FIFA's Proposal to Expand World Cup to 64 Teams for 2030 Centenary Celebration
Soccer/Sports

FIFA's Proposal to Expand World Cup to 64 Teams for 2030 Centenary Celebration

FIFA is planning a potential expansion of the World Cup to include 64 teams in 2030 to commemorate the tournament's 100th anniversary.

FIFA is reportedly considering the idea of a one-off, 64-team World Cup in 2030 to commemorate the centenary of the tournament, which would mark the second consecutive expansion of the tournament.

The idea was introduced towards the end of a recent FIFA meeting by Ignacio Alonso, a delegate from Uruguay who read a prepared speech in English, per The New York Times. While others in attendance at the virtual meeting were reportedly shocked by the proposal, FIFA president Gianni Infantino took an interest and said the idea should be studied in more detail.

Alonso’s proposal is expected to be met with resistance, much like FIFA’s previous pitch of holding the World Cup every two years rather than its current four-year timeline. A committee was formed to explore that idea but after a year, their work quietly came to a close.

A 64-team World Cup – especially one on somewhat short notice – is expected to face logistical challenges, especially during a tournament that will already be unconventional in that regard. FIFA has awarded the hosting rights for the 2030 edition to six countries across three continents – Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay, Spain, Portugal, and Morocco. There are also questions surrounding the quality of a 64-team competition, as it would include more than a quarter of FIFA’s member nations and could render certain World Cup qualification competitions largely meaningless.

Infantino’s expansion plans

The men’s World Cup was a 32-team competition from 1998 until the most recent iteration in 2022. Infantino was not the first to suggest expanding the World Cup to 48 teams, but he turned the idea into reality, despite the fact that it was met with disapproval from a logistical and competitive standpoint.

The 2026 World Cup, co-hosted by the U.S., Mexico, and Canada, will be the first to host 48 teams. The competition will last 39 days, which is nine days longer than a 32-team tournament, and will also see 104 games played, up from 64.

Several other competitions have expanded under Infantino’s leadership. The Women’s World Cup increased from a 16-team competition in 2011 to hosting 24 teams in 2015 and 2019, before expanding to 32 in 2023. Infantino has also reimagined the men’s Club World Cup from an annual eight-team competition to a quadrennial tournament featuring 32 teams. While some expansions have been well received, others - such as changes to the Men’s Club World Cup - have been viewed as burdensome to players already dealing with fixture congestion.

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