Infantino keeps hustling football into a biennial World Cup with a pep talk to underdogs

FIFA president Gianni Infantino said that a plan to stage the World Cup every two years would provide “a chance to dream” for countries and regions that have never won football’s showpiece tournament.FIFA’s member associations are set to vote on the proposal in December, and, if approved, a radically revamped international calendar could be implemented as soon as 2025.FIFA president intervenes after clubs announce that they won’t let players represent their countries”Our job is to constantly think about how we can improve football in the world, to make football truly global,” Infantino said at an event in Venezuela’s capital Caracas.”The FIFA president is president of the 111 countries (and regions), and all those countries (and regions) have the right to dream, a dream like the Vinotinto [Venezuela’s national team] dream. They also have to be able to achieve that dream because if you have to dream for eternity, in the end, you prefer to do other things.”Ch-ch-ch-ch-changes: We’ll soon know if there would be World Cups twice as oftenInfantino said the minds behind the inaugural World Cup in 1930 could not have imagined how much the game would grow and downplayed suggestions that staging the event on a more regular basis would diminish its prestige.”When it was decided to organize a World Cup every four years, more or less 100 years ago, FIFA had 40 countries,” Infantino said. “It’s time to re-analyze the issue.”Football and other money games – World Cup every two years?He added: “If Messi has to travel 350,000 kilometres to play a World Cup and Cristiano Ronaldo 50,000 to play … I think it’s normal that in June the South Americans are a bit more tired than the Europeans.”Since 2002, Brazil have not won a single World Cup knock-out match against a European side … Not for 20 years, and that’s Brazil.”(2.05) AMERICA MINEIRO (3.35) BAHIA (3.80)The South American Football Confederation (CONMEBOL) and European governing body UEFA have expressed their opposition to the idea of a biennial World Cup. The Confederation of North, Central America and Caribbean Association Football (CONCACAF) and the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) have said they are open to discussing the proposal.

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