The Columbus Dispatch

FIFA proposes new playoff ahead of 2026 World Cup

- By Graham Dunbar

ZURICH — FIFA wants to hold a new six-team playoff round in the 2026 World Cup host country to complete the expanded 48-team tournament lineup.

The final two qualifying slots would be decided in the proposed mini-tournament played in the November before the World Cup as a test event, a move that puts the Confederat­ions Cup’s long-term future at risk.

The idea was announced on Thursday as part of the FIFA Bureau’s proposal to award each of the six continenta­l confederat­ions extra places at the World Cup, which will expand starting in 2026 when North America is expected to host.

If agreed in May, the playoffs would give the 2026 hosts four more games to stage, adding to an 80-game tournament that has been 64 games since 1998.

UEFA is set to get the three extra guaranteed slots it wanted, bringing its total to 16 qualifying slots. The proposal also increases Africa to nine, Asia to eight, South America to six, North America and Central America and the Caribbean to six and Oceania to one guaranteed slot.

Europe would be “fairly represente­d” by the quotas, said UEFA President Aleksander Ceferin, whose members currently fill 26 of the top 48 places in FIFA’s ranking of 211 national teams.

Excluding Europe, the other five confederat­ions would send one team for the playoffs. The World Cup host continent would provide the sixth playoff team.

Before coming into effect, the FIFA Council must approve the proposal on May 9 in Bahrain. The council, chaired by FIFA President Gianni Infantino, agreed in January to expand the World Cup from 32 teams starting with the 2026 edition.

FIFA also said its bureau — comprising Infantino and the six confederat­ions presidents — wants automatic entry for host teams to come from a region’s quota.

With the United States, Mexico, and Canada weighing a cohosting bid for 2026, the decision on which hosts will get direct entry is set to be made by the council and not individual confederat­ions, FIFA said.

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