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No one tough plays this game. If they were tough and in Oz,ย  they would be playing rugby league/union.ย  Football here thrives mostly as a result ofย  mothers who believe little johnny is going to

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Canada's 3-0 loss today doesn't pay justice to how hard they fought in this game. Yes, Morocco were the better team, but it was 1-0 until the 80-minute mark when the Canadian team pushed forward to tr

Posted

I thought Ozzies were tough. They are being checked to the floor all over the place. US football going on clearly! Wrong game!

Posted
1 hour ago, Chibearsv said:

A sea of yellow on the ground. Favorite move was an OZ grab of a US players arm and hit himself in the face with it, then of course rolled on the ground in agonyโ€ฆuntil he was ignoredโ€ฆthen he played on ๐Ÿ˜‚

If your not tough and you can't act in Aus what options do you have? I guess the soccer team is an option. I'm just grateful for the first game result โ˜บ๏ธ No politics in football indeed...Lol. And the home crowd energy won't have helped them. Well done USA. I was surprised how full the stadium was given the talk of ticket prices. Seems the marketing has payed off! The commentators over here were making quips about how a touch on the face makes them go down hard, rolling around and when there's no decision their way they pop up and run off. It's a terrible part of the game! Well onwards and upwards for both! Kept me entertained during my cigar. Don't let me down next game US! ๐Ÿ˜ ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

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Posted
4 hours ago, ha_banos said:

ย Don't let me down next game US! ๐Ÿ˜ ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

Truer words, ฮฑฮดฮตฯฯ†ฯŒฯ‚ ฮผฮฟฯ…, truer wordsโ€ฆ

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Posted

Finally, Brazil showed their stuff. Loud music blasting after the game in my neighborhood.

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Posted

Fingers crossed that Portugal (who I cheer for) plays Argentina in the quarter-finals. Talk about an epic story line.ย 

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Posted
1 hour ago, benfica_77 said:

Fingers crossed that Portugal (who I cheer for) plays Argentina in the quarter-finals. Talk about an epic story line.

๐Ÿคž๐Ÿคž

Posted

Well done Canada.ย 

And well done Paraguay. Thanks for the penalties. That was fun. Ze Germans, sorry. ๐Ÿคท๐Ÿปโ€โ™‚๏ธ South America seems to care more.

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Posted

I think it's fair to say Germany didn't imagine it's trip being this short. It'll be a long trip home.ย 

The Algerian team is a bunch of clowns. I don't like teams going through the motions, but I like their tactics even less.

Netherlands and Morocco will be interesting tonight.ย 

Cheers!

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Posted

WE drove through the center of town a couple of hours after today's Brazil victory, and it was like a ghost town.ย  Everyone was somewhere. Crazy as it's normally the busiest time of day.

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Posted

Come on Aus! 1-1 against Egypt at full time. More penalties!? I hope so ๐Ÿคฃ Good luck! Watching now...

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Posted
17 hours ago, ha_banos said:

Come on Aus! 1-1 against Egypt at full time. More penalties!? I hope so ๐Ÿคฃ Good luck! Watching now...

They did their best. Tony Popovic, Australia's coach, favoured an inexperienced, yet talented team and they made it to the knockout stages. Australia and Egypt have never won a knockout stage match at the World Cup before so today was going to be a first for both teams.

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Posted
On 6/20/2026 at 10:53 PM, VeguerosMAN said:

I am sure we agree NFL stadiums look glorious at the World Cup.ย ย 

google up what is planned for future world cups - out of this world. one plans a stadium that will sit 300 metres above the ground. they look sensational. honestly, i think they are planning the olympic rowing up in the Mary River so they will lose someone to a croc early and the games can be csncelled with far less embarrassment than awaits us.ย 

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Six-nation madness; $8 TRILLION sky stadium: If you thought this World Cup was crazy, check out the next two

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Bos reveals ruthless WC mentality | 01:58
ย 
Max Laughtonย fromย Fox Sports@maxlaughton
July 2nd, 2026 10:41 pm

If you thought the 2026 FIFA World Cup was wild, wait until you see the next two.

