Category: Soccer/Union

  • World Cup 2026 draw: U.S. finds out most of its opponents, countries that might play in Philly, Trump gets a medal

    World Cup 2026 draw: U.S. finds out most of its opponents, countries that might play in Philly, Trump gets a medal


    // Timestamp 12/05/25 2:24pm

    U.S. knows two of its three World Cup opponents

    President Donald Trump smiles after drawing USA’s name Friday.

    The U.S. men’s soccer team will open its 2026 World Cup group stage run against Paraguay on June 12 in Inglewood, Calif.

    That will mean a meeting right out of the gate with a team the Americans just beat last month, 2-1, at Subaru Park in Chester.

    The game will be played on the second day of the tournament, with co-host Mexico playing the opener against South Africa on June 11 at Mexico City’s fabled Estadio Azteca.

    The Americans’ second group game will be against Australia in Seattle on June 19. That will also be a rematch of a recent game, a 2-1 U.S. win in suburban Denver in October.

    Their group stage finale will be back in suburban Los Angeles against the winner of a four-team qualifying playoff between Turkey, Romania, Slovakia, and Kosovo. The playoff will take place in March.

    Turkey will be favored on paper. If that’s the matchup, it would be another rematch, this one a 2-1 U.S. loss this past June, with an understrength American squad on the field.

    Here’s the U.S. men’s soccer team 2026 World Cup group schedule:

    • June 12: vs. Paraguay in Inglewood, Calif.
    • June 19: vs. Australia in Seattle
    • June 25: vs. UEFA playoff winner in Inglewood, Calif.

    Jonathan Tannenwald


    // Timestamp 12/05/25 2:13pm

    Full 2026 World Cup draw

    The opening game for the U.S. is on June 12 in Los Angeles against Paraguay. Games to be played in Philadelphia will involve teams from groups C, E, I, and L.

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    John Duchneskie


    // Timestamp 12/05/25 1:56pm

    A look at the first 24 teams in the World Cup

    As the first 24 teams were named in Friday’s World Cup draw, a few surprises and early looks at who could be coming to Philly next summer.

    For Philly, Brazil and Morocco were drawn in Group C with those two opening against each other. In Group E, Germany and Ecuador are the early entrants, France and Senegal are in Group I and England-Croatia in Group L.

    The eye openers are a rematch between Mexico and South Africa, the opening match 2010 FIFA World Cup. Also, Spain will open its campaign in group H against Uruguay, and an England-Croatia rematch from the 2018 World Cup semifinal.

    Kerith Gabriel


    // Timestamp 12/05/25 1:50pm

    U.S. will face Paraguay in first World Cup game

    The USA opener is vs. Paraguay June 12 in Inglewood, Calif. The teams just met at Subaru Park last month, a 2-1 U.S. victory.

    Mexico-South Africa will be the tournament’s opening game in Mexico City’s famed Estadio Azteca – 16 years after the nations met in the 2010 opener in South Africa.

    Jonathan Tannenwald


    // Timestamp 12/05/25 1:44pm

    Halfway through the draw, some big games

    Blockbusters so far: Brazil-Morocco, Netherlands-Japan, Spain-Uruguay, England-Croatia

    Germany-Ecuador will be an upset pick.

    USA-Australia will be the group stage finale.

    Jonathan Tannenwald


    // Timestamp 12/05/25 1:40pm

    Australia to face the U.S. in Group D

    Australia ended up in Group D, where it will face the United States during the first round of the 2026 World Cup.

    Rob Tornoe


    // Timestamp 12/05/25 1:35pm

    Drawings for top World Cup teams

    Here are the 2026 World Cup draws for the Pot 1 teams:

    • Group A: Mexico
    • Group B: Canada
    • Group C: Brazil
    • Group D: USA
    • Gropu E: Germany
    • Group F: Netherlands
    • Group G: Belgium
    • Group H: Spain
    • Group I: France
    • Group J: Argentina
    • Group K: Portugal
    • Group L: England

    Rob Tornoe


    // Pinned

    // Timestamp 12/05/25 2:16pm

    Here are the nations that could be headed to Philly

    Philly will host six World Cup games at Lincoln Financial Field.

    Philly now knows the potential games headed here next summer as the potential nations in Groups C, E, I and L.

    They are:

    Group C: Brazil, Morocco Haiti, Scotland

    Group E: Germany, Curacao, Ivory Coast, Ecuador

    Group I: France, Senegal, FIFA Playoff No. 2, Norway

    Group L: England, Croatia, Ghana, Panama

    The final nation is Group I will be determined by a FIFA Playoff qualifier between Iraq, Bolivia and Suriname in March.

    Kevin Hart, who ended the event on stage with Heidi Klum, Rio Ferdinand and other celebrities, said, “I know my guys back in Philadelphia are happy who could be coming to Philly next summer.”

    He’d be correct.

    The specific games will be set Saturday. Here’s a rundown of the World Cup games that will be played at the Linc:

    • Sunday, June 14: Group E
    • Friday, June 19: Group C
    • Monday, June 22: Group I
    • Thursday, June 25: Group E
    • Saturday, June 27: Group L
    • Saturday, July 4: Round of 16

    Kerith Gabriel, Rob Tornoe


    // Timestamp 12/05/25 12:55pm

    Host countries draw first, but we already knew the results

    President Donald Trump, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum, and Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney holds their countries’ name during the draw.

    As co-hosts, the U.S., Mexico, and Canada were pre-set into the group places they were drawn into among the 48 slots. The U.S. is D1, Mexico is A1, and Canada is C1.

    We also already knew the dates and locations of those teams’ group games, though we don’t know the opponents yet.

    The U.S. will play on June 12 in Inglewood, Calif., June 19 in Seattle, and June 25 back in Inglewood. Mexico will play on June 11, the tournament’s opening day, at Mexico City’s legendary Estadio Azteca – the site of the 1970 and 1986 finals — then in Guadalajara on June 18 and June 24 back in Mexico City. Canada will play June 12 in Toronto, then June 18 and 24 in in Vancouver.

    Jonathan Tannenwald


    // Timestamp 12/05/25 12:49pm

    Fans in Philly excited for the World Cup

    The Philly Sports Guy Jamie Pagliei, takes a selfie with Gritty at the FIFA World Cup drawing at Stateside Live! Friday.

    Almost three hours from the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, where the World Cup draw is hosted, Philadelphia sports fans gathered together as they waited in anticipation to learn the fates of their favorite teams — including Union season ticket holders Donna and Gary Brown.

    “I’ve only been able to see the World Cup one other time and that was when we lived in Orlando and it was amazing,” Gary said. “But again, it’s our hometown now and our hometown team, so it just makes it even more special that it’s going to be here. It’s Philadelphia, it’s the workplace of our country, national team. … And it’s our country’s 250th birthday.”

    Ariel Simpson


    // Timestamp 12/05/25 12:43pm

    Drawing out the World Cup draw

    If it feels to you that the draw is, to put it one way, drawn out… you aren’t alone. But it’s nothing new. World Cup draws have been spectacles for decades.

    It was true the first time the United States hosted a men’s World Cup, the 1994 edition, and it remains true now. You don’t have to like it, and rest assured plenty of people with in the soccer world don’t. But it is what it is, and it won’t change any time soon.

    Jonathan Tannenwald


    // Timestamp 12/05/25 12:37pm

    Trump awarded first-ever FIFA peace prize

    President Donald Trump is awarded the first-ever FIFA Peace Prize ahead of Friday’s World Cup draw.

    President Donald Trump was awarded the first-ever FIFA Peace Prize ahead of the 2026 World Cup draw Friday.

    “This is truly one of the great honors of my life,” Trump said during a brief speech.

    FIFA said the award would be given to individuals who, through their unwavering commitment and their special actions, have helped to unite people all over the world.

    Trump called the award “one of the great honors of his life,” as he went on to tout that peace accords he’s helped brokered in the Middle East, Africa and between Israel and Hamas has “saved millions and millions of lives.”

    He then described his excitement for the World Cup coming to the United States, saying tickets — which are approaching 2 million sold, according to FIFA — were selling in record numbers, though there wasn’t data readily available to confirm that claim. Trump then quickly caught himself during his talk about tickets, stating that: “not to bring that up, because don’t want to bring a thing like that up, right now.”

    World Cup tickets, and their exorbitant prices due to dynamic pricing models, have been major topics of discussion as well, given the confusing method for entering presales via lotteries.

    FIFA has one more presale in which the lottery to enter is scheduled to open after Friday’s draw, before opening remaining tickets to the public early next year.

    The announcement came about a month after Trump failed to receive the Nobel Peace Prize, which he claimed he deserved. It was announced by FIFA president Gianni Infantino, whom has developed a close relationship with Trump ahead of the World Cup.

    “The FIFA Peace Prize is awarded annually,” Infantino said of the award, which was being given for the first time.

    Rob Tornoe, Kerith Gabriel


    // Timestamp 12/05/25 12:19pm

    ‘The eyes of the world are going to be on Philly’

    Governor Josh Shapiro attending the FIFA Philly draw at Stateside Live! in Philadelphia Friday.

    Friday morning at Stateside Live! felt like a fever dream for Philadelphia sports fans as Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro stood above guests on the second floor surrounded by Phang, Gritty, Swoop, and the Phanatic as they prepared for the Philadelphia Soccer 2026 World Cup draw watch party.

    “We won this bid to host the FIFA World Cup next year because we’ve got the greatest fans on the face of the earth,” Shapiro said.

    “The eyes of the world are going to be on Philly next year when we celebrate USA 250,” Shapiro added. “FIFA World Cup is gonna be great. And let’s pray for a USA-Mexico matchup on July 4th right here in the Philly.”

    Unfortunately for Shapiro, the odds of that happening are slim to none.

    Ariel Simpson


    // Timestamp 12/05/25 12:04pm

    Inside the Kennedy Center, elected officials mix with former players

    Spectators gather for the 2026 World Cup draw inside the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C.

    Hello from inside the Kennedy Center’s Concert Hall, a legendary space in the most-famous performing arts venue in America’s capital city. Just 15 of the over 900 credentialed media have seats in the hall for the World Cup draw, and I’m lucky to be one of them.

    I must admit it’s a bit of a surreal feeling for me. I grew up in D.C. (sorry to anyone who thought I was a Philly native), and attended lots of concerts and musicals in this very space. To see it converted for a World Cup draw is a strange sight — and all the stranger by the inevitable politics surrounding this day.

    While walking over from the media work area, I saw a lot of familiar faces: New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy, U.S. Soccer Federation president Cindy Cone, sporting director Matt Crocker, former president Sunil Gulati, and MLS commissioner Don Garber.

    Murphy is here on behalf of the New York/New Jersey local hosting committee, and there’s a slew of former U.S. players here either in the official delegation or as media. At a quick glance around, I saw Delran’s Carli Lloyd, Heather O’Reilly, Julie Ertz, Cobi Jones, Marcelo Balboa, and former Union centerback Oguchi Oneywu — now in the official world as U.S. Soccer’s deputy sporting director.

    Plus, of course, famous soccer figures from all over the world, who were inevitably stopped all over for autographs. And in the hall, there was a brief moment of applause — though only scattered — when President Donald Trump walked in.

    Jonathan Tannenwald


    // Timestamp 12/05/25 11:54am

    Meet the World Cup mascots

    The World Cup mascots pose on the red carpet.

    // Timestamp 12/05/25 11:52am

    Trump, other dignitaries arrive for World Cup draw

    President Donald Trump and FIFA President Gianni Infantino arrive at the Kennedy Center.
    Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney and wife Diana.
    Former Brazil players Kaka (left) and Ronaldo.

    // Timestamp 12/05/25 10:55am

    Trump still ‘talking to FIFA’ about moving World Cup cities, White House official says

    President Donald Trump holds the World Cup trophy alongside FIFA President Gianni Infantino.

    President Donald Trump, who will attend Friday’s World Cup draw, continues to speak with FIFA about moving games out of cities controlled by Democrats, a White House official said on Fox News Friday.

    “President Trump is very concerned about some of these blue cities’ high crime rates, and he’s talking to FIFA,” said Monica Crowley, White House chief of protocol, adding “no decisions have been made.”

    Trump made similar threats in September about removing games from cities run by Democrats. Trump has cited crime, but crime rates are down in most cities, including Philadelphia, where violence in the city has dropped to near-historic lows.

    “If any city we think is going to be even a little bit dangerous for the World Cup, or for the Olympics, but for the World Cup in particular, because they’re playing in so many cities, we won’t allow it to go,” Trump said. “We’ll move it around a little bit. But I hope that’s not going to happen.”

    It would ultimately be FIFA’s decision to move games, a logistical challenge considering planning for the 2026 World Cup has been going on for years. FIFA president Gianni Infantino hasn’t indicated any potential moves, but has suggested he would consider shifting games from host cities if Trump made demands.

    “I don’t think you can have this problem, but we’re going to move the event to someplace where it’s going to be appreciated and safe,” Infantino said in the White House last month when put on the spot by Trump.

    Rob Tornoe


    // Timestamp 12/05/25 10:36am

    We won’t know who’s playing in Philly until tomorrow. Here’s why.

    Chelsea and Flamengo fans during a FIFA Club World Cup match at the Linc in June.

    FIFA’s decision to extend its draw over two days always felt by design.

    On Friday, ahead of the World Cup draw that begins at noon, an official said that doing so was nothing more than trying to make the draw “into an event.”

    Historically, FIFA would announce the venue pairings before the draw, so you’d know where teams would be after they fell into group pairings. For example, the nation slotted into Group A1 would play A4 making it easy to know where those nations would be playing even during the draw.

    Friday’s presentation will only place nations into groups, with Saturday at noon the reveal of where those host nations will be.

    “It’s to allow for greater discussion to take place on the exact locations,” said Brian Swanson, FIFA’s director of media relations. “In some parts of the world [where we’ve hosted previous World Cup draws], kickoff times are the big story in other parts [like the U.S.], we’re just looking to generate a bit of buzz.

    “Historically, we just published a PDF of that information, but it’s 2025, so we thought let’s make it into something more fun.”

    There are some who beg to differ.

    “I mean let’s just get it over with,” a FIFA volunteer who overheard the conversation said. “Like I get why their doing this but the suspense, to me, isn’t necessary. Also, I’m Tunisian, I don’t want to wait a day to see who we play.”

    Kerith Gabriel


    // Timestamp 12/05/25 9:56am

    Leave your Yetis at the door

    A trash can overflows with discarded items not allowed into Friday’s World Cup draw.

    With heads of state from all three host nations scheduled to take in today’s FIFA World Cup draw, U.S. Secret Service is taking no chances with what is being allowed inside the Kennedy Center.

    But what’s making its way into the trash cans outside is pretty hilarious. From Yeti coffee canisters valued at $30 on up to vape pens and cartridges, all had to get tossed before entering. One FIFA official joked to the Inquirer that he’d planned to collect it all and start a resale store.

    Upsetting at least the media on hand is that at a briefing yesterday, FIFA relayed that bringing in canisters for water and coffee would be an approved item.

    Sike.

    But what’s even more confusing are the workers, guests and media from around the world who thought they’d be able to enter today’s event with pocket knives, pointers and even a Phillips head screwdriver, as observed outside one of the trash cans.

    The draw kicks off at noon, but the early festivities have been the Secret Service members turned TSA, navigating what guests and media are trying to bring inside.

    Kerith Gabriel


    // Timestamp 12/05/25 9:21am

    Can I still buy World Cup tickets after the draw?

    Canada Prime Minister Mark Carney (right) holds a novelty World Cup ticket alongside FIFA President Gianni Infantino.

    Yes. Fans interested in buying tickets for World Cup matches at Lincoln Financial Field can enter ticket lotteries for individual group-stage games via FIFA’s random selection draw.

    The lotteries will begin accepting entries on Dec. 11 at 11 a.m. and close at the same time on Jan. 13.

    After the random selection draw phase of ticket sales has finished, any remaining inventory will be released on a first-come, first-served basis closer to the beginning of the tournament. Single-match and multimatch hospitality packages are also available through FIFA.

    FIFA’s first-come, first-served phase will be the last opportunity for fans to buy tickets directly through FIFA. After that, tickets will be available only through resale on the secondary market.

    — Owen Hewitt


    // Timestamp 12/05/25 8:26am

    Tight security as Trump, other dignitaries expected to attend today’s World Cup draw

    Snow falls in Washington, D.C. ahead of the 2026 World Cup Draw.

    It was snowing as the sun rose over the nation’s capital Friday, a rare sight in December. The rest of the scene around the Kennedy Center was one this town is used to: rows of giant black SUVs for dignitaries, and fences lining many blocks of sidewalks.

