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Ex-FIFA Chief Blatter cries foul over World Cup hosting; it should be England before Saudi Arabia, he says

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England should have won the hosting rights for the soccer World Cup before the next free date in 2038 and before Saudi Arabia which will hold the 2034 edition, former FIFA President Sepp Blatter said on Tuesday.

“England has done a great job for the game of football and they should be rewarded,” Blatter told Reuters. “They have tried since 1966 to get the World Cup back and it’s a shame they didn’t get it.

“They should have had it before Saudi Arabia, but it was organised in a very clever way so nobody was in opposition,” he said in an interview.

FIFA awarded the 2034 tournament to Saudi Arabia in an uncontested process in December , which also saw Spain, Portugal and Morocco chosen as the main hosts for the 2030 tournament combined with one-off matches in South America.

However, the decisions have come under fire, with the 2030 plan criticised by climate activists because of the increased emissions necessitated by the extra travel across three continents.

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The 2034 bid by Saudi Arabia has been questioned by some in the game due to its desert climate and also been criticised by activists over the country’s human rights record, much in the same way as the 2022 Qatar World Cup. Saudi Arabia denies suppressing rights.

This left 2038 as the next available date for England to host its second World Cup after winning the tournament at home in 1966.

Blatter said he was concerned about the increased influence of the Middle East on sports like football and Formula 1, with both having been heavily invested in by countries in the region, but said England should still apply to host the World Cup.

“They should wake up and apply again,” the 88-year-old said.

Blatter, who left FIFA in disgrace following a corruption scandal in 2015, was also concerned about the expanding size of the World Cup, which he said was diluting the quality of the tournament.

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Next year’s event in the United States, Mexico and Canada has been expanded to 48 teams, up from 32 at the 2022 edition.

“It’s become too big,” he said. “Will it become like in grand slam tennis where everybody goes to the World Cup? What next – 128 teams?

“I’ve always said there are too many teams and the quality is not the same,” Blatter added. “Who loses out – the spectators.”

He feared constant expansion could eventually damage the sport.

“As long as football has 2 billion followers, then FIFA thinks they are happy,” the Swiss said. “But one day there will be a stop – you cannot go and develop more football, and more players and have more money and more spectators and more stadiums.”

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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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Tunisia captain Sassi dropped for World Cup

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FIFA Arab Cup - Qatar 2025 - Group A - Tunisia v Syria - Ahmad bin Ali Stadium, Al Rayyan, Qatar - December 1, 2025 Tunisia's Ferjani Sassi in action REUTERS/Ibraheem Al Omari

 

 Tunisia left out captain Ferjani Sassi and key defender Yassine Meriah as new coach Sabri Lamouchi made expected changes on Friday when he named his ​squad for next month’s World Cup.

Sassi, who has played 101 times for Tunisia, ‌and Meriah, five caps away from a century of appearances for the North Africans, were both dropped from the squad.

Lamouchi, who was appointed coach in January after Sami Trabelsi was dismissed following ​Tunisia’s exit from the Cup of Nations in the last 16, overhauled the ​squad for his first two matches in March.

At the time, Lamouchi, ⁠who has had spells at Nottingham Forest and Cardiff City, did not reveal whether ​he was using the friendlies against Haiti and Canada to look at alternative options or ​whether he was seeking to build a new-look side.

Friday’s squad announcement suggests a mix, as there were surprise call-ups for 21-year-old Khalil Ayari and teenager Rayan Elloumi.

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Ayari has been signed by Paris Saint-Germain but has yet to make the first team squad, while Elloumi has made ​only two starts in Major League Soccer with the Vancouver Whitecaps.

Canadian-born Elloumi, 18, played earlier this ‌year for ⁠the World Cup co-hosts in a friendly against Guatemala.

The Tunisia squad also includes 32-year-old midfielder Rani Khedira, whose brother Sami was a World Cup winner with Germany in 2014. Khedira had previously rejected overtures from Tunisia to play for them, but in March ​switched his footballing nationality ​and debuted for ⁠the North Africans.

Tunisia compete at their seventh World Cup and are in Group F with Sweden, Japan and the Netherlands.

Squad:

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Goalkeepers: Sabri ​Ben Hessen (Etoile Sahel), Abdelmouhib Chamakh (Club Africain), Aymen Dahman (CS Sfaxien)

Defenders: Ali Abdi (Nice), ​Adem Arous (Kasimpasa), ⁠Mohamed Amine Ben Hamida (Esperance), Dylan Bronn (Servette Geneva), Raed Chikhaoui (US Monastir), Moutaz Neffati (Norrkoping), Omar Rekik (NK Maribor), Montassar Talbi (Lorient), Yan Valery (Young Boys Berne)

Midfielders: Mortadha Ben Ouanes (Kasimpasa), Anis Ben Slimane (Norwich City), Ismael Gharbi (FC ⁠Augsburg), ​Rani Khedira (Union Berlin), Mohamed Hadj Mahmoud (Lugano), Hannibal Mejbri (Burnley), Ellyes ​Skhiri (Eintracht Frankfurt).

