chrisPjelly
Member
Seems like a huge undertaking, but I can see everyone benefiting out of this if it works out.
Well yeah that's sort of my point, everything is so spread out across huge distances. In Brazil pretty much everything took place along the coast.
I don't know how I feel as much as I'd love to have some matches here in my Country. This presents a lot of issues right out of the bat:
1.Travelling distances might be insane by the time knockout stages come through, sure this could be avoided during the group stage by locking certain groups to different Countries.
2.-Concacaf is already one of the weakest football Confederations, if you give a free pass to three of the participants, the quality level of the tourney will be seriously hampered, not to mention by the time this WC comes around, they'll be like 150 teams involved.
3.-Does Canada even care about football? Braces yourselves for possible empty stadiums.
The only positive thing is that with the continuous infrastructure expectations and the money spent by the last hosts, dividing the load is probably how the next World Cups will be done.
I don't know how I feel as much as I'd love to have some matches here in my Country. This presents a lot of issues right out of the bat:
1.Travelling distances might be insane by the time knockout stages come through, sure this could be avoided during the group stage by locking certain groups to different Countries.
2.-Concacaf is already one of the weakest football Confederations, if you give a free pass to three of the participants, the quality level of the tourney will be seriously hampered, not to mention by the time this WC comes around, they'll be like 150 teams involved.
3.-Does Canada even care about football? Braces yourselves for possible empty stadiums.
The only positive thing is that with the continuous infrastructure expectations and the money spent by the last hosts, dividing the load is probably how the next World Cups will be done.
The weak CONCACAF argument doesn't really matter because we are getting 6 slots for the WC 2026 anyway. That's already set in stone so even if CONCACAF don't host the cup we're still getting 6 spots. Canada might not make the cut but betting on Mexico and the US taking their spot in the qualifiers has got to be one of the easiest bets of all time.
And I'm pretty sure there's some "soccer" cities in Canada. Montreal Impact put 60k people in their stadium for the CCL final.
The host countries will actually count as slots from that confederation. So whether USA/Canada/Mexico host or not, there'll be 6 Concacaf teams no matter what.I don't know how I feel as much as I'd love to have some matches here in my Country. This presents a lot of issues right out of the bat:
1.Travelling distances might be insane by the time knockout stages come through, sure this could be avoided during the group stage by locking certain groups to different Countries.
2.-Concacaf is already one of the weakest football Confederations, if you give a free pass to three of the participants, the quality level of the tourney will be seriously hampered, not to mention by the time this WC comes around, they'll be like 150 teams involved.
3.-Does Canada even care about football? Braces yourselves for possible empty stadiums.
The only positive thing is that with the continuous infrastructure expectations and the money spent by the last hosts, dividing the load is probably how the next World Cups will be done.
This is a small bubble of interest, you guys don't even have a professional league, come on now. Don't blame you tho, maybe if the quality of the MLS was somewhere near interesting, Canada might pull the trigger on making its own thing thus making the sport grow.
6 spots for Concacaf with Mexico and USA already in? Shit, that sounds super rough. A World Cup with more than 32 is absolutely ridiculous to begin with.
It probably wouldn't be much different than the 2014 World Cup in Brazil. Brazil is a massive country, and I recall the USMNT had to travel some pretty serious distances during that tournament.
Plus, they wouldn't be going far into Canada, probably only Toronto and Vancouver, maybe Montreal, and those are all near the border. And it wouldn't surprise me if Mexico only hosted games in Mexico City. Of course, the distances across the U.S. itself would be big, but that's to be expected.
Is Brazil really big? Jeezus. Darn eurocentric world maps.
Which country would host the Final match.
The US and Mexico must have enough fields to host it on their own, Canada probably would too. I don't see why any of these countries would need a hosting partner. Do they just think they'll be more likely to win the bid as a group?
With 48 teams they could all get in and the normal Costa Rica and Panama can get in too.
If we go by historic value? In the Azteca stadium in Mexico City.
There'll be 6 CONCACAF teams by then. You can probably add Honduras and Trinidad and Tobago or Haiti or something too.Panama??
There'll be 6 CONCACAF teams by then. You can probably add Honduras and Trinidad and Tobago too.
People keep saying this but CONCACAF had a better showing than Africa last World Cup. Asia didn't even win a single game.2.-Concacaf is already one of the weakest football Confederations, if you give a free pass to three of the participants, the quality level of the tourney will be seriously hampered, not to mention by the time this WC comes around, they'll be like 150 teams involved.
