Herald on Sunday

NZF optimistic about World Cup joint host bid decision in June

- Michael Burgess

New Zealand Football is still hopeful of a decision on the 2023 Women’s World Cup hosting rights in June, despite the global disruption caused by the Covid-19 pandemic.

New Zealand’s joint bid with Australia is one of four submission­s angling for the event, alongside Colombia, Brazil and Japan.

If the Anzac bid is successful, it would be the biggest football event to come to these shores, supersedin­g the 2015 Under-20 Men’s World Cup.

Fifa’s operationa­l arm have completed their inspection tours and were due to deliver their evaluation reports next month, with a subsequent vote of the 37-member Fifa council at the annual congress to decide who will host the ninth edition of the marquee event.

The Fifa congress has been pushed back to September due to Covid-19 but that doesn’t necessaril­y mean the vote will be delayed.

“Officially it is still the first week of June,” NZF chief executive Andrew Pragnell told the Herald on Sunday. “We’ve had no formal advice that they are moving that decision; the latest they could move it would be September.

“We are hoping the decision is in June, otherwise it is a bit unfair to whoever gets the rights,” said Pragnell, pointing out the hosts for the 2026 Men’s World Cup were decided in 2018. “It would reduce the preparatio­n time for one of the biggest sporting events in the world and 2023 is not that far away. It doesn’t seem like it could be delayed more than a few months.”

The transtasma­n bid is seen as one of the strongest contenders, alongside Japan, and Pragnell remains quietly confident.

“Generally we are optimistic in terms of where the bid is at, and the fact New Zealand and Australia are doing well in the battle against

Covid-19 can’t hurt,” said Pragnell.

He added New Zealand’s successful staging of the Under-20 World Cup in 2015 was also important.

At a local level, Pragnell is focused on ensuring the post-Covid sustainabi­lity and survival of the sport here. Clubs will take a massive hit from the compressed winter season — whatever shape it takes — and there are big challenges for the regional federation­s.

“There are one or two in particular where it is going to be hard,” said Pragnell. “But it’s across football — and sport in general, as there is a reliance on class four gaming money and affiliatio­n fees.”

NZF has reserves — mostly garnered from the interconti­nental playoffs with Mexico (2013) and Peru (2017) — but they must be managed carefully, given the number of age group World Cups New Zealand are involved in and the fact the income stream varies markedly across a four-year cycle.

All NZF staff will be taking a 20 per cent pay cut from May 1, to be reviewed monthly, and around 20 contractor­s (tied to various World Cup campaigns) have been released.

Pragnell also said this week’s cancellati­on of the Chatham Cup and Kate Sheppard Cup was unfortunat­e but inevitable given the ongoing Covid-19 restrictio­ns and the desire not to place extra financial pressure on struggling clubs.

“Our priority is getting community football going again,” said Pragnell, who is hopeful the sport can resume when New Zealand moves to level 1.

Pragnell declined to talk about the situation with Oly Whites coach Des Buckingham, whose contract expires in August.

Buckingham wants to stay on for the reschedule­d Olympic Games next year but the financial pressures on NZF and the questions over ongoing internatio­nal match activity mean that scenario seems unlikely.

The fact New Zealand and Australia are doing well in the battle against Covid-19 can’t hurt. NZF CEO Andrew Pragnell on the joint 2023 Women’s World Cup bid

 ?? Photo / Photosport ?? Andrew Pragnell with past and present Football Ferns Michele Cox, Claudia Bunge, Rosie White and Barbara Cox.
Photo / Photosport Andrew Pragnell with past and present Football Ferns Michele Cox, Claudia Bunge, Rosie White and Barbara Cox.

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