Sports

Fans from Qatar are No.5 on l of ticket buyers for the FIFA Women’s World Cup this year

It is unclear if it is the effect of hosting the 2022 men’s FIFA football World Cup, but fans from Qatar are in the top-10 when it comes to ticket buyers for the women’s World Cup to be held in Australia and New Zealand later this year.
Qatar is No.5 on the l while Australia is No.1, followed New Zealand, United States of America and England, according to a l put out FIFA. The women’s World Cup will be held from July 20 to August 20.
According to the Sydney Morning Herald, 500,000 tickets or half a million have been sold for the women’s World Cup around which there were concerns of viewership on television because of the time zone. People from 132 countries have bought tickets and will travel to the venues to watch the games. The paper reported that this year’s tournament is set to break the overall tournament attendance recordof 1.1 million during the tournament in France in 2019, which the United States won beating the Netherlands 2-0.
Fifa’s decision to allot Qatar the mne’s football World cup had been criticised because of the country’s human rights record and deaths of migrant workers working. However, it turned out to be one of the most well-organised and exciting World Cups with Argentina beating France in what is widely considered as the greatest World Cup final.
However, there have been fears of the women’s World Cup around the rights bid of European broadcasters because of the time zoneFor the first time FIFA unbundled the rights, which means broadcasters have to buy separate rights for the women’s and men’s World Cups. FIFA president Gianni Infanito speaking at the FIFA council meeting in Auckland in October had said that the bids received for the broadcast rights of the women’s World Cup was at least 100 times less than the men’s World Cup.
“When these same broadcasters, often public but also private, offer us 100 times less for the Women’s World Cup than what they offer for the men’s World Cup, even more than 100 times in some occasions, then this is not acceptable. We are not going to accept this because we know the viewing figures for these broadcasters in some big footballing countries for the men’s World Cup or for the women’s World Cup are actually very similar. In the recent past we had viewing figures in the last Women’s World Cup of 1.2 billion people,” Infantino said.

The FIFA president had also said that the game’s governing body was investing $1 billion in developing the game over a four-year cycle. FIFA’s chief women’s officer Sarai Bareman spoke to the Sydney Morning Herald about the time zone factor.
“Football is a global sport, FIFA has 211 member associations. They’re in the northern hemisphere, they are in the southern hemisphere, they are right across every time zone,” Bareman said.

Related Articles

Back to top button