There's a shit load of soccer fans in Canada. It's a country full of immigrants who love soccer.
More than hockey??Plus families with kids who play soccer. In terms of participation, it's far and away the most popular sport for Canadian children.
Hockey is for more well off kids.More than hockey??
More than hockey??
There's over 200 member associations, 48 coming to the world cup isn't a big deal to me.
There's a shit load of soccer fans in Canada. It's a country full of immigrants who love soccer.
And if it's only Vancouver, Toronto and Mexico City, wouldn't it be basically a US world cup?
I think a lot of your are forgetting - especially if there are gonna be games in Toronto and Montreal, that those cities have large immigrant populations that love football. They will definitely come out to support the World Cup.
Games involving:
Greece, Italy, France, Portugal, Brazil will get a lot of Canadian support. Outside chance that South Korea will get a lot of fans out too if they qualify.
I personally don't want the World Cup in Canada though, it seems to me that a lot of these large sporting events like the Olympics and World Cup turn out to be massive financial boondoggles.
Nice. That graphic really does put into perspective how massive Brazil is.
http://thetruesize.com/Is Brazil really big? Jeezus. Darn eurocentric world maps.
The format will be 16 groups of 3 teams each with the top 2 advancing to a round of 32. Even if you ignore the quality question, that's a hell of a stupid way to format the group stage. There are teams that will travel all across the globe to play only two games, not to mention that there's a very real possibility that all 3 games in a group stage end up being scoreless draws. The amount of shenanigans that would entail are ridiculous.There's over 200 member associations, 48 coming to the world cup isn't a big deal to me.
There's also the issue of match fixing since there won't be 2 games played at the same time anymore. I think Infantino said he just wants to "ban" draws during the World Cup and have penalties even during the group stage.The format will be 16 groups of 3 teams each with the top 2 advancing to a round of 32. Even if you ignore the quality question, that's a hell of a stupid way to format the group stage. There are teams that will travel all across the globe to play only two games, not to mention that there's a very real possibility that all 3 games in a group stage end up being scoreless draws. The amount of shenanigans that would entail are ridiculous.
To put your words into perspective
The games were played in nine cities across the country. ... Because of the massive land size of the main 48 states of the United States, the match locations were often far apart; making traveling long and gruelling for teams and their traveling fans. Some teams in Groups A and B had to travel from Los Angeles or San Francisco all the way to Detroit and back again, covering 2,300 mi (3,680 km) and 3 time zones one way. The teams in Groups C and D only played in Foxborough (Boston), Chicago and Dallas – a trip from Boston to Dallas is 2,000 miles (3,200 km), but only covers one time zone; Chicago is in the same time zone as Dallas but is still 1,000 miles away from both Dallas and Boston. The teams in Groups E and F's travel was a bit easier – they played exclusively in East Rutherford, New Jersey (New York City), Washington and Orlando. A few teams such as Cameroon and Italy did not have to travel great distances to cities to play matches.
The variety of climate in different cities all over the United States made playing conditions very difficult;
I personally don't want the World Cup in Canada though, it seems to me that a lot of these large sporting events like the Olympics and World Cup turn out to be massive financial boondoggles.
Man, why does the southern hemisphere shrink. Canada isn't really that big by comparison. lol
The World Cup next year is being played across four different time zones.Potentially bigger issue:
The bigger issue is timezones and change in climate. You have to avoid more elevated cities, and try to account for not making teams travel across timezones too often between matches, at least without some sort of break in between. And it's not so much any climate so much as that climate being consistent for teams.
Then again, 1994 had a similar issue:
Most countries and cities that decide to host shouldn't be trying to host. You need to already have a large enough stadium, have the public infrastructure to handle such an event, etc. A major pro for at least the US part of this, is that football stadiums are perfectly large enough and maintained at a high level of quality for the world cup to be held. Not sure if Canada has pre-existing stadiums that are large enough, but Montreal, Vancouver, and Toronto probably beat out most US cities on public infrastructure and transportation.
To put your words into perspective
The more I think about it the more I hate it. North America is too big in territory and far too populated to host a WC. Each of these countries by themselves could host one... hell, two of these have done it already (Mexico did it twice!).
Just give it to the US and save us the corruption scandals in Mexico, please. Maybe US-Canada but not Mexico. We don't need this.