The Fiji Times

FIFA poised to scrap sponsorshi­p for WC

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FIFA could be set to abandon plans for Saudi Arabia’s tourism arm to sponsor the Women’s World Cup after a ferocious response from cohosts Australia and New Zealand and some of the highest-profile players in the women’s game.

The global governing body is still yet to even publicly acknowledg­e the mooted deal, more than two months on from initial reports by The Athletic in January which said Visit Saudi would be unveiled as a tournament sponsor.

That triggered a wave of immense criticism from both Football Australia and New Zealand Football, who demanded immediate clarificat­ion from FIFA and said neither federation had been consulted.

Matildas players have largely avoided public comment on the issue, but USA stars Alex Morgan and Megan Rapinoe described it as “bizarre”, “totally inappropri­ate” and “outrageous” considerin­g Saudi Arabia’s heavy restrictio­ns on rights for women and ban on same-sex relationsh­ips, while Dutch striker Vivianne Miedema said FIFA should be “deeply ashamed” for even considerin­g it.

The scale of the backlash has shocked Fifa, according to a source familiar with the tournament’s planning who was not authorised to speak publicly.

The source also claimed the Gianni Infantino-led organisati­on was now considerin­g ways to reshape the Visit Saudi agreement and find a solution before next week’s FIFA congress in Rwanda.

It could, according to the source, involve the sponsorshi­p being instead attributed to another Saudi-related entity rather than the kingdom’s tourism body, which would also address separate fears in Australia and New Zealand that the co-hosts’ ambitions to promote their own countries as holiday destinatio­ns could be overshadow­ed by another nation.

New Zealand Football chief executive Andrew Pragnell said he thought FIFA was having a “rethink” of the mooted Visit Saudi deal based on their response last week to a letter sent almost a month ago by the chairs of the Australian and New Zealand federation­s.

“I found the response fairly ambiguous. It didn’t confirm nor deny the potential Visit Saudi sponsorshi­p that has been reported in the media,” Pragnell told Stuff last week.

“It did allude to the importance of treating all member associatio­ns equally and the importance of engagement as opposed to isolation. Other than that, it stated that they’d be reaching out through their media and partnershi­ps team for further conversati­ons.

“We’re left in a little bit of uncertaint­y as to what’s going on here, to be frank, which is a bit disappoint­ing.

“Anything further I say would be speculatio­n because I don’t know, but clearly our letter, given the delay in the response, and the absence of confirmati­on or denial, has caused some form of rethink in FIFA about this issue.”

If FIFA persists with the Visit Saudi deal, it runs the risk of having big-name players or even entire teams staging protests during the Women’s World Cup.

“Football Australia has consulted on this matter with key stakeholde­rs, including government and commercial partners, and it was an overwhelmi­ng consensus that this partnershi­p does not align with our collective vision for the tournament and falls short of our expectatio­ns,” said Football Australia chief executive James Johnson, who together with FA chair Chris Nikou expressed their disappoint­ment to Infantino at the recent Asian Football Confederat­ion congress in Bahrain.

“Whilst the partnershi­p has not been confirmed by FIFA, based on the consultati­ons we have had with our community, key stakeholde­rs and our own position, we would not be comfortabl­e with it.

“While we await further clarity and informatio­n as to the details of the partnershi­p from FIFA, we continue to convey this clear message on behalf of Football Australia, New Zealand Football, and our community.”

 ?? Picture: US SOCCER ?? Megan Rapinoe and Alex Morgan, right, have played in a highly successful era for the US.
Picture: US SOCCER Megan Rapinoe and Alex Morgan, right, have played in a highly successful era for the US.

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