@ashkan I think 2030 is a special case, being the Centennial World Cup. Since it spans 3 continents (and may have 64 teams) I do not believe it counts against any of the 3.
@TDRxLFC@Tee555410@FIFAWorldCup@Socceroos Until you watch the video and see that the Aussie runs from behind and right across the defender. No illegal kick or motion from the defender, just an unintentional coming together.
Genuinely the best thing that can happen to American soccer culture is to lean in to what makes us unique with our college football culture opposed to doing our version of European soccer culture
College gameday style atmospheres is a great start
Finally: after 96 years and 992 matches, this USA-Australia match will be the first in men’s World Cup history between two nations that respect the tradition and history of the sport by calling it soccer
BREAKING: Four-Star LB Jalaythan Mayfield has Committed to Indiana, he tells me for @Rivals
The 6’2 235 LB chose the Hoosiers over Georgia and Miami
“In Bloomington, we win. Google it!”
https://t.co/7bLBvzyT09
@Jonatha22605857@nsemeke33 Get past the Premier League and the Championship, though, and you’re not going to have many stadiums big enough for the World Cup.
@nsemeke33 The smallest stadium currently being used for the World Cup is in Canada with 43,036 seats.
Noting that you couldn't use all of these, 116 stadiums are larger than that number.
We are currently using 12 of our 30 NFL stadiums.
https://t.co/kzkFzVmH6P
💻 @CCignettiIU
What are the challenges of building a roster in this NIL world? And how did the @IndianaFootball head coach take in the Brendan Sorsby news of the week?
#CFBPlayoff#IUFB
@Acyn@MeidasTouch No other president would have the time to partake in all his trivial endeavors. This is why we have the Planning & Commission, Historical Society, Dept of Interior & a number of other agencies not to mention Congress for most of his legacy & ego tripping.
Lo más impresionante del Mundial en Estados Unidos es que no tuvieron que hacer prácticamente nada para recibirlo.
Catar levantó estadios desde cero, construyó un metro completo, rediseñó carreteras, hoteles y barrios enteros, inclusive cuando terminó el evento dijeron que iban a regalar un estadio porque les sobraba.
Sudáfrica tuvo que erigir estadios nuevos, estacionamientos y obras masivas, fue una inversión multi millonaria que abarcó parte de su PBI.
Brasil quemó miles de millones en infraestructura y terminó con un presidente preso por corrupción (Lula), al final todavía estaban las obras cuando comenzó el evento.
Rusia remodeló medio país para estar a la altura, y aún así se veían las deficiencias de infraestructura como de transporte y otros.
¿Y Estados Unidos?
Cambió el césped en algunos estadios. Punto. Nada más. Nada de megaproyectos, nada de obras faraónicas, nada de “reinventar” ciudades.
Y esto pasa porque cuando ya tienes infraestructura de primer mundo, el Mundial no es un problema sino que es un trámite.