Imperial Valley Press

World Cup again to create 104-game program

A bigger March Madness? Many obstacles stand in the way

- BY GRAHAM DUNBAR Associated Press BY RALPH D. RUSSO AP College Sports Writer

The expanded World Cup in North America got even more supersized on Tuesday.

The governing body of soccer increased the size of the 2026 tournament for the second time – six years after the first – by approving a bigger group stage for the inaugural 48team event.

By retaining groups of four teams instead of moving to three, FIFA has created a 104-game schedule that will last nearly six weeks in the United States, Canada and Mexico. The final is scheduled for July 19.

The 16 host cities – 11 in the United States, three in Mexico and two in Canada – now have 24 extra games to stage on top of the 80 they already had for the inaugural 48-team tournament.

Adding about 1.5 million more tickets will also further fuel FIFA’s expected record revenue of at least $11 billion through 2026 from a tournament that will rely on using high-revenue NFL stadiums.

FIFA said the decision followed a “thorough review that considered

NEW YORK – The number was supposed to be 96.

The last time the NCAA seriously considered expanding the men’s Division I basketball tournament a plan emerged to add 16 more games and 32 more participan­ts to grow that symmetrica­lly satisfying 64team bracket.

The backlash that followed from college sports administra­tors back in 2010 was strong enough to scrap the idea. A modest expansion to 68 teams was approved in 2011.

“At the end of the day, membership sentiment was that they were not unified in wanting to expand the tournament beyond 68,” recalled Greg Shaheen, the former NCAA vice president for championsh­ips.

For the first time in more than a decade, NCAA and college sports leaders are committed to a serious examinatio­n of increasing the number of teams allowed to compete in an event that has become one of the crown jewels of American sports.

The mere suggestion of messing with March Madness, which generates hundreds of millions in revenue annually for the NCAA and its 1,100 member schools, is still met with skepticism by a lot of basketball fans and some within college sports.

Making significan­t changes in the near term will be difficult, if not impossible. There are logistical, financial and even political obstacles.

“That’s not to say we won’t give it it’s appropriat­e level of analysis and considerat­ion, but there’s a lot of factors to be considered,” said Dan Gavitt, the NCAA vice president for basketball.

Chatter about tournament expansion started more than a year ago, when the NCAA assembled a committee to look into the how Division I, the highest level of college sports, operates.

After more than a year of work, the committee’s final recommenda­tions included expanding fields for all NCAA championsh­ip – not just basketball –- with a high level of participat­ion to accommodat­e 25% of competing schools. sporting integrity, player welfare, team travel, commercial and sporting attractive­ness, as well as team and fan experience.”

The latest push by FIFA president Gianni Infantino for more games and bigger events in a congested calendar will likely provoke more concern among stakeholde­rs such as domestic leagues and players’ union FIFPRO. They have long felt isolated from talks on soccer’s future.

The six-week World Cup will start one year after FIFA launches a 32-team Club World Cup, which could also be staged in North America to test tournament logistics. The Champions League in Europe also has a new format with more teams and games in the 2024-25 season.

The new World Cup format will have 12 groups of four teams instead of 16 groups of three, the plan chosen in 2017. Both options were to go to a 32team knockout round.

The format guarantees every World Cup team will play a minimum of three times instead of two, adding up to a stacked group stage totaling 72

The 25% recommenda­tion is just that. Whether it is implemente­d will be a decision made on a sportby-sport basis. Committee co-chair Greg Sankey, the Southeaste­rn Conference commission­er, has tried to avoid being seen as pushing for expansion while also pointing out some of the reasons to do so.

“You have teams that have been the 11-seed in the First Four, make it to the Final Four, the Elite Eight, the Sweet 16,” Sankey said in January. “We’re excluding highly competitiv­e teams, because of the structure. Now what does that expansion or those opportunit­ies look like? I have ideas, but I’m not going to throw them out now since I don’t want to make headlines.”

Current selection protocols provide an automatic berth to the champions of all 32 Division I conference­s, plus 36 at-large bids. Those are mostly scooped up by the six strongest and richest conference­s: the Atlantic Coast, Big East, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12 and Southeaste­rn.

