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Vancouver hosts FIFA congress with expanded World Cup under scrutiny

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FIFA’s member associations meet in Vancouver on Thursday for their annual congress, a ​usually routine gathering that carries greater weight this year with the 2026 World Cup less than two months away ‌and several questions still hanging over the first 48-team edition of the tournament.

The biggest World Cup in history will be held across the United States, Canada and Mexico from June 11 to July 19.

One of the clearest concerns is cost.

The sheer scale of staging a tournament across North America, with long-haul travel, ​differing tax regimes and significant operational demands, has prompted unease among some participating nations.

UEFA has passed on concerns from several ​European associations that teams could find it difficult to break even unless they progress deep into the ⁠competition.

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FIFA, for its part, is expected to point to the unprecedented commercial strength of the tournament.

The governing body has indicated it is ​prepared to raise prize money and participation payments beyond already record levels, presenting the expanded World Cup as a vehicle for wider ​redistribution rather than simply a bigger payday for the strongest teams.

Its argument is that more nations, more matches and greater revenues will ultimately mean more money flowing into development programmes and solidarity funding across the global game.

Iran’s participation is the most politically sensitive item on FIFA’s agenda.

Iran have qualified for the World ​Cup, but security and travel concerns around their matches in the United States have prompted officials in Tehran to seek guarantees and ​request alternative venues.

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FIFA has rejected any change to the schedule, saying teams are expected to play as planned.

Visa access and travel restrictions are also expected ‌to be ⁠closely watched.

Officials from the Palestinian Football Association were recently denied entry to Canada for a pre-congress meeting, underlining the practical obstacles that can arise when sport, border policy and international politics collide.

However, Palestinian association vice president Susan Shalabi and president Jibril Rajoub have both now been granted visas and are expected to attend the congress, FIFA told Reuters on Monday.

Shalabi has already arrived in Vancouver while Rajoub is ​expected on Tuesday.

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FIFA says it is ​working with host governments to ⁠help facilitate access for delegations, although the final list of attending associations will not be confirmed until the congress begins.

The wider logistics of the 2026 World Cup remain a defining theme. A tournament spread ​across three countries, multiple time zones and vast distances will test teams, supporters, broadcasters and organisers ​in ways no ⁠previous World Cup has.

Some federations have raised concerns privately, but FIFA argues that a multi-host model is essential for a 48-team event and reflects the future scale and ambition of the competition.

For Vancouver, then, the task is not only to celebrate the approach of a landmark World Cup ⁠but to ​smooth the final edges before the June 11 kickoff.

FIFA expects the 2026 tournament ​to be the largest and most lucrative in its history, with projected revenues of around $13 billion for the current cycle. The challenge now is to ensure that its ​expanded vision of the World Cup feels not only bigger, but workable, fair and genuinely global.

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-Reuters

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Kunle Solaja is the author of landmark books on sports and journalism as well as being a multiple award-winning journalist and editor of long standing. He is easily Nigeria’s foremost soccer diarist and Africa's most capped FIFA World Cup journalist, having attended all FIFA World Cup finals from Italia ’90 to Qatar 2022. He was honoured at the Qatar 2022 World Cup by FIFA and AIPS.

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Folarin Balogun’s Red Card: A Legal Appraisal of Articles 27 and 66 of the FIFA Disciplinary Code

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AbdulHakeem Uthman Mustapha, SAN, a member of FIFA’s Anti-Racism and Anti-Discrimination Committee, is reporting from Mexico City during the FIFA World Cup 2026.

 

 

 

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By AbdulHakeem Uthman Mustapha, SAN

The controversy surrounding the red card issued to Folarin Balogun during the FIFA World Cup has generated considerable debate within the global football community.

Beyond the emotional reactions of supporters and the media lies a more fundamental legal question: Did FIFA’s Disciplinary Committee possess the legal authority to suspend the implementation of Balogun’s automatic one-match suspension?

In answering this question, the relevant provisions are Articles 27 and 66 of the FIFA Disciplinary Code (“the Code”). Properly construed, these provisions do not conflict; rather, they complement one another and form part of a coherent disciplinary framework.

 

The Facts

 

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Brazilian referee Raphael Claus issues a controversial straight red card to United States Men’s National Team (USMNT) forward Folarin Balogun during a FIFA World Cup 2026 Round of 32 match against Bosnia and Herzegovina on July 1, 2026.

 

During the Round of 32 match between the United States Men’s National Team and Bosnia and Herzegovina, Folarin Balogun was shown a straight red card after a VAR review concluded that his challenge on Bosnian defender Tarik Muharemović amounted to serious foul play.

Pursuant to Article 66 of the Code, the sending-off automatically attracted a one-match suspension, thereby rendering him ineligible for the United States’ next fixture unless the competent judicial authority determined otherwise.