    I got to the security checkpoint just after 8 a.m., and there were already long lines to get in and many nearby streets were closed.

    The checkpoint, by the way, was up the street near the Watergate hotel — made famous by former President Richard Nixon’s scandal in the 1970s. There have been plenty of jokes about that this week among the international media who’ve come to town.

    But the security operation is no joke. It’s always been the way things work when the president — whoever the president is — wants to show up at a big sports event in D.C.

    Even with that, a World Cup draw is different from other spectacles.

    Today, the Kennedy Center will host dignitaries from the 42 national teams qualified for the World Cup so far, plus some from teams in the final qualifying playoffs; over 900 credentialed media members, spread across the Center’s many halls; and the tournament cohosts’ heads of state — U.S. President Donald Trump, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum, and Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney.

    It will be tight and tense inside, and some FIFA officials will no doubt wonder if they should have stood firm on having the draw in Las Vegas, where they wanted to have it until Trump said otherwise.

    Then again, the snow was enough proof of that.

    Jonathan Tannenwald


    // Timestamp 12/05/25 7:57am

    Watch and stream today’s World Cup draw

    The World Cup draw, which will determine the groups for the round-robin stage of the tournament, will take place today at noon.

    The event will be hosted by the Kennedy Center in Washington and broadcast live on Fox. Coverage of the draw will begin at 11:30 a.m. and conclude at 3 p.m.

    FIFA’s event is expected to last about an hour and a half, with the draw itself accounting for about 45 minutes of that time.

    The draw will also stream live on FIFA’s website and its YouTube channel.

    — Owen Hewitt, Rob Tornoe


    // Timestamp 12/05/25 7:47am

    How does today’s World Cup draw work?

    Qualified nations have been divided into four pots based on their FIFA World Rankings positions. Pot 1 contains the nine best-qualified teams in the rankings, as well as the three cohosts.

    The host nations have already been assigned to groups — Mexico will be in Group A, Canada will be in Group B, and the U.S. will be in Group D. The remaining teams will be assigned to the other nine groups, one team per group.

    After all the teams in Pot 1 have been drawn, the draw will move to Pot 2, selecting one team for each of the 12 groups. The process will repeat with Pot 3 and Pot 4, resulting in 12 groups of four teams.

    During the tournament, the top two teams in each group will advance to the knockout rounds. The top eight third-place finishers in the 12 groups will also advance, completing the Round of 32.

    Though the draw determines tournament groups, FIFA is also looking ahead to the knockout rounds. FIFA will structure the knockout bracket so that the top four teams in its rankings — Spain, Argentina, France, and England — will not meet before the tournament semifinal, provided that they each finish first in their respective groups. It is the first time the World Cup will use a tennis-style bracket for knockouts.

    Here’s a complete look at the pots that will be used Friday:

    • Pot 1: Canada (B1), Mexico (A1), U.S. (D1), Spain, Argentina, France, England, Brazil, Portugal, Netherlands, Belgium, Germany
    • Pot 2: Croatia, Morocco, Colombia, Uruguay, Switzerland, Japan, Senegal, Iran, South Korea, Ecuador, Austria, Australia
    • Pot 3: Norway, Panama, Egypt, Algeria, Scotland, Paraguay, Tunisia, Ivory Coast, Uzbekistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, South Africa

    — Owen Hewitt


    // Timestamp 12/05/25 7:40am

    What countries have qualified for the World Cup?

    U.S. goalkeeper Matt Freese dives for a save during practice last month.

    42 countries have already qualified for next year’s World Cup, including the United States, Canada, and Mexico, and will be included in today’s draw.

    There are six spots remaining – four for the top teams in the European Federation’s 16-team playoff, and two for the top two finishers in FIFA’s intercontinental playoff tournament. Both take place in March.

    Since those have not been determined yet, those six teams will be represented by placeholders in today’s draw.

    Here are the countries that have already qualified for the 2026 World Cup:

    • Cohosts: Canada, Mexico, United States
    • Asian Football Confederation (AFC): Australia, Iran, Japan, Jordan, South Korea, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Uzbekistan
    • Confederation of African Football (CAF): Algeria, Cape Verde, Ivory Coast, Egypt, Ghana, Morocco, Senegal, South Africa, Tunisia
    • Confederation of North, Central American and Caribbean Association Football (Concacaf): Curaçao, Haiti, Panama
    • South American Football Confederation (CONMEBOL): Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Paraguay, Uruguay
    • Oceania Football Confederation (OFC): New Zealand
    • Union of European Football Associations (UEFA): Austria, Belgium, Croatia, England, France, Germany, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Scotland, Spain, Switzerland

    Rob Tornoe


    Which teams will play in Philly?

    Lincoln Financial Field will hose six 2026 World Cup games.

    We won’t know which counties will play in Philadelphia until Saturday, when FIFA releases its official schedule. But we’ll get a sense who might travel here.

    Philadelphia will host six World Cup games at Lincoln Financial Field – five in the group stage, and one in the Round of 16. So we know counties ending up in Groups C, E, I, and L will play at the Linc (which unfortunately means no Team USA games during the group stage, since the U.S. has already been assigned Group D).

    Here are the World Cup games scheduled to be played in Philly:

    • Sunday, June 14: Group E
    • Friday, June 19: Group C
    • Monday, June 22: Group I
    • Thursday, June 25: Group E
    • Saturday, June 27: Group L
    • Saturday, July 4: Round of 16

    Rob Tornoe

    // Timestamp 12/05/25 7:35am

  • VAR time limits, tournament expansion, and more were the topics tackled ahead of Friday’s FIFA World Cup draw

    VAR time limits, tournament expansion, and more were the topics tackled ahead of Friday’s FIFA World Cup draw

    WASHINGTON — Whether fans like video reviews in soccer or not, they tend to draw complaints when those reviews seem to take too long.

    It might seem natural to want a time limit for those reviews, perhaps one or two minutes. The sport’s global governing body is saying no, though, at least for now.

    “Well, there might be different opinions, which I will respect,” FIFA’s refereeing chief Pierluigi Collina said Thursday at a media briefing ahead of Friday’s 2026 men’s World Cup draw. “Certainly, when something lasts a bit longer, it’s not because the referee is, say, lazy or slow. Probably, things which are considered are particularly complicated.’”

    A game referee from 1995 to 2005, including the 2002 men’s World Cup final, Collina took his new role with FIFA in 2017 and has remained a public figure ever since.

    Pierluigi Collina (left) speaking at Thursday’s event.

    “Something else to consider is when you are waiting for someone, every second looks like an eternity — when you are under pressure and you are doing something, time flies,” he said. “So, referees, when they are doing that, probably they do not really realize that time is passing for them so quickly. But, we all know that timing is an issue in every activity, so we are always trying to improve.”

    Collina acknowledged a report by the Times of London earlier this week that the International Football Association Board — the entity that sets the rules of how soccer is played — is considering expanding what VAR is allowed to rule on.

    The expansion would include second yellow cards, which result in red cards and expulsion; and whether officials got it right calling a corner kick vs. a goal kick.

    “It was already announced after a meeting of the IFAB football and technical advisory panel: the discussion took place, and the outcome was to propose to further discuss and propose” at the IFAB’s next business meeting on Jan. 20, Collina said. If a proposal passes there, it will go to the annual general meeting in March. That vote would be for implementation on June 1, in time for the World Cup.

    Under the current rules, a straight red card is reviewable, but a second yellow card that results in expulsion is not reviewable.

    “Certainly, extending the possibility of the VAR to intervene in some specific circumstances is something [on] the table,” Collina said, adding: “It would be a pity if the result of the competition, whichever the competition is, is decided not by what the players do on the field playing, but by a honest mistake made by the decision-maker.”

    Specific to corner kicks calls, he said “that the main criteria is no delay” in the action on the field.

    “It takes normally, how long? 10, 15 seconds to get the attackers ready to take the corner kick,” Collina said. “In these 10-15 seconds, if the corner kick was wrongly given, everybody has the evidence that the start of play is wrong. To me, it’s difficult to understand if they have the possibility to see that, why we have to hide our head under the sand and hope that nothing happened on the corner kick which is taken.”

    Collina also said that FIFA hopes to use referee bodycams again next summer, after debuting them in the Club World Cup.

    “It was, I would say, a great success,” he said. “It has been implemented in some leagues, [which] means that it was well-received by the TV viewers — also, referees got some benefit from using that. So, pretty confident that the rule-maker, as mentioned, IFAB, will give us the permission to to implement it during the next World Cup [in] ’26.”