The Big Six secured 31 of 36 at-large bids on Sunday.

Along with prestige and opportunit­ies to advance, bids have monetary value. The NCAA distribute­s revenue to conference­s based on tournament performanc­e, with conference­s earning a games before arriving at the knockout rounds. The four semifinali­sts will play eight matches, one more than last year in Qatar.

The entire 2022 World Cup in Qatar amounted to 64 games in the seventh and last edition of the 32-team format. The 1998 World Cup in France was the first with 32 teams.

Increasing the World Cup’s lineup was first floated in 2015. It was proposed then as a way to sweeten FIFA’s 200-plus member federation­s into accepting much-needed governance reforms in the wake of American and Swiss investigat­ions of corruption.

After Infantino was elected FIFA president to succeed Sepp Blatter, one of his first big strategic wins was adding 16 teams to the World Cup. Infantino persuaded FIFA colleagues that a 48-team tournament – with Africa and Asia getting more of the extra places than Europe – would fuel interest and drive developmen­t in countries that rarely or never qualified to play on the biggest stage.

That was despite FIFA’s own research in 2016 suggesting that the highunit for each round one of its teams advances.

In 2023, a basketball unit will be worth approximat­ely $2.04 million over the sixyear period in which it is paid out. So if you’re the SEC or Big Ten, each with eight teams in the tourney, seeing all of them advance a round means more than $16 million.

Coaches, whose job security often depends on making the tournament, have typically supported a bigger field.

“Since I coached at Valparaiso University I always was in favor of tournament expansion, because I thought there’s enough quality teams,” Baylor coach Scott Drew said.

Drew’s magic number is 128, which would add another full round to the tournament and include more than one-third of the 358 Division I basketball teams.

Tom Burnett, the former Southland Conference commission­er who also served a stint as the head of the men’s basketball selection committee, said he was open-minded but cautious when the topic of tournament expansion would come up.

“If there were a practical expansion plan that addressed whatever needs to be addressed – except here’s where I draw the line: It can’t expand because my est quality soccer was achieved by the 32-team format.

In Qatar, the split-screen drama created by decisive group games played simultaneo­usly helped convince FIFA that four-team groups are better.

There was also concern that scheduling groups of three could lead to match- fixing in a final game between two teams who could both advance to the round of 32.

FIFA has now found an option it said “mitigates the risk of collusion” and also gifts itself more games to sell.

The extra 24 games should drive up the price of sponsor deals and broadcasti­ng deals not yet signed. However, some key broadcast markets are alteam didn’t get in,” Burnett said. There will always be teams that feel slighted if they don’t get in.

There is some concern outside the power conference­s that expansion will result in even more atlarge bids going to middleof-the-pack teams from those leagues with strong mid-major teams still getting squeezed out.

“If you’ve got a seventhor eighth-place team in over a regular-season champion in a conference, from our perspectiv­e, that’s not the way to expand,” said Northern Arizona athletic director Mike Marlow, whose team made an unlikely run to the Big Sky Tournament championsh­ip game before losing.

If the Lumberjack­s (1223) had beaten Montana State (25-9) to win the conference, the Bobcats – with 13 more wins than NAU – would be heading to the NIT instead of a first-round NCAA game against Kansas State on Friday.

A-10 Commission­er Bernadette McGlade said she’s not concerned about expansion favoring certain conference­s.

“I think that everybody has a fair opportunit­y to share in those additional opportunit­ies. You just have to go after it, just like teams and schools are going after it now,” McGlade said. ready signed, including in the United States, Brazil and the Middle East.

The 2026 World Cup was already set to earn up to $3 billion in ticket and hospitalit­y sales for FIFA, and massively increase the tournament attendance record. That record was set in the United States in 1994 when 3.6 million spectators attended 52 games in a 24-team event.

One downside of the 48-team format is the unbalanced nature of the 32 teams that will advance.

Eight of the 12 thirdplace teams will move on, creating uncertaint­y for some teams placing third in a group not knowing if they will advance until matches are completed days later.

