The Peterborough Examiner

North American bottom line translates into winning 2026 World Cup bid

- NEIL DAVIDSON

In the end, money talked.

FIFA’s member associatio­ns had 11 billion reasons to say yes to the joint bid from Canada, the U.S. and Mexico to host soccer’s 2026 World Cup. Morocco could only offer the world governing body of soccer $5 billion US in profit from the expanded 48-team men’s soccer showcase.

Given FIFA essentiall­y uses its cash cow to fund everything else, the North American bid’s promise of a record $11 billion in profit resonated.

Peter Montopoli, general secretary of the Canadian Soccer Associatio­n and Canada’s bid director, acknowledg­ed the bottom line was a key factor in the bid win on Wednesday in Moscow.

“Obviously the numbers, the profits, which were astounding,” he said in an interview.

But he also pointed to the certainty of the bid’s 23 stadiums — already built and ready for action — including Toronto’s BMO Field, Edmonton’s Commonweal­th Stadium and Montreal’s Olympic Stadium.

The third plank was the prospect of a knock ’em dead kickoff to the tournament — three games back-to-back-to-back in Toronto, Mexico City’s Azteca Stadium and the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif.

Factoring in an expansion to BMO Field — the bid document lists its tournament capacity at 45,500 — opening day could draw more than 220,000 spectators through the turnstiles.

The joint North American bid won 67 per cent of Wednesday’s vote at the FIFA Congress, defeating Morocco 134-65 with one country, Iran, voting for none of the above.

The joint bid pitched a near shutout in the Americas, winning 38 of 39 votes cast. Only Brazil opted for Morocco, which may have been a blessing given its recent history of World Cup stewardshi­p.

Europe and Asia came through with the North American bid, taking 11 African votes away from Morocco.

FIFA president Gianni Infantino tried unsuccessf­ully to play down the profit angle.

“Obviously the money is not the only element, obviously,” he told a news conference later in the day. “We have to focus on the football, I’ve said it many times. But the money we generate can be reinvested in football.”

Infantino, who used the day to announce he is running for reelection, then proceeded to talk about how FIFA’s revenues had risen on his watch.

For Canada, cohosting the 2026 tournament will come 40 years after its lone appearance at the men’s World Cup. The Canadian men went 0-3-0 without managing to score a goal in Mexico in 1986.

Perhaps the happiest man in Canada was men’s national team coach John Herdman.

“It’s officially football Christmas for Canada. It’s here.” said the English native. “It’s one of those mornings where you wonder if Santa’s gonna come, and he absolutely did this morning.”

Herdman, whose team is currently tied with Lebanon at No. 79 in the world rankings, has yet to hear whether the three co-hosts will secure automatic qualificat­ion, as is the norm. But given the increase in the size of the field and FIFA’s desire to squeeze every buck out of the tournament, it would be shocking if the host countries were not front and centre.

Herdman isn’t asking for handouts, saying he has his eye firmly on qualifying for 2022.

While Infantino said no decision had been made on automatic qualificat­ion, he said CONCACAF would have seven slots in 2026 — compared to 3 1/2 at present in the smaller 32-team field. “It’s up to CONCACAF to look into that and to see how they want to organize their qualificat­ion for this. We’ll certainly have a discussion about that in the weeks to come.”

But U.S. Soccer Federation president Carlos Cordeiro said the issue of automatic qualificat­ion was a FIFA decision “that would be made in the passage of time.’

Vancouver Whitecaps star Alphonso Davies eloquently opened the North American bid’s presentati­on to the FIFA Congress. Davies’ parents fled their home in Monrovia, Liberia, to escape a civil war. They ended up at a refugee camp in Ghana, where Davies was born.

“It was a hard life. But when I was five years-old, a country called Canada welcomed us in ... Today, I’m 17 years-old and I play for the (Canadian) men’s national team. And I’m a proud Canadian citizen. And my dream is to some day compete in the World Cup, maybe even in my home town of Edmonton.”

A late entry to the 2026 hosting sweepstake­s, Morocco was classy in defeat. It has now lost five bid campaigns. On paper, the two bids were worlds apart, with FIFA’s own bid evaluation report rating the North American entry several storeys above Morocco. The African country planned to use 14 stadiums, nine of which had yet to be built with the other five due for renovation.

The current blueprint calls for Canada and Mexico to stage 10 games each with the U.S. hosting 60. The North American bid offers up 23 candidate cities with Edmonton, Toronto and Montreal representi­ng Canada.

 ?? RICHARD LAUTENS TORONTO STAR ?? Alexandra Karges kicks a soccer ball Wednesday on a public pitch in Toronto. Toronto has a love affair with soccer that shows in being a part of the North American winning FIFA World Cup 2026 bid.
RICHARD LAUTENS TORONTO STAR Alexandra Karges kicks a soccer ball Wednesday on a public pitch in Toronto. Toronto has a love affair with soccer that shows in being a part of the North American winning FIFA World Cup 2026 bid.

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