Dayton Daily News

FIFA plans to announce 2026 World Cup sites on June 16

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FIFA intends to announce the 2026 World Cup sites in New York on June 16.

Seventeen U.S. stadiums in 16 areas remain in the bidding for the first 48-team World Cup, with the Los Angeles area submitting both SoFi Stadium in Inglewood and the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, site of the 1994 World Cup final. Three stadiums each in Canada and Mexico are expected to be used.

The bid plan envisioned 16 total sites for the tournament. FIFA targeted mid-May for announcing site selections, and then pushed that back a month.

The 2026 World Cup will be the first with three co-hosts.

FIFA selected the bid as joint host in June 2018.

Sixty games are to be played in the U.S., including all from the quarterfin­als on. Canada and Mexico are to host 10 games each.

Chicago, Minneapoli­s and Arizona dropped out in March 2018 because of what city officials said were burdensome financial demands by FIFA.

Montreal dropped out last August after the Quebec provincial government withdrew its support. It was replaced in April by Vancouver, British Columbia, which made an initial bid in 2017, then said in March 2018 it had been rejected because it refused to comply with FIFA’s requiremen­ts that include tax waivers and putting agreements under Swiss law.

The remaining U.S. sites under considerat­ion are: Arlington, Texas, AT&T Stadium; Atlanta, Mercedes-Benz Stadium; Baltimore, M&T Bank Stadium; Cincinnati, Paul Brown Stadium; Denver, Empower Field at Mile High; East Rutherford, N.J., MetLife Stadium; Foxborough, Mass., Gillette Stadium; Houston, NRG

Stadium; Inglewood, Calif., SoFi Stadium; Kansas City, Mo., Arrowhead Stadium; Miami Gardens, Florida, Hard Rock Stadium; Nashville, Tenn., Nissan Stadium; Orlando, Florida, Camping World Stadium; Pasadena, Calif., Rose Bowl; Philadelph­ia, Lincoln Financial Field; Santa Clara, California, Levi’s Stadium; Seattle, Lumen Field.

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