Advertisement
Advertisement
US Soccer Federation president Sunil Gulati speaks at a press conference to announce the unified bid of the three nations, United States, Mexico and Canada, to jointly host the 2026 FIFA World Cup competition on the 102nd floor of One World Trade Centre in New York, New York. Photo: EPA

US, Canada and Mexico in joint bid for 2026 World Cup

The United States, Mexico and Canada will make a joint bid to host the 2026 World Cup, top soccer officials from the three nations announced on Monday.

No nation from CONCACAF, the governing body for soccer in North and Central America and the Caribbean, has hosted the tournament since the United States in 1994.

The 2018 World Cup will be in Russia while Qatar hosts the tournament in 2022.

“We announce our bid to bring the World Cup back to the United States, to Canada and Mexico in 2026,” US Soccer president Sunil Gulati told a press conference in the 102nd floor observatory of the new World Trade Centre in lower Manhattan.

“We look forward to welcoming the world after what we hope is a successful bid.”

Decio de Maria President of the Mexican Football Federation speaks during a press conference announcing the joint bid of the US, Mexico and Canada for the 2026 World Cup. Photo: AFP

Following the presentation, Gulati, Mexican soccer federation president Decio de Maria and Canada Soccer Association president Victor Montagliani, who is also CONCACAF president, signed a memorandum of understanding to join forces in the bid.

The CONCACAF region is widely viewed as favourite to win the 2026 bid, given FIFA rules that restrict Europe and Asia from hosting again so quickly.

The bidding process is expected to begin later this year and to run until 2020.

Gulati said the initial plans were to stage 60 of the 80 World Cup games in the US, with Canada and Mexico hosting 10 games each.

All the games from the quarter-finals onwards would be in the US, Gulati said.

Post