Opinion

Desert World Cup: to watch or not to watch?

Oliver Fischer
18.11.2022

The world is congregating in the desert to play footie for almost a month. The question is, should we watch? Are we even allowed to? If the most clamouring voices are anything to go by, then we’re not. Ab – so – lute – ly not. But I see things a bit differently.

It remains to be seen how much FIFA will learn from this allocation (and previous difficulties). But we’re entitled to have our doubts. In any case, the next World Cup takes place in 2026 in Canada, the US and Mexico. At least they’re countries with a sporting tradition, even if it’s not specifically football.

Futile boycott discussion

There are a myriad of reasons why this World Cup shouldn’t be held in Qatar and very few reasons (erm, which ones exactly?) why it should. Public debate has flared up around whether football fans in Switzerland should punish the tournament by ignoring it. This discussion is absolutely logical and, for the most part, understandable. But in this moment, right before the start of the tournament, it won’t change anything.

The bottom line is: the World Cup is going to take place. As was planned twelve years ago. The stadiums have been built, sponsorship money has flown in, and TV rights have been sold. Allegedly, thousands of construction workers have paid with their lives and tens of thousands worked in slave-like conditions. These are catastrophes. And they cast a dark shadow not just over Qatar and FIFA, but also the whole world.

Why? Because the uproar, opposition and tournament boycott should have started in 2010. If confederations, national associations and superstars of world football formed a united front to protest against letting Qatar host the World Cup, FIFA might have come to its senses. But as a footballer supposedly said in an interview: «Hindsight is 20/20.»

And now here we are, bickering amongst each other about it not being OK to watch a match on TV. Or about whether it’s alright to turn on the box for one or two games without having too much of a guilty conscience. But of course, without telling anyone.

No one should feel bad about tuning in

*PS: The kind of boycott that I think could change things is one that affects the biggest sponsors – i.e. those who’ve invested the most money. They’re scared of bad publicity. And a bad deal might be enough to stop them signing up to anything FIFA suggests without giving it the slightest thought in future.

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Globetrotter, hiker, wok world champion (not in the ice channel), word acrobat and photo enthusiast.


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