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Two year World Cup worth extra $4.4bn for Fifa

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FIFA president Gianni Infantino believes he has majority backing for his biennial World Cup plan, after national football leaders were told the switch would create an extra $4.4 billion (about R70bn) in revenues for the world body.

Fifa held a “global summit” of leaders of national football federation­s to discuss its proposal to increase the frequency of the World Cup from every four years to two.

The financial data forms part of an overall feasibilit­y study, of which Fifa presented a summary with a full 700page report set to be published.

The upbeat findings are in marked contrast to analysis put forward by critics of the proposals.

There has been opposition from European clubs, the top leagues and European governing body Uefa, whose president Aleksander Ceferin has threatened to boycott any additional tournament.

No vote is yet scheduled for the plan, but Infantino said a majority was in place for the idea but it needed to be dealt with as part of the broader overhaul of the internatio­nal match calendar.

“If I was going to a vote tomorrow, probably the majority would vote in favour of a World Cup every two years,” Infantino told a news conference after the summit.

“But it is not the topic, we are looking at the entire calendar and how we can make football better and how many we can bring on board with a new way of organising the future in football,” he added.

Infantino would not state when any vote would be held or whether it would be on the agenda at the Fifa congress in Doha on March 31.

“It is about getting the right decisions for football at the end of the day and we will take the time that it takes, to come to this decision. I will not commit to anything at the congress. Everything is open and flexible,” he said.

“We continue the dialogue, the analysis, we hope we can make progress, one way or the other, or some middle way, we will see,” he said.

One compromise solution has been floated by Concacaf president Victor Montaglian­i, who heads the confederat­ion for North and Central America and the Caribbean.

Montaglian­i told Reuters earlier this month that an additional tournament could be a revamped version of the old Confederat­ions Cup rather than a full World Cup with a separate qualifying process. Last month, a report commission­ed by the World Leagues Forum said the Fifa proposal, allied with changes to the Club World Cup, could cost the big domestic soccer leagues and Uefa around €8bn (about R143bn) a season in lost TV rights and match day and commercial agreements.

Uefa last Friday published a report which it had commission­ed from consultanc­y firm Oliver & Ohlbaum which warned that the changes to the internatio­nal calendar would see revenues for European national federation­s drop between €2.5bn and €3bn over a fouryear cycle.

The delegates at Monday’s summit were told that a report by Italian company Open Economics had found that the revenues of domestic leagues and Uefa competitio­ns were not hurt by national team and internatio­nal club competitio­ns.

A report from Nielsen predicted that the biennial World Cup plan would see revenues rise from an expected $7bn for a 48-team tournament, to $11.4bn over a four-year cycle thanks to increased ticket receipts and media rights and sponsorshi­p revenues.

Fifa officials told the delegates that $3.5bn of the extra revenue would go to a new “Member Associatio­n Solidarity Fund” with each national federation allocated around $16 million in a fouryear period, while extra funds would also be given to the Fifa Forward Programme for developmen­t projects.

Fifa said that the funds would help reduce the gap in revenues between the developed and less developed football markets.

Along with Uefa, South American confederat­ion Conmebol has opposed the proposal.

Arsene Wenger, Fifa’s head of Global Football Developmen­t, said he hoped the debate would change in the coming weeks.

“We face opposition, but what I regret is that 90% of this opposition is emotion and not facts and not analysis, we have to get over this fear because most of the emotions that we face are based on fear,” he said.

 ?? ?? FIFA President Gianni Infantino.
FIFA President Gianni Infantino.

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