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Friday, June 13, 2025
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One year from the World Cup opener, FIFA leaves questions unanswered on tickets and security

publish time

10/06/2025

publish time

10/06/2025

In this file photo, the World Cup trophy is displayed before the UEFA Preliminary Draw for the 2026 FIFA World Cup soccer tournament at FIFA headquarters in Zurich, Switzerland, Friday, Dec. 13, 2024. (AP)

NEW YORK, June 10, (AP): A year from the largest World Cup ever, there has been no announcement on general ticket sales, prices for most seats, location of a draw or security arrangements as FIFA has mostly avoided disclosing details of an event set for 16 stadiums across the United States, Mexico and Canada.

There is uncertainty about whether fans from some nations will be welcome - 11 of the venues are located in the U.S., where all matches will be played from the quarterfinals on.

Security is a concern, too. At the last major soccer tournament in the U.S., the 2024 Copa America final at Miami Gardens, Florida, started 82 minutes late after spectators breached security gates.

"That was certainly a reminder and a wake-up call if anybody needed it that those types of things are going to be used in terms of the ultimate assessment of whether this World Cup is successful," said former U.S. defender Alexi Lalas, now Fox's lead soccer analyst.

U.S. President Donald Trump's travel ban on citizens from 12 nations exempted athletes, coaches, staff, and relatives, while not mentioning fans. Vice President JD Vance made what could be interpreted as a warning on May 6.

"Of course, everybody is welcome to come and see this incredible event. I know we’ll have visitors, probably from close to 100 countries. We want them to come. We want them to celebrate. We want them to watch the game,” he said. "But when the time is up, they’ll have to go home. Otherwise, they’ll have to talk to Secretary Noem,” he added, speaking alongside Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem.

The 1994 World Cup sparked the launch of Major League Soccer with 12 teams in 1996, and $50 million in World Cup profits seeded the U.S. Soccer Foundation, tasked with developing the sport’s growth. MLS now has 30 teams, plays in 22 soccer-specific stadiums, and has club academies to grow the sport and improve talent.

Next year’s tournament will include 104 games, up from 64 from 1998 through 2022, and the 11 U.S. stadiums are all NFL homes with lucrative luxury suites and club seating. It will also be the first World Cup run by FIFA without a local organizing committee.

"The legacy initiative of 2026 is around how we ensure that soccer is everywhere in this country," U.S. Soccer Federation CEO JT Batson said. "How do we ensure that every American can walk, ride their bike, or take public transit to a safe place to play soccer? How do we make it to where every school in America has soccer accessible to their students? And how do we make it to wherever every American can truly see themselves in the game?”

Interest in soccer has vastly increased in the U.S., with England's Premier League averaging 510,000 viewers per match window on NBC's networks last season and the European Champions League final drawing more than 2 million viewers in each of the past five years on CBS. However, CBS broadcast just 26 of 189 Champions League matches on TV in 2024-25 and streamed the rest.

MLS drew about 12.2 million fans last year, second to 14.7 million in 2023-24 for the Premier League's 20 teams, but MLS has largely disappeared from broadcast TV since starting a 10-year contract with Apple TV+ in 2023. Apple spokesman Sam Citron said the company does not release viewer figures.

In a fractured television landscape, different deals were negotiated by FIFA, UEFA, MLS, the NWSL, the USSF, and the five major European leagues.

"You have over 2,800 game windows per season aired in the United States and so that requires distribution largely on streaming platforms like Paramount+ or ESPN+, but it's difficult for new fan adoption and it makes reach kind of challenging,” said Gerry Cardinale, managing partner of RedBird Capital Partners, which holds controlling interests in AC Milan and Toulouse and owns a non-controlling stake of Fenway Sports Group, parent of Liverpool. "Kids today are getting weaned on Premier League football and Serie A football, and when you watch that as a product, it’s hard for MLS to compete.”

The 1994 World Cup, a 24-nation tournament, drew a record 3.58 million fans for 52 matches. Ticket prices ranged from $25-$75 for most first-round games and $180-$475 for the final at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California.

FIFA, which has about 800 people working at an office in Coral Gables, Florida, says it will announce information on general tickets in the third quarter. It wouldn't say whether prices will be fixed or variable.

Hospitality packages are available on FIFA's website through On Location. For the eight matches at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, including the final on July 19, prices range from $25,800 to $73,200 per person.

FIFA appears to be using variable pricing for this year's Club World Cup, played at 12 U.S. stadiums from June 14 to July 13, and some prices repeatedly have been slashed. Marriott Bonvoy, a U.S. Soccer Federation partner, has been offering free tickets to some of its elite members.

Asked about Club World Cup ticket sales and team base camp arrangements, Manolo Zubiria, the World Cup’s chief tournament officer, hung up four minutes and five questions into a telephone interview with The Associated Press. Brendan O’Connell, the publicist who arranged the interview, wrote in an email to the AP: "The guest was not prepared for those questions.”

FIFA's media relations staff would not make FIFA president Gianni Infantino available to discuss the tournament.