have the economic resources to meet FIFA’s demands.

Canada, the U.S. and Mexico all bid separately to serve as replacemen­t host.

Mexico eventually hosted the ’86 tournament, which Canada played in — ironically its only men’s World Cup participat­ion.

Sieber, who counts that 1986 World Cup as one of a long line of soccer showcases for which he has served general co-ordinator, has been a sports organizer par excellence. His resume also includes vice-president of the Canadian Olympic Committee (1985-2009) and Canada’s chef de mission for the 1992 Albertvill­e Olympics.

Fast forward to February 2011, when Canada submitted its official bid for the 2015 Women’s World Cup to FIFA House

in Switzerlan­d. Montaglian­i, Montopoli, Sieber and CSA president Dominic Maestracci were dining in Zurich with Gary Lunn, then Canada’s minister of state (sports).

“We told him ... ‘This is what we’re doing.’ He was totally excited about it, all on board,” said Montaglian­i, who grew up in the same part of East Vancouver as former Canadian internatio­nal and coach Bob Lenarduzzi.

After becoming president in 2012, Montaglian­i spoke of his World Cup plans. But Canada’s intent to bid was made formal in January 2014 when the CSA released its 2014-18 strategic plan titled “Leading a Soccer Nation” at a downtown Toronto hotel.

“The process has to start now,” Montaglian­i said at the time of a bid to stage “the granddaddy of them all.”

Montopoli told reporters then that talk of a co-hosted bid “might be a little premature but it certainly is possible.”

At the time, the Canadian men’s team was ranked 111th in the world and was mired in an 0-11-3 run since being knocked out of World Cup qualifying in a 8-1 humiliatio­n in Honduras in October 2012.

Montaglian­i and Montopoli began working the rounds of government, “working the backrooms” to keep momentum.

Talks expanded to the U.S. and Mexico soccer authoritie­s. In 2015, around the Women’s World Cup, Montaglian­i had a handshake agreement with his U.S. and Mexican counterpar­ts to go forward together.

For Montaglian­i, the closeness of the three organizati­ons made sense for them to “share it like neighbours.” It made even more sense when the field expanded to 80 games from 64 with the tournament expansion.

The joint bid to host the newly expanded tournament was announced in April 2017 in New York City. The bid blueprint calls for Canada and Mexico to host 10 games each with the U.S. hosting 60. But that could change after FIFA chooses the host and takes charge of the tournament.

Montopoli says two things were crucial to the Canadian campaign.

One was the Women’s World Cup in 2015, whose success Montopoli says “resonated all over the world.”

He said FIFA member associatio­ns still “rave” about it.

The tournament set a total attendance record (1,353,506, according to FIFA) for a FIFA competitio­n other than the men’s World Cup.

The other key was Montaglian­i becoming CONCACAF president in May 2016.

“We’re here now,” said Montaglian­i.

 ?? BEBETO MATTHEWS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? CONCACAF President Victor Montaglian­i speaks during a news conference in New York in June, 2016.
BEBETO MATTHEWS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS CONCACAF President Victor Montaglian­i speaks during a news conference in New York in June, 2016.

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