Gulf News

US, Mexico and Canada win joint bid for 2026

North America joint hosts promise the richest and most lucrative tournament in history of football

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Nations at the 68th Fifa Congress in Moscow backed North America’s joint bid to host the 2026 World Cup. With a handful of games in Mexico and Canada but the majority in the US, the 2026 bid promises the richest and most lucrative tournament in the history of global football.

The expanded 2026 event, featuring 48 teams for the first time, will be played in 16 different cities — 10 in the US, plus three sites in both Canada and Mexico. The US will host 60 of the 80 matches, including the final, scheduled for MetLife Stadium outside New York City.

“It’s a bit emotional for us today,” Carlos Cordeiro, president of US Football, said after the vote. “The beautiful game transcends borders and cultures. Football today is the only victor, and in that spirit, we wish our Russian hosts and all the teams participat­ing here this month, the very best of luck.”

The winning bid got 134 votes, compared to 65 for Morocco. There was one abstention.

Wednesday’s vote, held in Moscow on the eve of this year’s tournament, was about much more than just the 2026 host nation. Many in the internatio­nal community viewed this decision as a reflection of how far Fifa has come after years of scandal and widespread corruption, some of which was tied to the 2018 and 2022 World Cup bidding processes.

When Gianni Infantino replaced embattled Sepp Blatter as president of football’s governing body in 2016, he acknowledg­ed that the organisati­on was “in a crisis” and promised reforms.

On paper, it was hard to make the case for Morocco. Canada, Mexico and the US are home to a combined 491 million people and two of the world’s biggest media markets. All of the proposed stadiums exist already. And perhaps most persuasive, the North American bid promised Fifa a record $11 billion in profit, nearly double the $6.6 billion that governing body expects to earn in the 2022 event in Qatar and more than double the $5 billion estimated by Morocco.

The money promised by the North American bid will be a strong boost to Fifa. The Switzerlan­d-based organisati­on reports its revenue in four-year cycles, and most recently claimed $5.7 billion for the cycle culminatin­g in the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.

Yesterday Trump tweeted his congratula­tions, saying the winning bid was the result of “a great deal of hard work.”

The US last hosted the World Cup in 1994, an event that eventually gave rise to Major League Football, now in its 23rd season. The 3.6 million attendees remain a World Cup record, despite the fact that only 24 nations competed at the time. Mexico hosted the World Cup in 1986; Canada never has.

“The fact that Mexico, Canada and the US can come together and organise the world’s biggest sporting event is a nice message,” Fifa head Infantino said at a news conference.

 ?? AP ?? Delegates of Canada, Mexico and the US celebrate after winning a joint bid to host the 2026 World Cup yesterday.
AP Delegates of Canada, Mexico and the US celebrate after winning a joint bid to host the 2026 World Cup yesterday.

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