Malta Independent

FIFA pushes ahead with 48-team World Cup, OKs new club event

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The FIFA Council on Friday approved working with Qatar to explore expanding the 2022 World Cup to 48 teams by adding at least one more country in the Persian Gulf to host matches.

FIFA President Gianni Infantino wants to enlarge the tournament from 32 to 48 teams, which a FIFA feasibilit­y study said would require at least one additional country to be used among five nations identified as possibilit­ies.

FIFA will work with Qatar to produce a proposal for considerat­ion in June when the council and congress meet in Paris ahead of the Women's World Cup. FIFA decided in January 2017 that the 2026 World Cup will be 48 teams when it is co-hosted by the United States, Canada and Mexico.

The Associated Press on Monday revealed details of a FIFA feasibilit­y study that said Qatar would not be forced to share games with Bahrain, Saudi Arabia or the United Arab Emirates unless those countries restore diplomatic and travel ties with Doha.

Because of their neutrality in the situation, Kuwait and Oman are indicated to be the current possible options to host games in 2022, but their stadium infrastruc­ture is only briefly assessed in a FIFA report.

CLUB WORLD CUP

The FIFA Council agreed to introduce a pilot tournament of an enlarged 24-team Club World Cup in 2021 despite European opposition.

"We hope all the greatest teams will participat­e," Infantino said. "The best teams should have this world platform . ... We will continue our discussion­s."

A quadrennia­l version would launch in June-July 2021 to replace the current Club World Cup, a seven-team event played each December.

Ahead of the meeting, the European Club Associatio­n wrote to FIFA saying none of its teams would participat­e in 2021. The ECA had no immediate comment after the decision.

The letter, viewed by the AP, was signed by top executives from 14 leading European clubs, including ECA head Andrea Agnelli of Juventus. The ECA executive board letter said it was "against any potential approval of a revised CWC at this point in time and confirm that no ECA Clubs would take part to such competitio­n."

They urged FIFA "to postpone any decision relating to the CWC until such moment when the legitimate concerns and interests of the European Clubs have been properly addressed."

Those concerns center on not wanting FIFA to add new competitio­ns until there is an agreement on a new internatio­nal match calendar from 2024. The ECA represents 232 clubs in Europe.

"We have to take care of the footballer­s," Barcelona President Josep Bartomeu told the AP ahead of council meeting. "We have to take care about the way of training and the vacation they need to recover every season that they do. If the calendar is not modified, of course we cannot agree."

SCHEDULING

The Club World Cup fills the slot previously reserved for the Confederat­ions Cup, which had served as a test event in a host nation a year before the World Cup.

In 2021, FIFA envisages the window for internatio­nal matches — likely to include 2022 World Cup qualifiers — from May 31 to June 8. The Club World Cup would be held from June 17 to July 4, while the African Cup of Nations and CONCACAF Gold Cup could be played from July 5-31. European club seasons typically start around mid-August.

According to a FIFA document seen by the AP, South America would have six slots in the first edition. Three each would go to teams from Africa, Asia and CONCACAF, which represents North and Central America and the Caribbean. Oceania would get one.

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