Lillian Thomson
Hall of Fame Member
What’s the “big advantage” in that?
Yeah qualification would be awful but everyone hates it anyway. Maybe they could just fully incorporate it into the nations league? Not sure how that would actually work.Thinking about it, I'm not sure a 32 team tournament would dilute the quality that much.
There's probably enough semi-competent teams who missed out who aren't significantly worse than the poorest 8 teams to qualify.
There's (say) Serbia, Slovenia, Bosnia, Romania, Bulgaria, Greece, Norway, Iceland, Eire & Northern Ireland. Perming any 8 from them stacks up reasonably well against (say) North Macedonia, Turkey, Finland, Scotland, Austria, Ukraine, Slovakia and Poland.
Will make qualification a farce, but lessen the potential for carve ups and the need for slide rules in the actual tournament group stages.
You're kidding; that had completely slipped through my radar. How many teams will take part from 2026?Yeah groups of 3 are the absolute worst. Which is great because the World Cup is going to have that from 2026
48. They were nearly going to try and push it through for 2022 as well.You're kidding; that had completely slipped through my radar. How many teams will take part from 2026?
Ha, quite.Thanks. So no stitch-ups or unfair advantages at all in the final group games then.
Yeah, I know, and you probably know that there haven't been those collusions since then because that match ensured that the final group games have been played simultaneously since 1982. Peru/Argentina in 1978 the other obvious example of course. So even if there weren't cases before then, having two examples in successive WCs suggests to me that the age of innocence had long since passed. Thinking about it, the 1962 England/Bulgaria game belongs in this discussion too. England needed a point to progress past the group stage and Bulgaria were happy with a draw having lost their previous two games. It finished 0-0 and, according to Bobby Moore, was the worst game he ever played in as circumstances dictated that a goalless draw suited both teams.The Germany/Austria game wasn't a three team group. The problem was that the last group games weren't played simultaneously. Even then the fact that that one match is so often quoted shows how these collusions hardly happen anyway.
The 2026 tournament will be held in North America, where the prevailing opinion is nothing of interest in the round ball code happened before 1992I'm staggered. You'd think that the Austria/West Germany pact in 1982 would still be remembered by the people making these decisions.
The England/Bulgaria game doesn't sway any sort of argument for anything though. That was the most generic 16 team, 4 group tournament format ever. There is nothing you can do to eliminate every possible situation where the last group games might throw up the odd game where a particular result suits both teams. All you can do is do away with groups altogether and just have a straight knock out tournament.Yeah, I know, and you probably know that there haven't been those collusions since then because that match ensured that the final group games have been played simultaneously since 1982. Peru/Argentina in 1978 the other obvious example of course. So even if there weren't cases before then, having two examples in successive WCs suggests to me that the age of innocence had long since passed. Thinking about it, the 1962 England/Bulgaria game belongs in this discussion too. England needed a point to progress past the group stage and Bulgaria were happy with a draw having lost their previous two games. It finished 0-0 and, according to Bobby Moore, was the worst game he ever played in as circumstances dictated that a goalless draw suited both teams.
It will be interesting to see how the Austria/Ukraine game pans out this week. With both teams on 3 points, a scoreless draw may seem an attractive option.