Toronto among 16 sites chosen to host 2026 World Cup matches
Matches for the 2026 World Cup will be held in 11 US cities as well as three host sites in Mexico and two in Canada, soccer's world governing body, FIFA, announced Thursday.To get more news about bongda24h, you can visit 24h.live official website.
The 16 host cities will be: Atlanta, Boston, Dallas, Guadalajara, Houston, Kansas City, Los Angeles, Mexico City, Miami, Monterrey, New York/New Jersey, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Seattle, Toronto and Vancouver.
FIFA officials will decide at a later date which of the 16 cities will host group play and which will host elimination round matches.
"We congratulate the 16 FIFA World Cup Host Cities on their outstanding commitment and passion," FIFA President Gianni Infantino said in a news release. "Today is a historic day -- for everyone in those cities and states, for FIFA, for Canada, the USA and Mexico who will put on the greatest show on Earth. We look forward to working together with them to deliver what will be an unprecedented FIFA World Cup and a game-changer as we strive to make football truly global."
The 2026 men's World Cup will be the first edition to feature 48 teams and it is the first time matches will be played in three countries.It will be the second time the US has hosted the World Cup after the first in 1994, and a record third time for Mexico, which also hosted in 1970 and 1986. It will be the first time a men's World Cup match has been held in Canada, though the country did host the Women's World Cup in 2015.
The host cities that are successful in their bids could reap huge financial benefits, according to a 2018 US Soccer study, with more than $5 billion in economic activity created in North America.
The study said that those cities chosen to hold World Cup matches could see an estimated $160-$620 million in economic activity.This match was definitely more than a physical game. Players had to have mental stamina to get through the pressure of this do-or-die World Cup qualifier.
After two full halves, three minutes of stoppage time, a full 30 minutes of extra time and one round of five penalty kicks, there was still a stalemate. But the sixth round of penalty kicks finally sealed the win for Australia thanks to a goal by Awer Mabil and a save by goalie Andrew Redmayne after Peru’s sixth kick.
The Peruvians were favored from the start, having qualified for the FIFA World Cup finals five times, the last time being in 2018. But Australia showed up to play. The game was head-to-head for a majority of the first half, both team’s defensive lines prohibiting any goal opportunities.
Over the first 45 minutes of play, nerves proved to be high and the teams remained tight. Peru instilled some pressure late into the first half as Australia started to make it closer to the goal, yet still no success for either side.
By | buzai232 |
Added | Jul 17 '22, 08:22PM |
The Wall