FIFA World Cup to be hosted in six countries across three continents in 2030

“The Spain-Portugal-Morocco bid is the only candidate”, FIFA says, confirming that Uruguay, Paraguay and Argentina will get an opening match each.

Lionel Messi celebrating with winner trophy in hand.
Argentina’s Lionel Messi celebrates holding the World Cup after victory in the final in Qatar in 2022. Pic: AP

The 2030 men’s FIFA World Cup is set to be spread across six countries on three continents, world football’s governing body has said.

In Europe, Spain and Portugal, will be the main co-hosts, along with Morocco in North Africa, as first revealed by Sky News.

FIFA president Gianni Infantino said in a statement: “In 2030, we will have a unique global footprint, three continents – Africa, Europe and South America – six countries – Argentina, Morocco, Paraguay, Portugal, Spain and Uruguay – welcoming and uniting the world while celebrating together the beautiful game, the centenary and the FIFA World Cup.”

Earlier, the FIFA council, which has been discussing a plan to combine rival bids, said the Spain-Portugal-Morocco bid “is the only candidate”, confirming “three South American countries will host games.”

Uruguay, Paraguay and Argentina will get an opening match each to mark 100 years since the first World Cup took place in Uruguay and was won by the hosts.

Argentina were runners-up in the tournament, while Paraguay is recognised as the traditional home of CONMEBOL.

The first game of the tournament will take place in the Uruguayan capital, Montevideo, the city which hosted the first World Cup finals match 93 years ago.

Matches in Argentina and Paraguay will follow, before the rest of the 48-team tournament moves to North Africa and Europe.

The proposal, backed by UEFA, the Confederation of African Football and South American confederation CONMEBOL, was accepted by the FIFA council at a meeting on Wednesday.

It now needs to be approved by FIFA’s congress.

The scandal surrounding the conduct of former Spanish football federation president Luis Rubiales at the final of the Women’s World Cup has not prevented Spain being lined up to host its second finals, after it staged its first alone in 1982.

Rubiales remains the subject of ongoing FIFA disciplinary proceedings.

Source: https://news.sky.com/story/fifa-2030-world-cup-sky-news-understands-countries-in-three-continents-will-host-to-mark-100-years-since-first-tournament-12976650

England beat Denmark to stand on verge of Women’s World Cup last-16

James scored the only goal of the game in a second 1-0 win for England.

England’s players celebrate the only goal of the game that helped them win their second match 1-0 [Rick Rycroft/AP Photo]
European champions England stand on the brink of the Women’s World Cup last-16 after a Lauren James cracker in the sixth minute gave them a 1-0 win over Denmark.

But an otherwise hugely satisfactory Friday night for England in front of just over 40,000 fans in Sydney was marred by what looked like a serious knee injury to influential midfielder Keira Walsh.

On a night of mixed emotions, Sarina Wiegman’s side will seal their place in the knockout rounds if Asian champions China fail to beat debutants Haiti later on Friday.

Denmark might have stolen a point with three minutes left in normal time when, despite having as little as 20 percent of the possession for much of the game, Amalie Vangsgaard shaved the outside of the England post with a header.

 

Lauren James celebrates after scoring her team’s first goal [Justin Setterfield/Getty Images]
James comes through
Wiegman made two changes from the team that squeezed past Haiti 1-0 in their opener, Rachel Daly and James coming into the starting XI.

And it was the 21-year-old Chelsea forward James who was the star of the first half, before fading in the second.

“It’s an amazing feeling and something I always dreamed of,” she said after the match. “We built on the momentum from the last win and took it into this game. Another difficult win but we got the win and that is the most important thing.”

Denmark’s Rikke Marie Madsen in action with England’s Chloe Kelly [Carl Recine/Reuters]
Walsh injury
A night that had been going so well for the Lionesses then suffered a significant setback when Walsh, a key cog in the team that won the Euro last year, tumbled over and appeared to badly hurt her knee.

Source: https://www.aljazeera.com/sports/2023/7/28/england-beat-denmark-to-stand-on-verge-of-world-cup-last-16

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