The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Stadium, event sites ess FIFA brass

City looking to host 2026 World Cup game and broadcast center.

- By Doug Roberson doug.roberson@ajc.com

Atlanta’s history of hosting important sporting events and the compact footprint of downtown are advantageo­us to the city’s hopes of hosting a World Cup game in 2026, FIFA officials and members of Atlanta’s bid committee said Friday.

Speaking at Mercedes-benz Stadium, which would host what the bid officials hope is a semifinal game, were two officials from a 23-person FIFA delegation, Vice President Victor Montaglian­i and Chief Tournament­s & Events Offi

cer Colin Smith, and Dan Corso, president of the Atlanta Sports Council, who said Atlanta very much wants to add a World Cup to a resume that includes the Olympics, Super Bowls, college football national championsh­ips, Final Fours, MLS Cup and MLS All-star game, among others.

“We know that Atlanta has now become a real football city, as in the real football, globally,” Montaglian­i said.

Atlanta is one of 17 cities up for selection for as many as 11 game sites in the U.S. Three sites in Mexico and two in Canada also will be selected as part of a bid won by the three nations in 2018.

The delegation toured Boston on Wednesday and Nashville, Tennessee, on Thursday. The group also will visit Orlando, Washington, Baltimore, New York/new Jersey, Philadelph­ia and Miami. Eight other U.S. candidate cities are scheduled for visits by the end of November.

Atlanta also has bid to host the World Cup’s internatio­nal broadcast center. That is a separate process from bidding to host a game.

FIFA will select the winning cities by the end of the first quarter in 2022. After the match schedule is completed, games and cities will be matched. There’s a chance Atlanta will win a game that is not a semifinal. The city is unlikely to host the final because the stadium’s capacity isn’t as large as that of some of its competitor­s. Grass will be put on top of the stadium’s turf, should it host a game. Smith said FIFA has no concerns with putting grass on top of turf.

In addition to touring the stadium, the delegation looked at possible fan-event sites at the Home Depot Backyard, which is beside the stadium, and Centennial Olympic Park, which is less than 2 miles from the stadium.

Both are examples of the appeal of having event sites convenient to one another.

“You can see it from our hotel, actually,” Smith said. “So I think it’s reinforced ... (that) what Atlanta provides is very compact. And that’s obviously something which is very interestin­g for fans, and you know, people are coming to the stadium, congregati­ng around the stadium for matches.”

Each speaker, a group that included Atlanta United President Darren Eales and Steve Cannon, president of AMB Sports and Entertainm­ent, hammered home points about the number of downtown hotel rooms (12,000), the nearby world-class airport, light-rail transporta­tion, etc., in many of their answers.

The delegation also toured potential team training sites that could be either base sites for the entire tournament or prep sites for whatever game is played at Mercedes-benz Stadium. Those included Atlanta United’s training ground, Kennesaw State — which hosts Atlanta United 2 games and sometimes Atlanta United — and Pace Academy.

Cannon said Arthur Blank, who owns Mercedes-benz Stadium as well as Atlanta United and the Falcons, very much wants FIFA to select Atlanta as a site.

“The opportunit­y to put Atlanta back on a global stage, much like we were in the Olympics in 1996 — think about how much Atlanta has progressed since that time,” Cannon said. “So for Arthur, this is part of the reason he built this stadium in downtown and didn’t, like many others, go out to some suburb outside of Atlanta, it was built for a reason in downtown, so that we can host events just like this.”

Corso said an economic impact study has yet to be produced because the city has never hosted a World Cup. He said that when the city hosted the Super Bowl, the 10-day event resulted in hundreds of millions of dollars. A World Cup would last a month, with possibly multiple matches, implying that the impact would be much greater than hosting the NFL’S championsh­ip game.

Costs weren’t shared. Cannon said it won’t be cheap, but he believes it will be worth every bill.

“The whole world spotlight is going to be pointed on Atlanta and all that Atlanta has to offer from a business community, from a place to live, work and play,” he said. “It’s a phenomenal, phenomenal story that doesn’t frankly get global coverage.

“And this is going to be a oncein-30-years opportunit­y to put that on a pedestal and begin to talk about it. I believe that there will be a trickle effect once other companies, CEOS, business leaders see what Atlanta has to offer. The economic impact won’t just be hotel rooms and airline tickets. It’s going to be people relocating and living here in Atlanta.”

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