TL;DR
Canada feels sidelined in the co-hosting of the World Cup, with the U.S. dominating attention and hosting 75% of matches. The FIFA Congress held in Vancouver is seen as less prestigious compared to events in the U.S. and Mexico.
VANCOUVER, B.C. — Under an unprecedented three-way co-hosting arrangement, the marquee moments in the lead-up to the World Cup are spread across North America’s largest countries. Last December’s lottery draw went to the United States, the June 11 opening match landed in Mexico, and Canada got this year’s FIFA Congress.
That gathering, which brought world soccer’s most powerful figures to Vancouver last week, is widely accepted to be the least exciting and prestigious of the three — a business meeting for sports bureaucrats all but invisible to the world beyond them.
That trilateral imbalance reflects the realities reshaping an event originally conceived as a proud display of continental unity that has devolved into seething cross-border anxieties and resentments: Canada feels like a World Cup afterthought.
“The original hosting concept stressed the strength and appeal of Canada, Mexico and the USA jointly hosting the World Cup,” said John Kristick, who served as executive director of the 2026 United Bid Committee. “That ‘united’ thread has been lost in much of the marketing and coverage to date, with the USA claiming a lion’s share of the attention.”
From the outset, the United States was positioned as the tournament’s center of gravity, slated to host roughly 75 percent of matches, including nearly all knockout games, the semifinals and the final. That asymmetry was accepted as par for the course — the United States population is twice that of the other two countries combined, is geographically central, and offers a wealth of stadium facilities for high-profile competition.
But FIFA President Gianni Infantino’s relentless focus on winning over President Donald Trump has widened a gap between the three countries in both power and perception, contributing to the feeling that the 2026 World Cup has become an American pageant with a handful of satellite events abroad.
“FIFA Congress is our premier annual meeting, bringing together member associations and the leadership of every continental confederation. This year’s edition in Vancouver was particularly significant as it became the centerpiece of a broader week of global football governance, diplomacy and administration, reinforcing the city’s role as a key hub in the international game,” FIFA said in a statement to POLITICO.
Placing the FIFA Congress in Vancouver, the hometown of FIFA vice president Victor Montagliani — who heads CONCACAF, the regional confederation that includes North and Central America, along with the Caribbean, and has been seen as a potential challenger to Infantino — was a carefully calibrated concession to Canadian insecurities. Montagliani is close to Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, British Columbia Premier David Eby, and the Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim.