Chicago Sun-Times

POSITIVE CLIMATE CHANGE

2026 tournament will help bring civility and manners back to U. S.

- Twitter: @ nrarmour NANCY ARMOUR

The United States is going to need every minute of the next eight years to get ready for its turn as the world’s host.

Not to build stadiums or hotels, or even add the infrastruc­ture required to support the 2026 World Cup and the millions of guests it will bring. The United States has all that, so much so that it could host the tournament next year if need be.

No, what this country needs is manners and civility, particular­ly when it comes to people from outside our borders. Given the current climate, reminding Americans how to roll out the welcome mat might be the biggest challenge — and the biggest benefit — for the U. S. organizers in the United Bid.

What makes the United States unique is that we are, at heart, a country of misfits. With the exception of Native Americans, we all came from somewhere else. Many of our ancestors were poor and uneducated when they arrived, lured by the hope of a better life in the United States — or at least a fairer shake than what they’d get in the country they just left.

Some fled war and persecutio­n. Others, shamefully, were brought here against their will. But together, this patchwork of people from different countries and cultures, different traditions and experience­s, has made the United States exceptiona­l.

We seem to have forgotten that, however. Our government now treats immigrants and refugees as if they’re less than human, convenient­ly ignoring the fact that many of our ancestors were once viewed with that same kind of disdain and contempt. People who look or sound different are the object of hate and, sometimes, violence, as if our relatives didn’t once have to assimilate, as well.

Not all of us are so small- minded and rude. But enough to be embarrassi­ng.

The World Cup — and the Summer Olympics in Los Angeles two years later — is a great chance to remind Americans that there is a vast world outside our borders. That despite outward appearance­s, we are more alike than different. That welcoming strangers is not only the right and charitable thing to do, it’s the most American thing to do.

In making the case for the United Bid to the FIFA Congress in Moscow, U. S. Under- 20 soccer player Brianna Pinto told the story of playing Iran in a youth tournament last fall. On the field, the Americans and Iranians were fiercely competitiv­e, Pinto said.

Off of it, they ate meals together and bonded over their common love of soccer.

“We may come from different countries and cultures,” Pinto said Wednesday, “but deep down, we’re all pretty much the same.”

It’s fitting that the United States teamed up with Mexico and Canada to bring the world’s largest sporting event back to North America. The United States could’ve gone it alone as it did in 1994, the last time it hosted the men’s tournament, and 1999 and 2003, when it hosted the women’s tournament.

But organizers recognized the bid would be stronger if they worked with Canada and Mexico, embracing their neighbors and the spirit of cooperatio­n. A whole is always greater than the sum of its parts, and the 2026 World Cup will be better for its inclusivit­y.

“In a world where the forces of division try to pull us apart, a World Cup in North America will show how soccer unites us all, as family and friends,” said Decio de Maria, president of the Mexican Soccer Federation.

Despite the Super Bowl’s blockbuste­r ratings and the World Series’ overstated name, the World Cup is the most popular sporting event on earth. It’s a spectacle like no other, a wonderful riot of sport and fandemoniu­m, and Americans will be charmed by everything about it — if they let themselves be.

The focus will be on the stadiums and the games, but it is ordinary people who will ultimately determine the success of the 2026 World Cup. It doesn’t take much to be kind or welcoming, and the benefits almost always outweigh the effort.

The world is coming our way. The timing couldn’t be better.

 ?? BILLY STICKLAND/ GETTY IMAGES ?? In 1994, the last time the World Cup was held in the United States, the Brazilian national team won its fourth world title. The United States, Mexico and Canada will host the 2026 World Cup.
BILLY STICKLAND/ GETTY IMAGES In 1994, the last time the World Cup was held in the United States, the Brazilian national team won its fourth world title. The United States, Mexico and Canada will host the 2026 World Cup.
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