Miami: FIFA Council members will be asked Friday to approve a pilot tournament for an expanded 24-team Club World Cup in June-July 2021 featuring eight European participants, but plans for a worldwide Nations League are on hold.
An overhaul of the current seven-team annual Club World Cup, normally in December, is being pursued by FIFA President Gianni Infantino to generate new interest and greater revenue despite ongoing opposition from Europe, with the long-term vision of the bigger tournament being staged every four years.
A 17-page FIFA report on the future of competitions does not specifically mention the financing plans which sparked concern among members of the FIFA Council last year, only that the governing body wants to ‘ensure that the generated revenues stay within football and do not go to third parties’.
Infantino informed council members last March of a $25 billion offer from investors, led by Japan’s SoftBank, to guarantee funding to overhaul the Club World Cup and introduce mini-World Cups for national teams every two years in a worldwide Nations League.
Of the funding package, an enlarged Club World Cup was guaranteed to deliver FIFA at least USD 12 billion in revenue 2021-33. But now FIFA just wants agreement on the concept of replacing the little-regarded current Club World Cup format, removing funding from the discussions.
The FIFA Council in Miami will be asked Friday to approve a trial 24-team Club World Cup running from June 17-July 4, 2021. That is the slot previously reserved for the Confederations Cup, which serves as a test event in a host nation a year before the World Cup.
FIFA originally wanted 12 European teams, but UEFA, which sees the competition as a threat to the status of the Champions League, insisted there should only be eight.
In the first edition, South America would have six slots — one based on previous performances. Three each would go to teams from Africa, Asia and CONCACAF, which represents North and Central America. Oceania would get one representative.
The confederations would decide their own qualification process, whereas now each continental champion qualifies for the Club World Cup.
The tournament would start with eight groups of three, with the winners advancing to the quarterfinals. Teams would play two to five matches over a maximum of 18 days.
FIFA believes the proposed 24-team Club World Cup would “promote and grow football for the benefit of all confederations, member associations, leagues, clubs and fans.” South America is eager to retain an annual December Club World Cup with the number of finalists doubling to 14 but FIFA concluded “this would impact the European domestic leagues on an additional weekend.”
AP