    Preparations at the Kennedy Center in Washington for Friday’s event.

    FIFA defends expanding the World Cup to 48 teams

    It was no surprise to hear FIFA officials say Thursday that it’s a good thing to expand the men’s World Cup to 48 teams, as will happen for the first time next year. The women’s tournament will follow suit in 2031 when the U.S. spearheads a regional tournament alongside Mexico, Costa Rica, and Jamaica.

    But the way those officials framed it nonetheless was news, especially for the international media outlets that have traveled to D.C. this week.

    “It’s less than 25% of the 211 countries who are affiliated to FIFA,” said Arsène Wenger, FIFA’s chief of global football development and the famed former manager of English Premier League club Arsenal. “Still, 75% of the teams are not there, and I count in there China, India — that’s 3 billion people.”

    FIFA’s chief football officer Jill Ellis, the former U.S. women’s national team manager, noted how the growth of women’s soccer worldwide has made it easier to have a 48-team tournament without fear of lopsided games.

    “We see it in the in the college basketball landscape right here in the U.S.,” said the coach who led the U.S. women to World Cup titles in 2015 and 2019. “We’re used to these teams that are maybe lower-ranked and then they suddenly have this phenomenal run.”

    Jill Ellis (left) and Arsène Wenger (right) on stage Thursday.

    Will weather be an issue again?

    The hot temperatures at this summer’s Club World Cup understandably raised a lot of complaints, and fears of more problems next summer. Wenger raised that unprompted.

    FIFA hasn’t said much yet about if it will take weather into consideration for kickoff times, beyond one hint from president Gianni Infantino in July that it would be a good idea.

    “If there’s one uncertainty that we don’t master, it’s the weather,” Wenger said. “Especially in Miami, you know, places like Atlanta, where you had some problems last year. So we’ll do the maximum to protect the competition and the players.”

    He also said “we will consider a lot the best possibilities for the teams to be protected from heat” as FIFA finalizes the kickoff times before Saturday’s announcement. But skeptical fans worldwide won’t believe that until they see it.

    Temperatures were in the 90s during many Club World Cup games this past summer.
  • The best and worst World Cup opponents for the USMNT, and the teams Philly should want to host

    The best and worst World Cup opponents for the USMNT, and the teams Philly should want to host

    WASHINGTON — At some point between noon and 2 p.m. on Friday, the World Cup group draw will tell us which teams the United States will play in next year’s tournament. We’ll also get the first hints of which teams will come to Philadelphia, although the schedule won’t be set until Saturday.

    Along the way, there will be jokes from Kevin Hart, singing from Andrea Bocelli, and appearances from Tom Brady, Wayne Gretzky, Shaquille O’Neal, and Aaron Judge. President Donald Trump also will be involved, having steered FIFA to move the event from Las Vegas to the Kennedy Center in D.C.

    Not only was FIFA president Gianni Infantino happy to oblige his friend, but the global governing body added the Village People (of Trump favorite “Y.M.C.A.” fame) to the list of performers.

    But somewhere amid all that, there will be sports, too. Tournament draws weren’t always as much of a spectacle, but they’ve always been a dramatic part of soccer’s tapestry.

    The men’s World Cup trophy on display Wednesday at the Kennedy Center in Washington, where the draw will take place Friday.

    Once the pots of seeds were set last month — four groups of 12 each, with the cohosts and the top nine teams in FIFA’s rankings in Pot 1 — the speculation began worldwide. How about England vs. Scotland, or the Republic of Ireland, Wales, or Northern Ireland if they get through Europe’s last qualifying playoffs?

    How about a Spain-Morocco rematch of a 2022 World Cup epic? If Italy gets through the playoffs, which teams will it face in its first men’s World Cup in 12 years? And what powerhouses will underdogs like Haiti, with the Union’s Danley Jean Jacques, get to challenge?

    Then, of course, there are matchups that resonate off the field. For all the efforts to keep sports and politics separate, soccer has always been the most political sport. So will the U.S. play Iran for a second straight men’s World Cup, and a third overall? There are sparks already, as Iran has boycotted the draw, since some of its delegates were refused visas.

    As you wonder, here are three rules to consider. First, teams from the same continent can’t be drawn in the same group except for Europe, which has 16 berths in the first 48-team World Cup. There must be one European team in each group, and there can’t be more than two.

    The famous draw balls in one of the bowls on stage, waiting to be picked up.

    With that in mind, here are our picks for the easiest, hardest, most festive, and most politically controversial groups that the U.S. could end up in:

    The picks

    The easiest group: Austria, South Africa, Jordan. There are lower-ranked European teams in the playoffs than No. 24 Austria, but the case here is about the opponent you know vs. the opponent you don’t.

    Since Austria is in Pot 2, drawing that country would spare the U.S. from big hitters like Croatia, Colombia, Morocco, and Japan. From there, South Africa would give the U.S. a better tactical matchup than the rest of Pot 3, whose teams span Europe, Africa, South America, Asia, and Concacaf.

    Having picked South Africa from Pot 3, all the African teams in Pot 4 are off the table. So we’ll go to Asia for Jordan, a World Cup debutant ranked No. 66. And we’ll wish Cape Verde, with former Union midfielder Jamiro Monteiro in a starring role, all the best.

    Former Union midfielder Jamiro Monteiro (right) helped Cape Verde qualify for its first World Cup.

    The hardest group: Morocco, Norway, Italy if it qualifies. Morocco edges Croatia and Colombia from Pot 2 for talent — led by Paris Saint-Germain’s Achraf Hakimi — and a vibrant, gritty playing style.

    In Pot 3, Norway has finally delivered Manchester City superstar striker Erling Haaland to his first World Cup, along with outstanding Arsenal playmaker Martin Ødegaard.

    In Pot 4, we turn to the European playoffs. Italy never needs much introduction, though it bears repeating that the Azzuri truly blew it in failing to reach the 2018 and 2022 World Cups. The current squad features goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma and midfield generals Nicolò Barella and Manuel Locatelli.

    The most festive group: Colombia, Scotland, Republic of Ireland. A U.S.-Colombia game would be a headache for the American squad but would bring back epic memories of the 1994 upset at the Rose Bowl. The Cafeteros’ fan base is also as good as it gets in South America, especially with the country’s big immigrant population in this country.

    Former Union sporting director Earnie Stewart (center) scored in the United States’ upset of Colombia at the 1994 World Cup.

    Scotland and Ireland’s fan bases are massive, loud, and fun-loving. The Scots are in a men’s World Cup for the first time since 1998, and the Tartan Army will travel in huge numbers — buoyed by expats here and anyone who wants to feel the part for a day.

    The same goes for Ireland if it gets through a tricky qualifying playoff with Czechia, North Macedonia, and favorite Denmark. But if the Irish make their first World Cup since 2002, the sea of green will flood the States. New Jersey’s Meadowlands still echo with the raucous noise of the 1994 Ireland-Italy game.

    The most political group: Iran, South Africa, Ukraine if it qualifies. A combustible mix of war, immigration, race, and religion that spans as widely as three continents.

    The teams Philadelphia fans should want

    As the city saw up close during the Club World Cup this summer, there’s no party in soccer like a South American party. Argentina, Brazil, and Colombia have the continent’s biggest fan bases in the U.S., and the first two would bring global superstars in Lionel Messi or Real Madrid’s Vinícius Júnior.

    Philly fans got to know Brazil’s new phenom, 18-year-old Estêvão, when he scored for Palmeiras against Chelsea in the Club World Cup at Lincoln Financial Field — then joined the Blues a few weeks later.

    It’s already set that the U.S. won’t play in the nation’s birthplace during the group stage, to the dismay of fans here and well beyond. But from the rest of Pot 1, France would bring the most star power from Europe, and the Netherlands‘ dancing masses would paint the town oranje.

    Germany would also be very welcome in a city with proud and deep German roots.

    In Pot 2, no player is more worth watching than Croatia’s Luka Modrić. Even at age 40, his passing skills are unparalleled as he heads into his last World Cup. Japan, South Korea, and Morocco have vibrant fan bases, and the latter two have big expat communities in this part of the U.S.

    In Pot 3, Scotland easily is the team you’d want most — and that every hotel, bar, and restaurant would dream of. Egypt would bring another superstar in Liverpool’s Mohamed Salah.

    Pot 4 is where the Union ties are. It would be special for Jean Jacques to play in his club hometown with Haiti or for Monteiro to come back to town with Cape Verde’s Blue Sharks.

