Waterloo Region Record

Sponsors aren’t lining up for Russia’s World Cup

- Tariq Panja

With 16 months to go before the next staging of soccer’s flagship event, corporate sponsors aren’t in a rush to have their names attached to the 2018 soccer World Cup in Russia.

Tournament organizer Fédération Internatio­nale de Football Associatio­n has signed just one new top-tier level partner, China’s Wanda Group, since the last tournament in Brazil. Only Moscow-headquarte­red Alfa Bank has agreed to be a regional World Cup supporter, which has replaced national supporter as the cheapest level of sponsorshi­p.

By the same stage in the tournament cycle for Brazil, almost all the agreements were concluded, with the majority confirmed more than three years before the event kicked off. Reasons behind companies’ reluctance to sign may include the $150 million cost of the most expensive deal and the fallout from FIFA’s 2015 corruption scandal, according to Andrew Georgiou, chief executive officer of Lagardere Sports and Entertainm­ent, one of the world’s largest sports agencies.

“I think compliance issues are affecting brands and I think the price points are affecting brands,” Georgiou said in an interview at his company’s headquarte­rs in London. “Has FIFA got itself back to a place where corporate western brands are comfortabl­e doing business?”

An internal investigat­ion into wrongdoing at the 112-year-old body has been completed by Washington law firm Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, which will provide its report to FIFA next month. That will be three months before Russia hosts the Confederat­ions Cup, an eight-nation tuneup that takes place a year before the main event.

As of now FIFA, which sells three categories of sponsorshi­p, has just nine companies on its roster for the tournament. That compares with 20 by the time the Brazil World Cup kicked off, including two local companies in the global World Cup sponsorshi­p category, the second most-valuable segment.

Russian state-owned gas giant Gazprom PJSC joined FIFA as a partner in 2013 and it wasn’t until July 2016 that Alfa Bank joined as FIFA’s first ever and so far only regional sponsor. The numbers make FIFA’s target of 14 tier-one and tier-two backers, joined by a further 20 regional sponsors drawn from five global territorie­s, seem increasing­ly ambitious. World Cup-related sponsorshi­p brought in $404 million in 2013, according to FIFA data. That figure was down to $246 million in 2015.

“The sales process is ongoing and new commercial affiliates will join the marketing program before the FIFA World Cup,” FIFA said in an emailed statement, without providing further details. FIFA’s longtime marketing head Thierry Weil left in October as part of a clear-out of senior management.

Further trouble is around the corner, Georgiou said. FIFA president Gianni Infantino convinced members to expand the World Cup from to 48 teams from 32 for the 2026 tournament and beyond. The expansion risks diluting the quality of the competitio­n, and makes the usually two-year long regional qualificat­ion programs devalued for television companies, said Georgiou, whose company buys and manages rights. “The value’s gone down,” he said. “I have had the same conversati­on about the value going down in Asia, same in Africa. The value will go down across the board.”

FIFA declined to respond to the comments, referring to a press conference given by Infantino in January.

“The football fever that you have in a country that qualifies for the World Cup is the biggest and most powerful promotiona­l tool for football that you can have,” he said at the time.

Infantino’s World Cup expansion is part of string of campaign promises he made on an ultimately successful run to the FIFA presidency in February 2016. He also promised the group’s 211 member nations an increase in financial support.

“We’ve changed the sport as a result of politics, not because it’s right for sport,” said Georgiou, whose company has contracts with the regional soccer bodies for Asia, North America and Africa. “I’m not sure that’s right.”

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