
"When Fifa expanded the World Cup from 32 to 48 teams, it was in the hope that countries such as India and China, with their 2.7 billion residents, would qualify rather than countries such as Cape Verde and Curacao, whose combined population of about 700,000 barely equals a district of a megacity such as Mumbai or Shanghai. What the governing body did not account for was that, with the 2026 tournament a month away, there would be no broadcasting deals done with the two Asian giants to ensure fans there can watch the 104 games."
"A few months ago, Fifa was said to be offering this World Cup, and the next, to New Delhi and Beijing for respective sums of $100m (73m) and between $250m and $300m. There have been no deals struck despite the asking price falling steadily. In India, it has reportedly dropped to $35m. The closest bid is the $20m put forward by JioStar. On the face of it, it is a surprise. For the 2014 and 2018 competitions, Sony shelled out $90m, then Viacom18 paid $62m to show the action from Qatar."
"Compared with 2022, timings for India are not as kind. Only 14 games will kick off before midnight on the subcontinent. In 2018, all but one did; in 2022, all but 20. Yet this is not the main reason for the standoff, according to Shaji Prabhakaran, a member of the Asian Football Confederation's executive committee and former general secretary of the All India Football Federation. The timing can be used as an excuse, he told the Guardian. The World Cup games are on similar times to Uefa Champions League games and Indians watch those and this is not the first World Cup to be on at this time and India has watched those too."
"He puts the impasse down more to a lack of options, money and confidence in the broadcasting sector. In 2022, Viacom, owned by Reliance, was a new player in search of quality content to attract customers and was prepared to lose money on the World Cup. Now there is only JioStar, a result of a Reliance and Disney merger, and Sony. There is no real c"
FIFA expanded the World Cup from 32 to 48 teams expecting large markets such as India and China to qualify. With the 2026 tournament approaching, no broadcasting deals have been secured for the two countries to ensure fans can watch all 104 games. FIFA reportedly offered the rights for New Delhi and Beijing for $100m and $250m to $300m, but bids have not materialized and prices have fallen, including a reported drop to $35m in India. The closest bid is $20m from JioStar. Concerns include less favorable match timings for India, but a key factor is limited options, money, and confidence in the broadcasting sector, with fewer major bidders than in 2018 and 2022.
Read at www.theguardian.com
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