CONCACAF to mull joint World Cup bid; Trump wall no concern
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[February 17, 2017]
By Simon Evans
MIAMI (Reuters) - CONCACAF will discuss
a possible joint bid for the 2026 World Cup and the governing body's
president said on Thursday a planned wall along the U.S.-Mexico
border would not present an obstacle to co-hosting the event.
Victor Montagliani, speaking to Reuters by telephone hours after
FIFA said it would encourage co-hosting for the 2026 World Cup, said
a three-way bid with the United States, Mexico and Canada was one
option but did not rule out games in Central America or the
Caribbean.
For Montagliani, head of the governing body for soccer in North and
Central America and the Caribbean, FIFA's welcoming of joint bids
and the expansion of the tournament to 48 teams from 32 in 2026
meant a multinational bid made sense.
"Especially with 48 teams and the increased infrastructure that
requires, not so much from a stadium standpoint but training
facilities, hotels and all the other things, having the opportunity
with three or more countries that are geographically close, it would
be reasonable," said Montagliani.
"Probably in short order, here in CONCACAF, we will sit at a table
and see how we are going to move forward."
FIFA president Gianni Infantino said earlier on Thursday the
organization would encourage applications to co-host the 2026 World
Cup and that the event could be split between up to four countries.
Montagliani, when asked if an expanded tournament featuring 80 games
meant there was also a possibility for some group stage games to be
held in Central America or the Caribbean, said anything is possible.
"You have to look at the economics as well, weigh in the
cost-benefit, but I think the possibilities are endless, to be
honest with you, when you have that many games," Montagliani said.
"You can't close the door on any opportunities."
The 2018 World Cup will be in Russia while Qatar hosts the
tournament in 2022.
The CONCACAF region is widely viewed as favorite to host the 2026
tournament given FIFA rules that restrict Europe and Asia from
hosting again so quickly.
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Victor Montagliani, President of the Confederation of North, Central
America and Caribbean Association Football (CONCACAF) speaks to the
media after a FIFA Council in Zurich, Switzerland, January 10, 2017.
REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann
The United States hosted the 1994 World Cup while Mexico hosted in
1970 and 1986. Canada has never hosted the tournament but
successfully hosted the Women's World Cup in 2015.
U.S. Soccer Federation president Sunil Gulati has said his
federation has yet to decide whether to bid alone for 2026 or
jointly with Canada and/or Mexico.
Montagliani said he did not believe that a controversial border wall
to stem illegal immigration, which was one of U.S. President Donald
Trump's biggest campaign promises, would have any negative impact on
a bid from the region.
"Not withstanding some of the politics that is occurring in this
part of the world, Trump has been pretty consistent in his support
of global events and sport throughout his career as a businessman. I
am not sure I would see that necessarily changing now that he is a
president," said Montagliani.
"It is important, if we are going to do something like this, that we
get it right from a football and administration end before we start
worrying about anything above that. But I am also confident that a
World Cup, the only thing of its kind would, no pun intended, trump
politics."
(Editing by Frank Pingue/Steve Keating.)
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