Reuters

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FIFA Moves To Calm Iran’s World Cup Fears Ahead of Crucial Istanbul Meeting

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Fresh uncertainty surrounding Iran national football team’s participation at the 2026 FIFA World Cup has prompted emergency-level diplomacy, with senior FIFA officials set to hold crucial talks with the Iranian Football Federation in Istanbul on Saturday.

At the centre of the discussions will be FIFA Secretary-General Mattias Grafstrom, who is expected to meet officials of the Football Federation Islamic Republic of Iran (FFIRI) to offer what sources described as “reassurance” over Iran’s place at next year’s World Cup.

The meeting comes amid mounting political and security concerns following escalating tensions between Iran, the United States and Israel after military strikes earlier this year. The situation has raised fears over whether Iranian players, officials and delegation members would be granted unhindered access into the United States and Canada, two of the three host nations for the expanded 48-team tournament.

Iran have already qualified for the World Cup and are scheduled to play all three group matches in the United States, beginning with a clash against New Zealand national football team in Los Angeles on June 15.

However, doubts intensified after FFIRI President Mehdi Taj was reportedly denied entry into Canada for the recent FIFA Congress in Vancouver because of alleged links to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).

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Both the United States and Canada classify the IRGC as a terrorist organisation and have maintained strict entry restrictions for individuals associated with the elite military body.

The development triggered alarm within Iranian football and diplomatic circles, with Tehran insisting that FIFA must guarantee equal access and participation for all qualified nations.

Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister for Legal and International Affairs, Kazem Gharibabadi, warned this week that any barriers placed before the Iranian delegation would undermine the integrity of the World Cup itself.

“The Iranian national football team has earned its right to participate on the field in accordance with FIFA regulations,” Gharibabadi wrote on social media.

He argued that preventing players, officials or technical staff from entering host countries would violate the spirit of the competition and damage FIFA’s credibility as a neutral governing body.

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Behind the scenes, FIFA is understood to be working closely with authorities in the host nations to ensure all participating teams can compete “in a safe and secure environment.”

The governing body now finds itself balancing football neutrality with the realities of international geopolitics — a challenge that could define preparations for the biggest World Cup in history.

Iran had reportedly requested that their matches be relocated to Mexico to avoid possible entry complications in the United States, but Gianni Infantino is said to have rejected the proposal, insisting that the original tournament schedule remain intact.

In a potentially calming intervention, U.S. President Donald Trump recently indicated he had no objection to Iran participating in the tournament despite the strained political relationship between the two countries.

Still, uncertainty lingers over whether all Iranian officials — not just players — will receive visas and security clearance.

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The Iranian team is scheduled to leave Tehran for a training camp in Turkey on Monday before travelling to their World Cup base at the Kino Sports Complex in Tucson, Arizona in early June.

Saturday’s Istanbul meeting is therefore being viewed as far more than a routine administrative discussion. It represents a critical test of FIFA’s ability to protect the universality of football in an era where global politics increasingly threaten to spill onto the pitch.

For now, the message from FIFA appears to be one of reassurance. But until the first Iranian delegation members clear immigration checkpoints in North America, questions over Iran’s World Cup participation are unlikely to disappear completely.

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Haiti name World Cup squad for first appearance since 1974

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Jun 15, 2025; San Diego, California, USA; Haiti forward Duckens Nazon (9) dribbles downfield during the first half of a group stage match of the 2025 Gold Cup at Snapdragon Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Denis Poroy-Imagn Images 

Haiti named their World Cup squad on Friday, with ​captain Johny Placide and all-time top scorer Duckens ‌Nazon included as Les Grenadiers prepare for their first finals in 52 years.

French coach Sebastien Migne selected an experienced squad led by ​38-year-old goalkeeper Placide, who plays for Bastia, while Wolverhampton ​Wanderers midfielder Jean-Ricner Bellegarde is among the team’s ⁠most recognisable European-based players.

Nazon, who has 44 goals in ​76 appearances, was also selected after playing a key role ​in qualification, with the striker from Iranian club Esteghlal netting six times during the campaign.

The Caribbean side will play at the men’s World ​Cup for only the second time, and first since ​the 1974 tournament in West Germany, after topping their CONCACAF qualifying group.

They ‌had ⁠to play all of their home matches at neutral venues because of the country’s security crisis.

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Haiti will play warm-up matches against New Zealand and Peru before opening their Group ​C campaign versus ​Scotland on ⁠June 13, followed by games with five-time champions Brazil and Morocco.

Squad:

Goalkeepers: Johny Placide, Alexandre Pierre, ​Josue Duverger

Defenders: Carlens Arcus, Wilguens Paugain, Duke Lacroix, ​Martin ⁠Experience, JK Duverne, Ricardo Ade, Hannes Delcroix, Keeto Thermoncy

Midfielders: Leverton Pierre, Carl-Fred Sainte, Danley Jean-Jacques, Jean-Ricner Bellegarde, Woodensky Pierre, Simon ⁠Dominique

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Forwards: ​Louicius Deedson, Ruben Providence, Josue Casimir, ​Derrick Etienne, Wilson Isidor, Duckens Nazon, Frantzdy Pierrot, Yassin Fortune, Lenny Joseph

-Reuters

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