Infantina wants to expand the tournament to 48 teams, a contentious move that critics say would dilute the quality.

FIFA president Gianni Infantino's plan to expand the World Cup faces a key test from Thursday at a meeting of world football's top executives.
Infantina
wants to expand the tournament to 48 teams, a contentious move that
critics say would dilute the quality of World Cup competition and add
new fixtures to football's already packed calendar.
"It is not a secret that I believe in an expansion of the World Cup," Infantino told AFP last week, opting for a 48-team competition by 2026.
Infantino
has floated a proposal that would see the 16 winners of group
qualifying rounds automatically book a place in the showcase tournament.
An additional 32 teams would battle it out in a new pre-tournament play-in round, with 16 nations moving on to the World Cup.
Infantino
told AFP that for the World Cup proper "the ideal format is 32 teams",
but that would not stop him from seeking to widen opportunities for more
countries while boosting revenues from the cash cow tournament.
The
powerful 36-member FIFA Council will weigh the idea at the meeting on
Thursday and Friday but a final decision will not be made until next
year, Infantino said.
It has been nearly
eight-months since the Swiss-Italian national was elected to take over
world football's governing body amid an unprecedented crisis.
His
tenure has faced its share of challenges: he has been the target of an
ethics probe that ultimately cleared him any wrongdoing, a former top
executive blasted Infantino as an autocrat in his resignation letter,
while prosecutors in the United States and Switzerland continue to probe
decades of FIFA graft.
But Infantino has insisted
he remains focused on reforming an organisation that had become
globally disgraced under the leadership of ex-president Sepp Blatter.
The
46-year-old lawyer and former UEFA number two has made growing football
globally and increasing FIFA income top priorities of his
administration.
Broadening the World Cup could further both objectives.
A
marketing executive who worked with Infantino at UEFA and requested
anonymity told AFP the FIFA chief may be pushing for a 48-team
tournament as leverage but would settle for a 40-team format.
The
40-team idea was studied last year by FIFA's executive committee --
since renamed the FIFA Council -- but no decision was reached.
A
FIFA Council member, also speaking anonymously, said broadcasters who
pay hugely lucrative rights fees would likely have the final say on any
changes to the World Cup format.
Israel/Palestinians
Palestinians
children marched on an Israeli settlement this week chanting "Infantino
let us play", in a clear reminder of another tough challenge facing the
FIFA leader.
The Palestine Football Association
has written to Infantino calling on FIFA to demand the Israeli Football
Association expel the clubs based on Jewish settlements in the occupied
West Bank, which are considered illegal under international law.
Infantino told AFP last week that the issue was "one of (his) highest priorities."
The
Council meeting will hear a report on the Israel Palestinian issue from
the head of FIFA's monitoring mission to the area, South Africa's Tokyo Sexwale.
Israeli's
thorny relations with the Muslim world also feature in another issue
facing the FIFA Council: the venue for the body's next Congress.
Kuala Lumpur
had been slated to host the May 2017 Congress but the government of
Muslim-majority Malaysia has refused to give entry visas to Israeli
football officials, a stance that bars the country from hosting.
Infantino is scheduled to meet with the media after the Council wraps up on Friday.
No comments:
Post a Comment