Subsequently, FIFA’s Disciplinary Committee invoked Article 27 of the Code and suspended the implementation of the automatic suspension, thereby making Balogun eligible to participate in the following match while placing him on probation.

This decision immediately attracted criticism from several quarters, particularly from the Belgian Football Association, which reportedly contended that the suspension prescribed by Article 66 was mandatory and incapable of being deferred.

 

The Relevant Statutory Framework

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Article 66 provides in part:

“A sending-off automatically incurs suspension from the subsequent match. The FIFA judicial bodies may impose additional match suspensions and other disciplinary measures.”

It further provides:

“The automatic match suspension and any additional match suspension must be served, even if the sending-off is imposed in a match that is later abandoned, annulled, forfeited and/or replayed.”

Conversely, Article 27 provides:

“The judicial body may decide to fully or partially suspend the implementation of a disciplinary measure.”

It further stipulates that:

“By suspending the implementation of the sanction, the judicial body subjects the person sanctioned to a probationary period of one to four years.”

Principles of Interpretation

At first reading, the provisions may appear inconsistent. Article 66 employs mandatory language by providing that a sending-off “automatically incurs” suspension from the subsequent match. Article 27, however, grants the judicial body discretionary authority to suspend the implementation of a disciplinary measure.

In statutory interpretation, courts do not presume inconsistency within the same legislative instrument. Rather, every provision should be interpreted harmoniously so that each is given meaningful effect. A construction that renders one provision redundant is generally to be avoided.

Applying this principle, Article 66 should be understood as creating the disciplinary sanction automatically upon the occurrence of a specified event, namely, a sending-off. Article 27, on the other hand, regulates the subsequent implementation of that sanction by conferring upon the competent judicial body the discretion to suspend its enforcement where appropriate.

Accordingly, the two provisions operate sequentially rather than inconsistently.

The Nature of the Discretion under Article 27

The legal significance of Article 27 cannot be overstated.

The provision does not empower FIFA to erase a red card or overturn the referee’s decision. Nor does it invalidate the disciplinary finding that serious foul play occurred.

Rather, Article 27 merely suspends the implementation of the sanction.

Consequently:

* the red card remains valid;

* the finding of misconduct remains undisturbed;

* the automatic suspension legally exists;

* only its immediate enforcement is deferred;

* the player is placed on probation for a prescribed period; and

* a subsequent similar offence may trigger enforcement of the suspended sanction in addition to any fresh disciplinary measures.

This distinction between the existence of a sanction and its enforcement is well recognised in legal systems throughout the world, including criminal and civil jurisprudence where suspended sentences and suspended enforcement orders are common judicial mechanisms.

 

Whether FIFA Acted Within Its Powers

The principal criticism advanced by opponents of FIFA’s decision is that Article 66 leaves no room for discretion once a player has been sent off.

With respect, that interpretation fails to give proper effect to Article 27.

The FIFA World Cup Competition Regulations expressly provide those disciplinary matters are governed by the FIFA Disciplinary Code. Consequently, Article 27 forms an integral part of the applicable disciplinary regime and cannot be ignored.

When the Code is read as a whole, the more persuasive interpretation is that Article 66 establishes the automatic sanction, while Article 27 authorises the competent judicial body, in appropriate circumstances, to suspend its implementation.

Whether that discretion was wisely exercised is a matter of legitimate debate.

Whether the discretion legally existed is a different question altogether.

In my respectful opinion, the answer to the latter question is clearly in the affirmative.

 

The Allegations of Political Influence

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U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during an event at the White House. Trump later revealed that he had asked FIFA to review the red-card decision involving U.S. forward Folarin Balogun during the FIFA World Cup 2026. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

Following FIFA’s decision, widespread reports suggested that political lobbying had influenced the outcome.

Such allegations understandably generated public concern because the credibility of every sporting judicial system depends upon both actual independence and the appearance of independence.

However, allegations, however widely circulated, are not evidence.

To date, no credible material has been produced demonstrating that FIFA’s Disciplinary Committee acted under improper influence or outside the powers conferred upon it by the FIFA Disciplinary Code.

The Committee remains an independent judicial organ established under FIFA’s regulatory framework, and its decisions are presumed to have been taken in accordance with the governing statutes unless the contrary is established.

Conclusion

The Balogun decision illustrates the distinction between legal interpretation and public perception.

From a legal standpoint, Articles 27 and 66 are not contradictory. Rather, they perform different functions within FIFA’s disciplinary architecture.

Article 66 creates the automatic suspension arising from a sending-off, while Article 27 authorises the competent judicial body to suspend the implementation of that sanction without disturbing either the referee’s decision or the underlying disciplinary finding.

The controversy surrounding the decision therefore appears to stem less from any absence of legal authority than from disagreement over the manner in which FIFA exercised the discretion expressly vested in it by its own Disciplinary Code.

