Blatter Opposed to Joint World Cup Bids Amid 2026 Proposals

Former FIFA president Sepp Blatter has reiterated his view that World Cups should be staged in one country rather than co-hosted by multiple nations.

Blatter, 82, said football’s world governing body is now interested in co-hosted World Cups because it wants to increase the tournament to 48 teams.

A decision on the hosts of the 2026 World Cup will be made on 13 June.

United States, Canada and Mexico have made a joint bid while Morocco has also bid to host the event.

“To have three big countries together… they have proven they can host it alone, so why are the three together?” Blatter told Mani Djazmi, from the BBC’s World Football programme.

Disgraced former president Blatter was in charge of football for 17 years until he was banned amid a corruption scandal in 2015.

The World Cup has only been staged in more than one country once when it was co-hosted by South Korea and Japan in 2002, a tournament Blatter says was a “nightmare in organisation”.

He said joint bids were denied from Libya and Tunisia for the 2010 tournament, and Spain and Portugal, and Belgium and the Netherlands for 2018, because of a decision from Fifa not to consider a “combined organisation”.

Blatter has also criticised a taskforce introduced for the 2026 bidding process which has the power to exclude a bid to host the competition before the vote at FIFA’s congress.

“They cannot do that,” Blatter said.

“Even if one of the candidates is not a good one, they have the right to be at the congress.

“That’s why I’m advocating that Morocco has to go to the congress. Morocco cannot be kicked out before the congress.”

Blatter was banned for eight years, later reduced to six, over ethics breaches when he was found to have made a £1.3m “disloyal payment” to ex-UEFA boss Michel Platini.

Asked if he said he was confident of clearing his name Blatter said “yes, absolutely”.

“What I have done – or what we have done?” he added. “We have decided to pay a salary which we promised to pay him and it has been in all the books of FIFA.

“What’s not moral about paying a salary to somebody? It’s a contrary, and it will not stand in a tribunal, absolutely not.”

At the end of 2015 Blatter said he was “close to dying” following the ethics scandal.

“It was not an illness, it was just a shock,” Blatter said on those comments. “Fortunately for me my heart and my brain were always functioning and the rest is not so important.”

Blatter said he would “definitely not” return to FIFA if his ban was overturned and said he was “disappointed” that “discussions” of a Nobel Peace prize ended when he was suspended.

“There was no reason to suspend me – history will show it. The idea was never the Nobel Prize for me, but for FIFA, for the activity we have done in FIFA.”

He was asked what he would say to people who may question why he should be given airtime at all, given his ban from football: “I would say to those people, they should go to the big philosophers and humanists down through history and before and after Christ,” he answered.

“Confucius, Buddha, Jesus, Socrates, Mohammed. The one thing they have said, altogether they have said, is don’t judge, otherwise you will be judged.”

Blatter has also criticised FIFA’s plan for a League of Nations, saying “the rich will become richer, and those who have less, they remain poor” due to the tournament.

The new global league would effectively end international friendlies and see teams play competitive games against regional neighbours.

UEFA’ has already initiated its own Nations League, which begins after the World Cup.

“This is not the idea in the development programmes we started 30 or 40 years ago,” Blatter said.

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