FIFA also explained how

McGlade stopped short of saying she supports expansion, but she enthusiast­ically supports doing a deep dive into the possibilit­y.

Others are open-minded, but will enter the discussion more tentativel­y.

“Let’s be careful because it’s really, really good right now,” Mountain West Commission­er Gloria Nevarez said. “So make sure whatever we do is additive, and not just doing something for the sake of expansion that might somehow take the tournament a step back.”

The calendar alone is likely to limit expansion options. Any plan that requires the NCAA Tournament to start earlier than it already does –- the First Four games tip-off Tuesday –- would also require conference tournament­s to end sooner and maybe even the regular season.

“We already start the regular season in early November where historical­ly some conference­s have said it’s too early with all that’s going on with college football and the like,” Gavitt said.

Any expansion of the men’s tournament will almost certainly need to be done to the women’s tournament, too. The NCAA was slammed in 2021 for not providing a similar experience for the men’s and women’s teams. An independen­t review concludtea­ms will enter the 2025 Club World Cup, including continenta­l champions in each season from 202124. That means Chelsea, Real Madrid, Palmeiras, Flamengo and Seattle Sounders already secured their places.

Europe’s 12 entries can also be decided by a ranking system based on the same four- year period, with a cap of two teams per country advancing with exemptions for continenta­l champions.

FIFA also plans to create another new competitio­n starting annually in 2024 for continenta­l champions. The Champions League winner in Europe will play the winner of playoffs featuring the other continenta­l champions. ed the associatio­n had not done enough to invest and promote the women’s tournament.

The women’s field expanded from 64 to 68 last year. While the depth of competitio­n in women’s basketball has unquestion­ably improved, has it done so enough to justify a large and costly expansion?

But the same thing can be said for the men’s tournament. More teams adds expenses for travel, lodging and possibly running additional sites.

Plus, it would almost certainly decrease the value of those performanc­e units, money that is is often the main revenue source for mid- major conference­s that don’t play major college football.

“Cutting that by 10 or 11%, or whatever the different calculatio­n could be, that’s actually really important. And it’s vital to the stability of Division I,” Shaheen said.

When Shaheen led the last expansion effort, the NCAA was heading toward the end of a media rights deal with CBS. A new format was part of negotiatio­ns for the next deal.

That’s not the case now. The current $8.8 billion contract with CBS and Warner Bros. Discovery, part of an extension the NCAA signed in 2016, runs through 2032.

“What role would broadcast partners play?” Gavitt said. “We don’t do anything without respect and communicat­ion with our broadcast partners, who we value significan­tly.”

While CBS and WBD will not publicly insert themselves into any exploratio­n of tournament expansion, their opinions are key and they hold the rights to any men’s tournament games for nine more years. The NCAA cannot seek another partner for newly created games.

Contracts between the NCAA and the networks are not made public. But if the networks are under no obligation to pay up for more inventory – and nothing indicates they are –- then all this expansion talk might be nothing more than preparatio­n of the next TV deal.

“It’s a complicate­d thing,” Shaheen said.

 ?? AP PHOTO/CHUCK BURTON ?? Duke players “punch their ticket” to the NCAA Tournament after their win over Virginia in an NCAA college basketball game for the championsh­ip of the men’s Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament in Greensboro, N.C., on Saturday.
AP PHOTO/CHUCK BURTON Duke players “punch their ticket” to the NCAA Tournament after their win over Virginia in an NCAA college basketball game for the championsh­ip of the men’s Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament in Greensboro, N.C., on Saturday.
 ?? AP PHOTO/MANU FERNANDEZ ?? Argentina’s Lionel Messi kisses the trophy presented by FIFA President Gianni Infantino (left) as The Emir of Qatar Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani looks on, after the World Cup final soccer match between Argentina and France at the Lusail Stadium in Lusail, Qatar, on Dec. 18, 2022.
AP PHOTO/MANU FERNANDEZ Argentina’s Lionel Messi kisses the trophy presented by FIFA President Gianni Infantino (left) as The Emir of Qatar Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani looks on, after the World Cup final soccer match between Argentina and France at the Lusail Stadium in Lusail, Qatar, on Dec. 18, 2022.

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