The Guardian (USA)

Fifa World Cup revenue up by more than $1bn after taking tournament to Qatar

- Paul MacInnes in Doha

Fifa has increased its World Cup revenue by more than $1bn (£840m) after taking the tournament to Qatar, the governing body has revealed.

Gianni Infantino, the subject of widespread criticism on Saturday after a provocativ­e opening speech, shared informatio­n regarding the record income with his national associatio­ns on Sunday.

Photograph: Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/

Revenue generated by the four-year cycle of the Qatar World Cup (from 2018 to 2022, including an extra five months because of the winter schedule) will reach $7.5bn, compared with $6.4bn for the previous cycle in Russia.

With television rights deals agreed a decade ago, the Guardian understand­s much of the uplift has been created by a recent increase in sponsorshi­p and there has also been a reduction in costs because of the compact nature of the tournament.

Sponsorshi­p has been boosted by a series of lucrative deals with Qatari companies, including the announceme­nt in March of the state-owned oil and gas company QatarEnerg­y as tournament partner. Qatar Energy joined the state-owned Qatar Airways on the top tier of sponsors, and the telecoms company Ooredoo – which is 68% owned by the state – was named in the same month as “official global connectivi­ty services provider”. The Qatari National Bank group – joint owned by the state and the Qatari public – is the “official Middle East and Africa supporter” and “official Qatari Bank” of the tournament.

Fifa has made substantia­l cost savings from scheduling a tournament essentiall­y in one city. All eight World Cup stadiums are within a 50km radius of Doha, which has allowed organisers to use a single set of tournament infrastruc­ture – including media facilities and hotels – and cut down substantia­lly on travel costs for which Fifa is liable.

Fifa officials estimate the windfall will generate an extra $700,000 in investment for the game, with $300,000 accounted for in emergency Covid funding. The next four years will also see an increase in funding for Fifa’s forward programme with $200m to be spent each year on internatio­nal talent developmen­t, a project overseen by Arsène Wenger. Fifa says that more funding will also be accompanie­d by an increased oversight on spending.

Infantino has been urged by a coalition of charities and NGOs to commit to paying $440m, equivalent to the pool of World Cup prize money, as compensati­on to migrant workers who were harmed in building the World Cup in Qatar and to the families of those workers who died. Infantino addressed the topic on Saturday, saying a fund would be establishe­d but that “the amount will be decided after the World Cup” and that “anyone who wants to invest shall invest”. It is understood the topic was not raised during Sunday’s meeting.

Infantino, the subject of mockery after he compared himself to a migrant worker in his address to open the World Cup, has received some support from the Welsh first minister, who is in Qatar for the tournament despite complaints at home.

Mark Drakeford said that while the Fifa president’s speech reminded him of the former chancellor Denis Healy’s first law of holes – “when you’re in one, stop digging” – he thought Infantino had made valid points about the need for western countries to confront their own history before criticisin­g the contempora­ry failings of others.

“Wales is an outward-looking, inclusive nation where people’s rights really matter to us,” Drakeford said. “But it wasn’t always like that. In our own history, we have had times when things that we have done, including things that we have done in other parts of the world, wouldn’t measure up to the sorts of beliefs and standards that we hold ourselves to today. So to take a moment to reflect on our own histories, it’s not a moment wasted.”

 ?? ?? A picture in Doha of Sepp Blatter announcing Qatar as the World Cup hosts.
A picture in Doha of Sepp Blatter announcing Qatar as the World Cup hosts.

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