Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Prospectiv­e Wembley owner Khan wants 2030 World Cup bid

- By Rob Harris

LONDON » Prospectiv­e Wembley owner Shahid Khan wants to host 2030 World Cup matches and has assured the English Football Associatio­n the national stadium can remain the centerpiec­e of major tournament­s if the sale is completed.

England has been exploring a bid for the 2030 centenary World Cup but is yet to say if it will challenge the early applicant from maiden host Uruguay, which has launched a campaign with Argentina and Paraguay.

Khan told The Associated Press that “very preliminar­y talks” have been held with the FA about bidding for the FIFA tournament. The 90,000-capacity Wembley, which would be required for the final, is already due to host seven games at the continent-wide European Championsh­ip in 2020, including the last three games. England is also vying to host the Women’s European Championsh­ip in 2021.

“We would want it to host the World Cup and anything else that is available,” Khan said in a telephone interview. “The FA still has key assets there they will be getting revenue off. All of us will be aligned to use it and build on the heritage of the place.”

Khan, who also owns the NFL’s Jacksonvil­le Jaguars and London soccer team Fulham, hopes his purchase of Wembley from the FA goes through in two to three months after a period of due diligence.

“We are going to be perfectly aligned (with the FA) ... on all the important issues,” Khan said.

The FA is still expecting to have use of the national stadium for England games and major cup finals, even if the sale goes through for a price of around $840 million.

“Wembley is still going to be an iconic British stadium,” Khan said. “We are going to be investing more in it to keep it right up to the leading edge of gameday experience.”

There was a large backlash when Wembley’s distinctiv­e white twin towers were demolished to make way for the new Norman Foster-designed stadium, which opened in 2007 featuring a “Triumphant Arch” towering 400 feet above the venue.

The reaction has been less hostile to the FA’s plans to sell a facility it has owned for only the last two decades as it oversaw the reconstruc­tion at a cost of 800 million pounds.

Gordon Banks, the goalkeeper who helped England win the World Cup in 1966 at Wembley, fears NFL fixtures might take precedence over games for the national soccer team.

“It was a very special place and I don’t think we should be selling it,” Banks wrote in The Sun newspaper. “Football’s gone wild with the money right now. I think it’s spoiling the game a bit.”

The Sun was one of four British newspapers to use their front or back pages on Friday to gather criticism of the proposed sale, saying “fury erupted.”

The Daily Express headline asked, “Is nothing sacred? How on earth can the FA even think of selling Wembley Stadium when your money paid to build it twice.”

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