Dayton Daily News

North American bid for 2026World Cup looking strong

Morocco still in hunt as national federation­s vote today on site.

- ByStevenGo­ff

Carlos Cordeiro, the MOSCOW— new president of the U.S. Soccer Federation, says he has lost track of the exact number of countries he’s visited and people he’s individual­ly lobbied the past four months as part of an exhaustive effort to bring the 2026 World Cup to the United States, Mexico and Canada.

London one day, Bratislava the next, Copenhagen, Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur, Johannesbu­rg ...

“We end up in these godforsake­n airport hotels,” he said of three well-traveled delegation­s on separatewh­irlwind tours. “We tease each other about the shirt that wasn’t washed.”

The campaign is almost over, the final step coming today when, on the eve of the World Cup opener between Russia and Saudi Arabia at Luzhniki Stadium, 200-plus national federation­s in the FIFAfamily will choose North America orMorocco to stage soccer’s quadrennia­l tournament in eight years.

The World Cup was last held in North America in 1994, a U.S.hosted competitio­n that smashed attendance records and accelerate­d the sport’s growth in one of soccer’s last frontiers.

Onpaper, theUnited Bid, as the three-pronged effort is known, should breeze to victory with a portfolio of existing stadiums and infrastruc­ture, experience hosting major sporting events and the promise of sellout crowds and billions in revenue. But FIFA is an unpredicta­ble organizati­on, one that eight years ago rejected a solo U.S. bid and awarded the 2022 World Cup to Qatar, a small but wealthy Gulf state. Morocco’s bid seemed to gain momentum early this year, but since embarking on their world tour, United Bid officials are growing in confidence.

Asked if their chances have improved since late last year, Cordeiro said in an interview Sunday with several U.S. reporters: “One hundred percent. Wewere maybe behindwhen I think back to where we were in February, but I think we’ve changed the whole face of the bid.”

With co-chairs Decio deMaria (Mexico) and Steven Reed (Canada) making their own trips around theworld, Cordeiro said he believes the group has secured support froma growing number of countries.

“We have a path to victory,” he said. “We know where our support is. We are very confident, but a lot can happen in 48 hours. You saw what happened in 2010.”

What has changed since 2010 is the winner will not be decided by a 22-member executive committee but by all eligible federation­s. The vote is no longer by secret ballot, either. Soon after the results flash on a video screen at Moscow’s expo center, FIFA plans to release the list of how countries voted.

Even with a democratic process and greater transparen­cy, the United Bid has had its work cut out for it. To help prevent another upset, the first order of business was shoring up support

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