The report quoted a source who stressed that the potential of 128 matches in 2030 and the lack of competitiveness in that expanded format would be costly to FIFA's bottom line, and tough for president Gianni Infantino to push through.
“Gianni would not get that vote through Council even if he wanted to,” a FIFA source told the Guardian. “The overwhelming feeling around the table - and not just in Europe - is that 64 teams would damage the World Cup. There’d be too many uncompetitive matches, and it would risk damaging the business model.”
FIFA and CONMEBOL met on Tuesday to discuss the potential expansion, with the South American delegation praising the talks following the meeting following their pitch earlier this year.
"We believe in a historic 2030 World Cup!" CONMEBOL President Alejandro Domínguez said in a social media post after the meeting. "Thank you, President Gianni Infantino, for welcoming us and sharing this journey toward the centennial of football's greatest celebration. We want to call for unity, creativity, and believing big. Because when football is shared by everyone, the celebration is truly global."


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