Las Vegas Review-Journal

LV decided World Cup games too costly

- By Richard N. Velotta Las Vegas Review-journal

Las Vegas isn’t on the short list of cities under considerat­ion to host 2026 World Cup games because the cost would be too steep.

Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority President and Chief Operating

Officer Steve Hill said Thursday that when he and Raiders President Marc

Badain met with

World Cup bid organizers in November, they learned some of the requiremen­ts of host cities — and they were far more expensive and open-ended than they felt the city could afford.

“Ultimately, we made the decision to not continue Las Vegas’ pursuit of being one of the cities to host the World Cup,” Hill said.

WORLD CUP Page 3C

World Cup games were among the events that advocates for building the $1.8 billion Las Vegas stadium cited as justificat­ion for spending $750 million of public money for the project.

Prestigiou­s event

The 2018 World Cup, a 32-team internatio­nal soccer tournament and one of the most prestigiou­s sporting events in the world, began Thursday in Russia.

In November, Hill wasn’t yet with the LVCVA. He met with organizers in his capacity as chairman of the

Las Vegas Stadium Authority. Hill and Badain, whose team is building the 65,000-seat indoor football stadium at Interstate 15 and Russell Road, went to Houston for preliminar­y tournament meetings.

They met with organizers preparing a bid to host games in the United States, Mexico and Canada — a collaborat­ion known as United 2026.

Earlier this week, the internatio­nal soccer governing body FIFA announced that the United 2026 bid was accepted, but the short list of prospectiv­e host cities did not include Las Vegas.

Some cities have been leery of dealing with FIFA, which was involved in a $150 million corruption scandal in 2015. Investigat­ions by the FBI and the IRS resulted in the indictment of 14 people on charges involving collusion between soccer executives and sports marketing groups. FIFA’S top executive, Sepp Blatter, was removed from office.

Hill said Las Vegas would have been required to provide more than $100 million in improvemen­ts to host one or more preliminar­y-round group games.

The city expressed interest in hosting games because it would have the new stadium, abundant hotel-room inventory and extensive internatio­nal air routes to and from Mccarran Internatio­nal Airport to accommodat­e teams, FIFA officials, media and soccer fans.

Extensive requiremen­ts

But FIFA requiremen­ts for host cities were far more extensive than originally envisioned.

The requiremen­ts included providing two outdoor venues — each

capable of seating 20,000 people to watch every tournament game on a big screen at no cost, Hill said. The city also would have had to provide secure world-class practice facilities shielded from the public to teams that would be competing in games played in Las Vegas.

He also noted that the six-week tournament occurs at a time of year when Las Vegas resorts already are at high occupancy with summer vacationer­s.

Determinin­g who would build those facilities and how was problemati­c, Hill said, and he felt he and Badain could not commit the community to those expenditur­es.

“One of the questions we had … was who would actually sign those contracts,” Hill said. “There really is no (organizati­on). The Stadium Authority could have considered doing that, but we don’t have the financial ability to back up that signature, and that was a requiremen­t, and justifiabl­y so, in our ability to stay in the process.”

Contact Richard N. Velotta at rvelotta@reviewjour­nal.com or 702477-3893. Follow @Rickvelott­a on Twitter.

 ?? Dmitri Lovetsky ?? The Associated Press Fans celebrate a goal by Russia at a fan zone in St. Petersburg during the 2018 World Cup opening match Thursday between Russia and Saudi Arabia.
Dmitri Lovetsky The Associated Press Fans celebrate a goal by Russia at a fan zone in St. Petersburg during the 2018 World Cup opening match Thursday between Russia and Saudi Arabia.

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