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Sunday 22 of December 2024

UEFA to Ask for 16 Places at Expanded 2026 World Cup


Euro 2012 qualifying - Austria vs Germany,photo: Wikimedia
Euro 2012 qualifying - Austria vs Germany,photo: Wikimedia
FIFA is expected to confirm the quotas for each continental governing body at meetings in Bahrain in May.

 

BERLIN – Europe wants 16 places at the expanded 48-team 2026 World Cup finals, Aleksander Ceferin, the president of the continent’s soccer organization UEFA, said on Thursday.

The game’s governing body, FIFA, decided last month to add 16 teams at the finals with a first round of 16 groups of three. The top two in each group would qualify for the knockout stage.

“…we think, to ask for 16 slots at least (for European teams), plus another condition that each European team is in a different group,” Ceferin told a news conference after UEFA’s executive committee meeting in Nyon, Switzerland.

“Then if it’s true that we are so good, that the quality is on our side, then I think that all 16 (European teams) can qualify in the second round…”

Thirteen European teams qualified for the last World Cup in Brazil in 2014, which was won by Germany.

FIFA is expected to confirm the quotas for each continental governing body at meetings in Bahrain in May.

Meanwhile, future UEFA presidents will be limited to a maximum of three terms and a total of 12 years in the job, the European soccer body said after its executive committee approved a set of governance reforms.

Past presidents of the organization had no such restrictions, with former chief Lennart Johansson in charge for a full 17 years.

Ceferin, who replaced disgraced Frenchman Michel Platini in September, has pledged to reform the organization.

UEFA said part of the reforms approved by the executive committee was the “introduction of term limits for the UEFA President and members of the UEFA Executive Committee, with the possibility to serve for a maximum of three four-year terms.”

Other changes include granting two member positions on its Executive Committee to representatives of the European Club Association (ECA).

Candidates for election on the committee must also hold an active office in their respective national association.

“I am very pleased that the executive committee gave a unanimous backing to reforms I consider essential for the strengthening of UEFA,” Ceferin said.

“I am convinced that our member associations will also endorse these good governance proposals to create a stronger and more transparent governing body for the good of European football.”

The reforms will now need to be ratified at a UEFA congress on April 5 in Finland.

KAROLOS GROHMANN
KEN FERRIS