    The biggest of all on that scale would be if Jamaica gets through the intercontinental qualifying playoffs to earn its first men’s World Cup trip since 1998, finally delivering Andre Blake to a stage he deserves. And the turnout from Jamaican fans would be epic, in a city they love coming to for the Penn Relays.

    Among the European playoff contenders, the Republic of Ireland would be a huge deal here. But ever since the day three years ago when Philly was named as a host city, the first name on everyone’s lips has been Italy. Imagine how electric it would be if the Azzuri’s World Cup drought ends at the Linc.

    The scene at Gran Caffe L’Aquila in Center City when Italy won the European Championship in 2021.

    You might have noticed one big team hasn’t been mentioned here yet: England. The Three Lions would bring a huge amount of fans, star players, and media attention to town. But to come to the city where America declared independence from them, 250 years later?

    Ask around locally, and you’d find a fair number who’d say no thanks. They’d dreamed for years of a U.S.-England game on July 4, until the preset part of the draw path took the possibility away. It would feel strange if England uses the old colonial capital as the launchpad to fulfill the hype as one of the favorites to win it all.

  • The Union’s latest signing offers insight into who’s making decisions in absence of sporting director Ernst Tanner

    The Union’s latest signing offers insight into who’s making decisions in absence of sporting director Ernst Tanner

    After he rattled off a slew of regular-season accomplishments, it was time for Union manager Bradley Carnell to get down to the prevailing question in the room:

    Who is making player decisions now in the absence of sporting director Ernst Tanner, who remains embroiled in multiple allegations of misconduct?

    And for how long?

    In many ways, it appeared Carnell knew that would be the question on everyone’s minds before the Union’s final news conference of 2025 on Wednesday.

    Union manager Bradley Carnell had his first season with the club end with the Supporters’ Shield and MLS Coach of the Year honors.

    It’s why he chose to lead with a statement that divulged the plan of attack before reiterating highlights like the club winning the Supporters’ Shield for the second time or the fact that defenders Jakob Glesnes and Kai Wagner were named to Major League Soccer’s Best XI.

    All great reminders, just not what anyone in the room was feverishly writing down.

    It’s clear the Union already knew that, too, as Jon Scheer, the club’s director of academy and professional development sat alongside Carnell. Carnell revealed that alongside himself, Scheer, scouting director Chris Zitterbart, and assistant sporting director Matt Ratajczak will be the brain trust on player comings and goings for “the foreseeable future.”

    “We’ve established an internal structure that brings together myself, Jon Scheer, Matt Ratajczak, [and] Chris Zitterbart all working in close collaboration with our ownership group,” Carnell said as part of his opening statement. “This is a collective and collaborative effort … to remain prepared, deliberate, and focused on making the strongest possible decisions for the club.”

    How long this setup will continue remains a mystery, as neither the club nor the league has offered any clarity regarding Tanner as an investigation continues into his alleged racial, homophobic, and sexist behavior over seven years with the Union.

    Scheer noted that decisions on players have always been a “collaborative and data-driven” effort by the club, which is known for being more of a developmental franchise than one ready to spend cash on high-value talent.

    “I would say having worked in the club for seven years, I’ve seen the day-to-day and how that’s evolved,” said Scheer, who noted that the new group doesn’t change much in the process of how things work, despite Tanner being the architect of multiple player brokerages. “Every decision that’s been made over the last several years has been a collaborative effort with multiple people involved.

    Jon Scheer (far right) has been with the club for seven seasons, playing a key role in pipelining players from the club’s youth academy to the professional ranks.

    “We’re a very data-driven club, I think that’s been well documented. I think we’ve done a really good job of empowering our people across different domains. And that’s something that’s not going to change. We’re looking to take a step forward as a club and [continue] the on-field success. However, there’s a lot that’s going to remain the same in terms of decision-making and what that process looks like across the board.”

    A high-value transaction made waves in Wednesday’s proceedings, as earlier that morning, the Union confirmed that they secured Ghanaian forward Ekeziel Alladoh via transfer from Brommapojkarna of Sweden’s top flight for a club-record $4.5 million fee, with incentives. Alladoh, 20, is locked up through the 2028 season with option years in 2029 and 2030.

    Alladoh had been rumored to be joining the club for weeks and it’s believed that before his leave of absence, Tanner played a major part in bringing Alladoh to Chester.

    “He really suits and fits our style of play,” Carnell said. ”He’s very aggressive, runs very vertical in transition, and with our game model intact, [I think he] shows exactly what type of striker we were looking for to complement [forwards] Tai [Baribo] and Bruno [Damiani] at this stage.”

    Ezekiel Alladoh holds up his new Union jersey at the team’s practice facility in Chester.

    It’s unknown how long the Union’s decentralized approach to player decisions will last. Despite the comments from Scheer and Carnell about the group effort, someone ultimately makes the final decision in the role of sporting director — a role currently unfilled.

    “We were all involved in these decisions and processes to begin with, and this is just a look at how collaborative we need to be as a club,” Scheer said. “We are a development club, and we’re always looking from within first … so there’s so much natural overlap already.”

    When it came to any insight into the impact of Tanner’s absence, Scheer deflected.

    “No comments as it relates to an ongoing investigation that our club is collaborating with, so we’re just focusing on day-to-day and doing the best job that we can in terms of our decision-making process and the path forward,” he said.

    More on Alladoh

    “I think being proactive in the market is always a sign of intent, especially coming off of a successful season where we look to continue to maintain those standards,” Carnell said of Alladoh’s signing.

    Said Scheer: “It shows the ambition of our club and our ownership group.”

    Though Alladoh’s transfer fee qualifies him as a designated player, his age means he can be classified as an under-22 signing and not count as a DP. The Union’s announcement didn’t give him a label, and Scheer said the team would not pick one until the league’s 2026 roster compliance deadline in February.

    The Union announced they will return to Marbella, Spain, for training camp in January.

    Preseason news

    The Union’s preseason will begin Jan. 17, with plans for a trip to Spain, which the team took last year. Carnell said they’ll play two scrimmages there, then make their annual trip to Clearwater, Fla., where they are expected to play FC Cincinnati and CF Montréal.

    The Union return to the Concacaf Champions Cup in mid-February, and the regular season begins Feb. 21 at D.C. United.

    The Union’s Mikael Uhre (left) and Jovan Lukic celebrate Uhre’s goal against New York City FC on Oct. 4.

    Other notables

    Carnell reiterated that the club is in negotiations with forward Mikael Uhre about a new deal, but he was coy about the team’s desired outcome.

    “There’s no denying the fact that Mikael, within the game model, has a certain quality, right?” Carnell said. “So I think one [factor] of that is family, what do his family want; what does Mikael want; and what does the club want? And I think if all of those come together and find the best possible solution for player, family, and club — ‘Mika’ had a good end to the season and showed exactly what made him so strong here over the years.”

    Carnell said that form “sparks a lot of interest” to consider a deal. He also paid the Danish striker what felt like a notable compliment.

    “Mikael was one of the nicest teammates you could ever imagine, and we have had a good working relationship,” Carnell said. “So we’ll see what happens over the next due course.”

    Union academy director Jon Scheer says the club still is high on young defender Neil Pierre.

    There also was talk about Neil Pierre, the 18-year-old centerback with a high ceiling. He played regularly for the Union’s reserve squad this year but hasn’t yet reached the physical maturity he needs for the top level.

    “We’re really high on the potential of Neil Pierre, but we’re also going to make sure that he’s in the best possible environment to reach and maximize that potential,” Scheer said. “I think you’ll see here soon we’re still looking at other centerback options. But Neil, for the future, is one we still have a lot of belief in, and we’re looking forward to seeing what the best environment to continue to develop him in will be.”

  • USMNT will play Cristiano Ronaldo’s Portugal, Belgium, and Germany before the World Cup

    USMNT will play Cristiano Ronaldo’s Portugal, Belgium, and Germany before the World Cup

    NEW YORK — The U.S. men’s soccer team has played some strong opponents in its preparation for the World Cup so far. But for its last four games before the tournament, the team will face some of the biggest teams of all.

    After weeks of speculation, official word came Tuesday that the U.S. will play Belgium and Portugal in March in Atlanta, then Germany in Chicago in June for its World Cup send-off game.

    There also will be a game at the end of May in Charlotte, N.C., against a team to be announced. It might be revealed after the World Cup draw on Friday, since the U.S. won’t want to play against a team it will face again a few weeks later. The U.S. can’t be drawn against Belgium, Portugal, or Germany, as they’re in the same pot in the draw.

    “I think before starting the World Cup, it starts to [feel] like a World Cup, and I think it’s important for the team,” U.S. manager Mauricio Pochettino said at a gathering of the governing body’s sponsors and donors. “What we need is to challenge teams that are in the top list, and I think that is going to be an important experience for us. Great experience, and then after [that] to attack the World Cup in a very good condition.”

    Atlanta’s Mercedes-Benz Stadium will host eight games in next year’s World Cup, including a semifinal.

    All four games will be at the respective cities’ NFL stadiums, with Atlanta getting two since the area is the new home of U.S. Soccer’s headquarters. The governing body will open a $200-plus-million, 200-acre training center in the southern suburb of Fayetteville, Ga., this spring, in time for the men’s team to hold its pre-World Cup camp there.

    “That is a massive thing that is going to inspire, is going to give an unbelievable power to soccer here in the USA,” Pochettino said, knowing that some of the funders of the facility were in attendance Tuesday. “Maybe today, people don’t realize it because we are focused on the World Cup, [so] it’s about [how] to win the games. But that is the real impact that is going to be a massive change for soccer here in the USA.”

    Portugal’s visit won’t just bring all-time superstar Cristiano Ronaldo, who hasn’t played a game on American soil since 2014. The No. 6 team in FIFA’s global rankings has a fleet of the sport’s best players: Bruno Fernandes of England’s Manchester United, Rafael Leão of Italy’s AC Milan, and João Neves and Vitinha of reigning European champion Paris Saint-Germain.

    Belgium is led by midfield playmaker Kevin De Bruyne, a longtime player for England’s Manchester City and now with Italy’s Napoli, and winger Leandro Trossard of England’s Arsenal. The Red Devils are ranked No. 8, and, like Portugal won their group in European World Cup qualifying. Had they finished second, they’d have gone into the playoffs for the last World Cup spots that also are set for March.

    Kevin De Bruyne (right) is one of Belgium’s stars.

    Some famous histories

    Both nations stir memories for U.S. fans. The American men earned one of their most famous World Cup wins against Portugal in 2002, then nearly pulled off another upset win in 2014 before Ronaldo assisted a last-minute equalizer.

    When the teams last met in a friendly in 2017, the Americans earned a 1-1 tie in Portugal in the first senior national team appearance for Weston McKennie, Tyler Adams, and Cameron Carter-Vickers. (McKennie scored the goal, assisted by then-Union striker C.J. Sapong, and Ronaldo was absent.)

    Nine days later, the U.S. took Belgium to extra time with goalkeeper Tim Howard’s 16 saves, then fell, 2-1. Howard’s heroics set a World Cup record for saves in a game that still stands. The teams have not met since.

    Germany is a frequent and longtime U.S. opponent. This will be their 13th meeting, with the most recent a 3-1 Mannschaft win in Connecticut in October 2023. The first, in 1993, was a 4-3 U.S. loss that nonetheless announced the program on its way to hosting the 1994 World Cup. (Coincidentally, that game also was at Soldier Field.)

    Gio Reyna (left) on the ball in front of Florian Wirtz during the last U.S.-Germany game in 2023.

    The current German squad, ranked No. 9, is led by playmakers Florian Wirtz of England’s Liverpool and Jamal Musiala of Germany’s Bayern Munich. There also are some big-time rising stars aiming to make the World Cup squad, including striker Nick Woltemade of England’s Newcastle United and 17-year-old Lennart Karl of Bayern.

    The U.S. ends 2025 ranked No. 14, its highest standing since just before the Copa América flameout a year ago. Pochettino’s squad went 4-1-1 in its six games this autumn, with wins over Japan, Australia, Paraguay, and Uruguay.

    “It’s true that when we arrived here one year ago, it was a rushed time,” Pochettino said. “We need to go there, we need to perform, we need to get results, we need to push quickly the process, we need to go at a really fast speed. And I said, ‘No, calma [Spanish for calm down]You cannot sometimes go faster [than] what the process demands.’ I think we are in a very good moment now, right on time.”

    Pochettino’s insight on why he took the U.S. job

    The manager’s remarks came in a wide-ranging conversation on stage with his top assistant Jesús Pérez and Fox Sports reporter Jenny Taft. Some of the topics were ones Pochettino has covered often, but one he hasn’t so much is why he took the U.S. job in the first place.

    Mauricio Pochettino (center) with Jenny Taft (left) and Jesús Pérez (right) on stage at Tuesday’s event.

    “I think one of the motivations was to go out of our comfort zone after more than 15 years coaching clubs,” he said. “We felt very special when the first call [came] from Matt [Crocker, U.S. Soccer’s sporting director]. I called Jesús and said, ‘Why not?’”

    That didn’t mean he thought it would be easy.

    “Was it going to be a massive challenge? Of course,” Pochettino said. “We didn’t know what we were going to find there. It was a country that we only traveled to, to come here for preseason with Tottenham or Chelsea or Paris Saint-Germain.”

    Those were the three big European clubs he managed before taking the U.S. job.

    “I said, ‘Oh, that is going to be a big test for us as a coaching staff,’” he said. “It was also a moment to reveal and to challenge ourselves … I think it was the right moment for us in our lifetimes, in a personal way but also in a professional way. Both sides were perfect timing.”

    Mauricio Pochettino (right) and Jesús Pérez (left) watching a U.S. practice in Octover.

    Pérez, who has been at Pochettino’s side throughout the manager’s career, went into more detail on that.

    “To manage the last two clubs we were working with, and the personalities there, it took a lot of energy from him [Pochettino], especially — and you pay for that,” Pérez said. “It was a challenge for us to come where people know the name, but we had to prove that we can coach here and we can perform.”

    He also spoke about the differences between club management, where coaches can spend every day with players, and national teams, where time together is limited.

    “What we miss is training sessions,” Pérez said. “It’s where you can feel the player, you can improve the player, you can challenge the player. … It took us to a point that we have to change our way of work in order to have less training sessions, more precise, more clear, sometimes more simple. But with just basics, you can make people perform.”

  • International fans with World Cup tickets arriving in the U.S. next summer can apply for a priority visa. Here’s how.

    International fans with World Cup tickets arriving in the U.S. next summer can apply for a priority visa. Here’s how.

    Editor’s note: The headline in this story was updated to reflect that international ticketholders will have priority access to apply for a visa, not receive one.

    Ticket holders for the 2026 FIFA World Cup who plan to travel internationally into the U.S. next summer will have priority access to interview appointments for travel visas.

    On Monday, FIFA and the U.S. Department of State announced that international fans who bought tickets to any of the 78 matches hosted in 11 U.S. cities, including Philadelphia, will be eligible for the FIFA Priority Appointment Scheduling System, or FIFA PASS, which allows each ticket holder to obtain a prioritized visa interview for a B-2 visa.

    Here’s what it is, how it works, and why the State Department is looking to make World Cup travel to America a priority.

    President Donald Trump holds the FIFA World Cup trophy alongside FIFA president Gianni Infantino on Monday.

    What is FIFA PASS?

    The U.S. is co-hosting the world’s largest soccer tournament alongside Canada and Mexico, with the final scheduled to take place at MetLife Stadium on July 19.

    The FIFA PASS is expected to expedite visa processing for international travelers seeking to enter the U.S. for the international tournament next summer.

    Typically, wait times for an interview at U.S. embassies in countries where a B-2 tourist visa is required range from less than a month to 16½ months.

    How many matches will be in Philadelphia?

    Philadelphia will host six matches at Lincoln Financial Field in June and July, including a Round of 16 match on July 4.

    The FIFA World Cup 2026 Volunteer Center at the Fashion District is said to have over 3,000 Philadelphia-based volunteers.

    How do people apply?

    Many of the nations already qualified for next summer’s World Cup are listed under the U.S. Visa Waiver Program, including Japan, Australia, France, South Korea, England, and Germany, among others.

    However, many qualified nations are not included on the list of waiver countries. All six CONMEBOL qualifiers from the South American federation are excluded from the list, as are the nine qualifying countries from the Confederation of African Football. Fans from these nations will need to obtain a visa to cheer on their teams in the U.S.

    Travelers from countries included in the Visa Waiver Program can travel to the U.S. as tourists or on business for 90 days or less without obtaining a visa. Travelers from nations included in the waiver program must have a valid Electronic System for Travel Authorization approval before departing their home countries.

    Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney (right) is presented with a novelty World Cup ticket by FIFA President Gianni Infantino on Oct. 10.

    What officials are saying

    Gianni Infantino, president of FIFA, regaled the news in a press release, saying that “we have always said that this will be the greatest and most inclusive FIFA World Cup in history — and the FIFA PASS service is a very concrete example of that.”

    Secretary of State Marco Rubio added that “the kickoff is coming up” for the World Cup in the next eight months and that “the United States is offering prioritized appointments so FIFA World Cup fans can complete their visa interviews and show they qualify.”

    The State Department encourages those who are in countries where interview appointments are available to apply for one immediately. FIFA’s release said that further information about the FIFA PASS process will be distributed directly to ticket holders “in early 2026.”

    How many nations have qualified?

    As of Tuesday, 34 countries have qualified for the tournament, leaving 14 spots to be filled in the 48-team field. The 2026 World Cup will be the first to feature 48 teams, expanding from the traditional 32-team format. The World Cup draw, which will determine groups for the tournament, will take place in Washington at noon on Dec. 5.

    Over 1 million tickets have already been sold worldwide for matches in the United States, Mexico and Canada next year.

    How many people are expected?

    FIFA said it had sold 1 million tickets for the event in October, less than a month after making match tickets available to the public. More than 6 million tickets are available for 104 tournament matches in 16 host cities in Canada, Mexico, and the United States.

    Are there any concerns?

    The announcement comes in the midst of logistical uncertainty for next summer’s World Cup. President Donald Trump threatened to relocate World Cup matches from a few cities, including Boston, in October over his safety concerns because of civil unrest. On Monday, he mentioned those relocation threats again while speaking alongside Infantino in the Oval Office.

  • Catarina Macario stars again as the USWNT sweeps Italy to end its year

    Catarina Macario stars again as the USWNT sweeps Italy to end its year

    FT. LAUDERDALE, Fla. — Catarina Macario scored in her third straight international match and the United States women’s national team defeated Italy 2-0 on Monday night in the final game for the national team this year.

    The United States has scored in 16 straight matches, including all 15 this year. The national team wrapped up 2025 12-3-0.

    Macario scored the opening goal in the 20th minute with a strike from the corner of the box and up over Italy goalkeeper Francesca Durante’s head and into the side netting of the far post.

    Jaedyn Shaw added a second goal before halftime, taking a pass from Alyssa Thompson before squaring up and calmly finishing out of Durante’s reach to make it 2-0.

    Claudia Dickey earned her fifth clean sheet in her sixth appearance in goal for the USWNT.

    Macario had a pair of goals a 3-0 victory over Italy on Friday night in Orlando, Florida. Olivia Moultrie, who scored the other goal on Friday, was available off the bench Monday.

    Macario, who plays for Chelsea, led the team this year with eight goals, including seven goals in her last seven starts. She nearly got a second goal at Ft. Lauderdale’s Chase Stadium but it was disallowed because of a foul, denying her a third brace in her last three international games.

    Macario and Emily Fox were among the players named earlier Monday as nominees for the women’s U.S. Soccer Player of the Year award, joining Rose Lavelle, Thompson, and Sam Coffey.

    U.S. coach Emma Hayes made five changes to the starting lineup from Friday’s victory in the first game against Italy, going with veterans Naomi Girma, Lindsey Heaps, Fox and Macario. Three teenagers started for the United States, including 19-year-olds Claire Hutton and Jordyn Bugg and 18-year-old Lily Yohannes.

    The USWNT will next gather from Jan. 17-27 for the team’s annual camp in Carson, Calif., with a match planned against Paraguay and another against an undetermined opponent.

  • FIFA’s World Cup draw is this week. Here’s what to know before, during, and after Friday’s event

    FIFA’s World Cup draw is this week. Here’s what to know before, during, and after Friday’s event

    The FIFA World Cup is rapidly approaching, but before the world’s premier international tournament hits U.S. soil this summer, FIFA will assign qualifying nations into groups for the tournament during its highly anticipated final draw.

    Here’s everything you need to know about Friday’s event.

    When and where is the tournament draw, and how can I watch?

    The World Cup draw, which will determine the groups for the round-robin stage of the tournament, will take place on Friday at noon. The event will be hosted by the Kennedy Center in Washington and broadcast live on Fox. Its coverage of the draw will begin at 11:30 a.m. and conclude at 3 p.m. FIFA’s event, which begins at noon, is expected to last about an hour and a half, with the draw itself accounting for about 45 minutes of that time.

    Medford native Brenden Aaronson (right) and the U.S. will find out their pairings as one of three host nations on Friday.

    What teams are in the draw?

    Forty-two national teams, including cohosts Canada, Mexico, and the U.S., have already qualified for the World Cup and will be included in the draw.

    Six spots remain available for the World Cup, which will feature 48 teams for the first time in its history. Four of the remaining six qualifying spots will be awarded to the top four teams in the European Federation’s 16-team playoff, which will conclude in March. The other two spots will be awarded to the top two finishers at the FIFA Playoff Tournament, also in March.

    At Friday’s draw, the six qualifiers yet to be determined will be represented by placeholder slips, four for Europe and two for the intercontinental FIFA playoff.

    Here’s a full list of the qualified teams by confederation, plus a look at participants in the European playoff and the FIFA Playoff Tournament:

    Cohosts: Canada, Mexico, United States

    Asian Football Confederation (AFC): Australia, Iran, Japan, Jordan, South Korea, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Uzbekistan

    Confederation of African Football (CAF): Algeria, Cape Verde, Ivory Coast, Egypt, Ghana, Morocco, Senegal, South Africa, Tunisia

    Confederation of North, Central American and Caribbean Association Football (Concacaf): Curaçao, Haiti, Panama

    South American Football Confederation (CONMEBOL): Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Paraguay, Uruguay

    Oceania Football Confederation (OFC): New Zealand

    Lionel Messi will most likely play in his final FIFA World Cup with Argentina this summer.

    Union of European Football Associations (UEFA): Austria, Belgium, Croatia, England, France, Germany, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Scotland, Spain, Switzerland

    UEFA 16-team playoff (four qualifiers): Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Czechia, Denmark, Italy, Kosovo, Northern Ireland, North Macedonia, Poland, Ireland, Romania, Slovakia, Sweden, Turkey, Ukraine, and Wales

    FIFA World Cup 26 Playoff Tournament (two qualifiers): Bolivia (CONMEBOL), Democratic Republic of the Congo (CAF), Iraq (AFC), Jamaica (Concacaf), New Caledonia (OFC), and Suriname (Concacaf)

    How does the draw work?

    Qualified nations will be divided into four pots based on their FIFA World Rankings positions. Pot 1 will contain the nine best-qualified teams in the rankings, as well as the three cohosts. The host nations have already been assigned to groups — Mexico will be in Group A, Canada will be in Group B, and the U.S. will be in Group D. The remaining teams will be assigned to the other nine groups, one team per group.

    After all the teams in Pot 1 have been drawn, the draw will move to Pot 2, selecting one team for each of the 12 groups. The process will repeat with Pot 3 and Pot 4, resulting in 12 groups of four teams. During the tournament, the top two teams in each group will advance to the knockout rounds. The top eight third-place finishers in the 12 groups will also advance, completing the Round of 32.

    Though the draw determines tournament groups, FIFA is also looking ahead to the knockout rounds. FIFA will structure the knockout bracket so that the top four teams in its rankings — Spain, Argentina, France, and England — will not meet before the tournament semifinal, provided that they each finish first in their respective groups. It is the first time the World Cup will use a tennis-style bracket for knockouts.

    Here’s a complete look at the pots that will be used on Friday:

    Pot 1: Canada (B1), Mexico (A1), U.S. (D1), Spain, Argentina, France, England, Brazil, Portugal, Netherlands, Belgium, Germany

    Pot 2: Croatia, Morocco, Colombia, Uruguay, Switzerland, Japan, Senegal, Iran, South Korea, Ecuador, Austria, Australia

    Pot 3: Norway, Panama, Egypt, Algeria, Scotland, Paraguay, Tunisia, Ivory Coast, Uzbekistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, South Africa

    Pot 4: Jordan, Cape Verde, Ghana, Curaçao, Haiti, New Zealand, European playoff winner 1, European playoff winner 2, European playoff winner 3, European playoff winner 4, Intercontinental playoff winner 1, Intercontinental playoff winner 2.