Reasonable minds may differ on whether the discretion ought to have been exercised in Balogun’s favour. However, as a matter of legal interpretation, the decision appears to have been made within the framework of powers conferred by the FIFA Disciplinary Code.

Ultimately, fidelity to the rule of law in sport requires that disciplinary decisions be assessed not through the prism of national interest or public emotion, but by careful and objective interpretation of the governing regulations. That principle remains the cornerstone of every credible system of sports justice.

 

* AbdulHakeem Uthman Mustapha, SAN, member of FIFA’s Anti-Racism and Anti-Discrimination Committee, writes from Mexico City where he’s following the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

 

 

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World Cup 2026: Digital World Cup Smashes Engagement Records As 20 Billion Video Views Redefine Fan Experience

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Inside the stadiums and across the world, fans are plugged into a 24 hour digital World Cup that’s smashing every engagement record

 

 

 

 

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BY KUNLE SOLAJA, BOSTON.

The roar of the crowd inside a packed stadium remains football’s most powerful soundtrack.

But at FIFA World Cup 2026, another audience is making just as much noise — the billions following every goal, celebration and controversy through their phones.

As the tournament reaches the quarter-finals, FIFA’s latest numbers reveal a competition that is being experienced on a scale unimaginable even four years ago.

Twenty billion video views.

Thirty billion social-media impressions.

Fifty-four million new followers.

One hundred and eighty-seven million visitors to FIFA.com.

The figures tell the story of a World Cup no longer confined to stadiums and television screens.

For many younger supporters, the tournament’s defining moments are arriving through TikTok clips, Instagram reels, YouTube highlights and gaming platforms.

Norway’s Viking-inspired celebration has become one of the sporting images of the year, attracting more than 174 million views. Cristiano Ronaldo’s first-ever World Cup knockout-stage goal generated another 75 million views on YouTube.

The appetite for content has been relentless.

FIFA reports that social-media engagement is up by 160 per cent compared with the equivalent stage of the Qatar tournament, while video views have exploded by nearly fivefold.

Even football gaming has become part of the World Cup ecosystem.

More than 130 million gaming enthusiasts have engaged with FIFA’s digital football portfolio, while FIFA Super Soccer on Roblox has attracted over 21 million visitors during the tournament.

The transformation reflects football’s changing audience.

For a generation raised on smartphones, the World Cup is no longer a 90-minute experience. It is a 24-hour global conversation.

The result is a tournament that reaches supporters whether they are sitting inside Boston Stadium, watching from Lagos, following highlights in São Paulo or playing a World Cup-themed game in Seoul.

Football’s biggest event has become football’s biggest digital event.

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Mbappé, Messi And Haaland Lead A Record-Breaking World Cup

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Lionel Messi (ARG) tops the all-time scoring chart in FIFA World Cup history with 21 goals, followed by Kylian Mbappé (FRA) with 19. Enzo Fernández’s winning goal in the match between Argentina and Egypt was the 3,000th goal in the history of the FIFA World Cup.

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BY KUNLE SOLAJA, BOSTON

The FIFA World Cup has always been a stage for greatness.

In 2026, it has become a theatre of records.

As the quarter-finals approach, three of the game’s biggest stars are producing numbers never before seen at football’s greatest tournament.

Lionel Messi leads the way.

The Argentine captain has extended his World Cup scoring record to 21 goals, while also becoming the first player to score in nine consecutive World Cup matches.

Not far behind is France’s Kylian Mbappé, whose strike against Paraguay was his 19th World Cup goal and France’s 150th in tournament history.

At just 27 years old, the Real Madrid superstar stands on the verge of becoming the youngest player ever to make 20 World Cup appearances.

Then there is Norway’s Erling Haaland.

His seven goals have powered the Scandinavian side into their first-ever World Cup quarter-final and helped transform Norway from outsiders into genuine contenders.

Remarkably, this is the first World Cup in history in which three players have scored seven or more goals in the same tournament.

The competition has also produced other extraordinary feats.

Belgium midfielder Youri Tielemans has covered 61.8 kilometres, more than any other player.

Mbappé has recorded the fastest sprint at 37.6 kilometres per hour.

Senegal’s Pape Gueye unleashed the fastest goal-scoring strike measured at 131.9 kilometres per hour.

Meanwhile, Spain’s defensive excellence has become one of the stories of the tournament.

Goalkeeper Unai Simón has now gone 609 minutes without conceding a World Cup goal, extending the longest such streak in tournament history.

With four former champions still standing- Argentina, England, France and Spain- and emerging challengers such as Morocco, Norway and Switzerland writing new chapters of their own, the records may not stop falling anytime soon.

The World Cup’s biggest numbers, it seems, are still to come.

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