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World Cup won’t rotate among continents

FIFA decides after 2014 in Brazil, any country can bid for 2018 event

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The World Cup will have been played on every continent after South Africa hosts the tournament in 2010.
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updated 4:51 p.m. ET Oct. 29, 2007

ZURICH, Switzerland - The World Cup will no longer be rotated among continents, a decision that throws open the race for the 2018 tournament.

South Africa already has been awarded the 2010 tournament and soccer’s governing body is expected to announce Brazil — the only candidate — as the 2014 host Tuesday.

FIFA president Sepp Blatter said Monday the executive committee rejected a proposal from CONCACAF that would have ensured the 2018 event going to the region representing North and Central America and the Caribbean.

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“FIFA’s decision does not change our own commitment to try to bring the World Cup back to the United States,” U.S. Soccer president Sunil Gulati said. “I believe that a U.S. bid will be very competitive.”

South Korea and Japan shared the 2002 World Cup and Germany was the host in 2006.

“If you go back to 2002, and look at the recent history of rotation ... it’s been Asia, Europe, Africa and with 2014 going to South America,” CONCACAF general secretary Chuck Blazer told The Associated Press. “I thought in all logic and fairness the next cycle should be CONCACAF. Regrettably, that did not carry the day.”

FIFA has been under pressure to open the 2018 bidding to allow nations outside CONCACAF to hold the tournament. The rotation system meant that after Colombia dropped out of the 2014 race Brazil became the sole candidate. Blatter was upset more South American countries did not bid.

“Something was missing,” he said. “The competition was lacking, and football is competition.”

Countries belonging to the African and South American confederations will not be eligible to host the 2018 tournament because South Africa and Brazil will have hosted the two previous tournaments.

Those interested in hosting the 2018 World Cup include the United States, England, Russia, Australia, Spain, China, Mexico and a joint bid from the Netherlands, Belgium and Luxembourg.

“Isn’t it nice?” Blatter said. “We have not yet played 2010; we have not yet awarded 2014. Yet we have all this interest in 2018.”

To avoid conflicts of interest involving FIFA executive committee members and countries bidding for 2018, Blatter said track great Sebastian Coe will oversee the process. Coe is the new chairman of FIFA’s ethics committee and the organizing committee chairman for the 2012 London Olympics.

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown was “delighted” FIFA opened the door for the World Cup to return to England.

“By 2018, it will be 52 years since England hosted the World Cup,” he said. “The nation which gave football to the world deserves to have the greatest tournament back on these shores.”

In other decisions:

—FIFA announced new regulations on third-party ownership of players’ contracts.

—Goal-line technology — a soccer ball with a computer chip — will be tested in December at the FIFA Club World Cup in Japan.

—The 2007 Club World Cup winner will receive $5 million, the runner-up $4 million.

—FIFA suspended the Kuwait Football Association because of government interference in soccer.

—FIFA had to pay former general secretary Urs Linsi an unspecified sum because of his golden parachute.

The next FIFA Congress will be May 29-30 in Sydney, Australia.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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