Santa Fe New Mexican

U.S., Canada, Mexico to host

3 nations to bring tournament to N. America for first time since 1994

- By Tariq Panja and Andrew Das

The bid to bring soccer’s World Cup back to North America in 2026 was hatched in a Vancouver restaurant, announced in a New York City skyscraper and scrutinize­d by FIFA inspectors inside Mexico City’s cavernous Azteca stadium.

It was sold in countless other cities — Jakarta, Indonesia, and Bangkok; Copenhagen, Denmark, and Lisbon, Portugal; Jiddah, Saudi Arabia, and Johannesbu­rg — by officials from the United States, Mexico and Canada soccer federation­s who had teamed up in an unpreceden­ted effort to share the world’s most-watched sporting event.

And on Wednesday in Moscow, the campaign finally ended when voters — persuaded by promises of record crowds, record revenues and, perhaps crucially, a record $11 billion in profit for FIFA, world soccer’s governing body — awarded the hosting rights to the 2026 World Cup to a combined bid from the United States, Mexico and Canada. The three countries will bring the tournament to North America for the first time since 1994, with the majority of the matches, including the final, being held in the United States.

The North American bid routed its only challenger, Morocco, by a vote of 134-65, after which members of the winning delegation leapt out of their seats to embrace one another, pump their fists and celebrate the end of a frenzied few weeks of final lobbying.

Carlos Cordeiro, the president of U.S. Soccer, wiped away tears before making a short speech in which, with his voice trembling, he thanked FIFA’s membership for “the incredible privilege” of hosting the World Cup.

“It was a very emotional moment for everyone,” Cordeiro said later, recalling the devastatio­n he felt in 2010 when the United States failed to secure the right to stage the 2022 World Cup, losing to Qatar in a much-criticized voting process.

The 2026 tournament will be one of firsts. It will be the first time the World Cup is hosted by three countries, the first time it has a 48-team format (up from 32 teams), and Wednesday’s vote was the first of its kind to be decided by FIFA’s entire membership. Of the tournament’s 80 matches, 10 will be in Canada, 10 in Mexico and 60 in the United States — including the final, which will take place at MetLife Stadium in the New York City suburb of East Rutherford, N.J.

The last time the men’s World Cup was held in North America was when the United States hosted it in 1994. It was held in Mexico in 1970 and 1986, and Canada has never hosted. It was unclear whether all three nations would be granted automatic bids into the field, as is customary for the host nation; FIFA said there had been no final decision.

Leaders of the North American bid had been on the road since April, visiting voting nations around the globe. The extensive lobbying — bid leaders

estimated they had met 150 of FIFA’s 211 federation presidents in person — paid off.

The North Americans rode to victory on a wave of support from the Americas, Europe and Asia, plus a few votes poached from Africa, whose regional soccer president, Ahmed Ahmed, issued a bombastic plea to his members on Tuesday urging them to vote for Morocco as a symbol of African unity.

“From a few days ago, we always had a clear path to victory,” Cordeiro said. Still, even he could not have anticipate­d some of the support that the North Americans ended up receiving, notably a vote from Russia.

After the months of meetings and armtwistin­g, the hundreds of airline flights and the weeks in ever-changing hotels, a campaign that began last August when Morocco jumped into the race (on the final day countries could do so), ended in an instant: with a 15-second note and a brief announceme­nt by the FIFA president, Gianni Infantino, that the combined bid had prevailed.

Moments later, and just a few hours after Russian President Vladimir Putin had welcomed the world to celebrate the 2018 World Cup, the North American soccer leaders took to the same stage to tell the world to celebrate with them in 2026.

The victory spared U.S. Soccer a second stunning defeat in less than a year; the United States men’s team is missing the World Cup this summer, its first absence since 1986.

The American federation spent more than $6 million — out of a combined budget of about $8 million — to bring the World Cup back to North America, the culminatio­n of an idea set in motion in a restaurant in Vancouver, British Columbia, seven years ago, according to Victor Montaglian­i, the head of CONCACAF, the region’s governing body for soccer.

The North Americans had offered FIFA’s member associatio­ns a ready-made World Cup; the 23 stadiums they suggested are all built, as is most of the infrastruc­ture the expanded 48-team tournament will need: training sites, hotels, airports, rail lines.

The North American bid’s signature selling point, however, was delivered in a language FIFA members long have understood: revenue.

The North Americans promised FIFA an $11 billion profit — a staggering sum that could mean tens of millions of dollars in developmen­t funds for each national associatio­n.

Morocco, which pledged a profit less than half as large as its rivals, criticized the focus on money over soccer until the bitter end.

 ?? PHOTOS BY ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Delegates attend the FIFA congress on Wednesday in Russia to award the hosting rights to the 2026 World Cup to a combined bid from the United States, Mexico and Canada. The three countries will bring the tournament to North America for the first time since 1994, with the majority of the matches, including the final, being held in the United States.
PHOTOS BY ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO/ASSOCIATED PRESS Delegates attend the FIFA congress on Wednesday in Russia to award the hosting rights to the 2026 World Cup to a combined bid from the United States, Mexico and Canada. The three countries will bring the tournament to North America for the first time since 1994, with the majority of the matches, including the final, being held in the United States.
 ??  ?? Mexican soccer fans pose for a photo on the eve of the opener of the 2018 soccer World Cup on Wednesday near Red Square in Moscow.
Mexican soccer fans pose for a photo on the eve of the opener of the 2018 soccer World Cup on Wednesday near Red Square in Moscow.
 ?? PAVEL GOLOVKIN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Delegates of Canada, Mexico and the United States celebrate after winning a joint bid to host the 2026 World Cup on Wednesday at the FIFA congress in Moscow.
PAVEL GOLOVKIN/ASSOCIATED PRESS Delegates of Canada, Mexico and the United States celebrate after winning a joint bid to host the 2026 World Cup on Wednesday at the FIFA congress in Moscow.

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