    Lincoln Financial Field is one of 11 venues in the United States that will host next summer’s World Cup.

    Which teams are coming to Philly?

    The draw should help determine which international sides will play in Philadelphia this summer. FIFA’s tournament schedule shows that Philly will host group stage games for Groups C, I, and L, and two for Group E, alongside a Round of 16 match. Fans will not be able to track which teams are coming to Philly during the draw, as the current tournament schedule does not give specific placeholders for the group stage matchups.

    The World Cup schedule will be updated on Saturday after the draw, with the paired teams assigned to venues along with kickoff times. The updated schedule will include which teams will play group stage matches in Philly from Groups C, E, I, and L, as well as the time for the Round of 16 match on July 4.

    Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney (right) is presented with a novelty World Cup ticket by FIFA president Gianni Infantino on Oct. 10.

    Can I still buy tickets after the draw?

    Yes. Fans interested in buying tickets for World Cup matches at Lincoln Financial Field can enter ticket lotteries for individual group-stage games via FIFA’s random selection draw.

    The lotteries will begin accepting entries on Dec. 11 at 11 a.m. and close at the same time on Jan. 13.

    After the random selection draw phase of ticket sales has finished, any remaining inventory will be released on a first-come, first-served basis closer to the beginning of the tournament. Single-match and multimatch hospitality packages are also available through FIFA.

    FIFA’s first-come, first-served phase will be the last opportunity for fans to buy tickets directly through FIFA. After that, tickets will be available only through resale on the secondary market.

  • Catarina Macario’s two goals lead the USWNT to win over Italy, 3-0

    Catarina Macario’s two goals lead the USWNT to win over Italy, 3-0

    ORLANDO, Fla. — Cat Macario scored two goals and the United States defeated Italy 3-0 on Saturday night in a friendly match at Inter&Co Stadium.

    It was the first of two friendlies between the teams, with the second scheduled for Dec. 1 in Fort Lauderdale.

    Olivia Moultrie also scored while goalkeeper Claudia Dickey earned the shutout in just her fifth appearance at the senior level.

    “I think obviously we wanted to keep building on the performances we had last camp, and the emphasis on coming out strong and sticking to our principles, and I think that’s what we did,” said U.S. veteran Rose Lavelle, who earned her 116th cap. “Overall, I think a really good team performance.”

    The United States wasted no time in attacking Italy’s goalie Laura Giuliani, scoring inside the first two minutes.

    Fresh off their NWSL title with Gotham, Lilly Reale found teammate Lavelle to start the sequence. Lavelle then went wide to Alyssa Thompson, who quickly returned the ball. Lavelle found Moultrie, who went far side for her second goal in as many appearances with the team.

    “We talked about starting fast and starting strong, and I think the momentum carried out,” Moultrie said. “We had a really good week of training, so I feel like it flowed into the first minutes of the game.”

    An offside call on Lavelle at the 48-minute mark denied Moultrie her second goal.

    In the 64th minute, Sam Coffey dribbled down the middle and found Macario breaking on her left. Macario took the pass and fired a shot far side to give the United States a two-goal lead.

    Macario added her second in the 76th minute when she snared a pass from the team’s youngest player, 18-year-old Lily Yohannes, and fired a shot from the top of the right side of the box to the far side of the goal.

    It was Macario’s 15th goal in 28 international appearances. Macario has now been involved in 18 goals in her last 14 U.S. appearances.

    “It was a great win, it’s always a pleasure being with this team,” said Macario, who has 12 goals and six assists since February of 2022. “I feel so happy to be in this environment, and I feel like it really just helps you be the best version of yourself.

    “Lucky enough that (U.S. coach) Emma (Hayes) knows me very well, and she knows what I can bring to the team. This was a good year … in which I have just been trying to find some consistency … just trying to find my rhythm.”

  • Philadelphia is on a long list of potential cities for the 2031 women’s World Cup

    Philadelphia is on a long list of potential cities for the 2031 women’s World Cup

    NEW YORK — The United States Soccer Federation proposed 14 American sites among 20 possible venues to host games for the 2031 Women’s World Cup, including seven U.S. stadiums to be used for next year’s men’s tournament.

    FIFA released the bid books Friday for the 2031 and 2035 women’s tournaments. There is only one bidder for each, a U.S.-Mexico-Costa Rica-Jamaica proposal for 2031 and a United Kingdom plan for 2035. FIFA is to formally confirm the bids at its congress on April 30.

    Twenty-six additional U.S. stadiums were mentioned as suitable venues for a 48-nation tournament the bidders project would draw 4.5 million fans and generate about $4 billion in revenue, up from $570 million for 2023 in Australia and New Zealand and a projection of $1 billion for the 2027 tournament in Brazil.

    Proposed ticket prices of $35 for the cheapest seats in the opening round to $120 to $600 for the final were listed in a ticket grid. FIFA has refused to release a grid for next year’s men’s tournament, saying only prices initially ranged from $60-$6,730 but could fluctuate with dynamic pricing. The bid book said premium seating would average 10%-20% of capacity at the majority of 2031 stadiums.

    Lincoln Financial Field last hosted a women’s World Cup in 2003.

    Fifty sites in all were mentioned in the joint 2031 bid. Final decisions likely will not be made for several years.

    The bid book also said “other suitable cities are included” beyond the specified 14 “as part of the broader bid framework with the understanding that they will continue to be equally considered for the purposes of stadium selection.”

    “By proposing more than the required 20 sites, the joint bidders demonstrate a commitment to securing the best possible hosting conditions and ensuring the tournament represents the full diversity of our region on a global scale,” the bid book stated.

    The 2026 U.S. sites included in the 2031 proposal are Arlington, Texas (AT&T), Atlanta (Mercedes-Benz), East Rutherford, N.J. (MetLife), Houston (NRG), Inglewood, Calif. (SoFi), Kansas City, Mo. (Arrowhead), and Seattle (Lumen Field).

    MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J., hosted this year’s Club World Cup final and will host next year’s men’s World Cup final.

    The seven others are Charlotte, N.C. (Bank of America), Denver (Empower Field), Minneapolis (U.S. Bank), Nashville (Geodis Park), Orlando (Camping World), San Diego (Snapdragon), and Washington (proposed NFL venue on the RFK Stadium site).

    Orlando and Washington were sites of the 1994 men’s World Cup.

    Mexico’s three sites for next year’s World Cup also are proposed for the women’s tournament, Mexico City (Azteca), Guadalajara (Akron), and Monterrey (BBVA), along with a fourth in Torreón (Corona).

    National stadiums are proposed in Kingston, Jamaica, and San Jose, Costa Rica.

    The national stadium in Kingston, Jamaica will host its first women’s World Cup games.

    Other U.S. venues listed as possibilities are Foxborough, Mass. (Gillette), Philadelphia (Lincoln Financial Field), and Santa Clara, Calif. (Levi’s), all venues for next year’s men’s World Cup.

    Additional sites included were Baltimore (M&T Bank), Birmingham, Ala. (Protective), Carson, Calif. (Dignity Health Sports Park), Cincinnati (TQL), Cleveland (Huntington Bank Field), Columbus, Ohio (Lower.com Field), Frisco, Texas (Toyota), Glendale, Arizona (State Farm), Harrison, N.J. (Sports Illustrated), Los Angeles (Memorial Coliseum), Miami (Chase), Nashville (Nissan), New York (Etihad Park), Orlando (Inter & Co), Pasadena, Calif. (Rose Bowl), St. Louis (Energizer Park), San Francisco (Oracle Park), Sandy, Utah (America First Field), and Tampa, Fla. (Raymond James).

    Second possible sites in cities, all with lower capacities, were included for Houston (Shell Energy), Kansas City, Mo. (CPKC), and Washington (Audi Field).

    Indianapolis was listed for a proposed stadium.

    The Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif., hosted the 1999 women’s World Cup final – still one of the most famous games in women’s soccer history.

    Miami’s Hard Rock Stadium was the only 2026 World Cup venue not included.

    Chicago was not listed after dropping out of bidding to host in 2026 because of what it said were FIFA’s burdensome financial demands.

    Additional possibilities in Mexico are Pachuca (Miguel Hidalgo) and Querétaro (Corregidora) along with Universitario as an alternate choice in Monterrey. Saprissa was listed as an alternate site in San Jose, Costa Rica.

    Organizers envision fan festivals and watch parties in conjunction with games. Revenue from marketing and sponsorships is projected at $1.4 billion.