The 48-team tournament, spanning the USA, Mexico and Canada was controversial in the build-up for numerous reasons but as expected once the football began, those concerns faded into the background.

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There have certainly still been issues - from the high ticket prices, to the border issues for many fans, officials and players, most notably the treatment of the Iranian team - but for the most part the World Cup is working as intended.

Weโ€™re certainly a long way from the old days of a single football-mad nation simply using its world-renowned stadiums to host the tournament - France 1998, Germany 2006 and Brazil 2014 come to mind.

South Korea and Japan showed in 2002 that two nations could unite, and share the logistical load. Qatar then took things a step further in 2022, controversially winning the bid over Australia, the USA and others; the tiny nation not known for its footballing prowess then using its riches built on natural resources to construct or renovate eight venues.

But things are going to get even crazier over the next two World Cups - one of them spanning three continents and requiring mid-tournament 13-hour flights, and the other featuring plans looking more like video game concept art.

Even if you think you know whatโ€™s coming up in 2030 and 2034, you may not realise the true extent of it all.

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Ecuador's WC campaign ends on sour note | 00:31

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THE 2030 WORLD CUP: SIX-NATION MADNESS TO SEE TEAMS CROSS ATLANTIC MID-TOURNAMENT

It takes a pretty big country to host a World Cup, especially with 104 matches being played under the new 48-team format.

To help that, the 2026 event was split between three - the USA, Mexico and Canada - easing the burden on any one nation, though creating travel complications.

However thatโ€™s nothing compared to the 2030 World Cup which will be hosted by Spain, Portugal, and Morocco... and also Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay.

If you arenโ€™t a big map person, weโ€™ll help you out here - the Atlantic Ocean sits between those two trios.

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Officially, the 2030 World Cup is being held in six countries to celebrate the tournamentโ€™s 100th anniversary. Uruguay hosted the 1930 tournament, and one match will be held in its capital Montevideo; likewise in Buenos Aires, Argentina and Asuncion, Paraguay.

Those three nations thus count as host nations, and have automatically qualified, while all of the other matches are being held across Spain, Portugal and Morocco - which is a lot more reasonable, given how close the Iberian Peninsula and northern African nation are.

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A BBC graphic showing the distance between the six 2030 World Cup hosts. A BBC graphic showing the distance between the six 2030 World Cup hosts.Source: Supplied

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Six teams will participate in the centenary games in South America, needing to then fly all the way to Europe to play their second group games... which is obviously pretty crazy; a flight from Buenos Aires to Barcelona takes 13 hours.

The teams will almost certainly be given an extended break between matches, likely meaning the tournament begins in South America followed by a multi-day gap and then its resumption in Europe.

Multi-nation World Cup bids will be commonplace over the coming decades, especially if FIFA looks at expanding the tournament even further; there simply arenโ€™t enough stadiums in most countries, given that FIFA requires 14 all-seat venues with a capacity of 40,000.

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The two triplets - Spain, Portugal and Morocco, and Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay - were each looking to bid anyway, with the former bid receiving a higher score on FIFAโ€™s evaluation report.

FIFA conceded in its evaluation this combined World Cup would cause โ€œa significant negative impact on the climateโ€.

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Volpato on Roos: "I felt it was right!" | 03:21

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Throwing the triplets together has some merit due to the anniversary, but for all these reasons has still been controversial; though moreso because of what including all six nations did to the bidding process for theย nextย World Cup.

FIFAโ€™s principle of rotating the tournament between continents meant 2026 host North America wasnโ€™t a contender for 2034; then by including Europe, South America and Africa in the 2030 event, suddenly we were down to just two options - Asia or Oceania.

The decision on 2034 hosting rights was then made with barely a monthโ€™s notice, and while Australia and Indonesia had both considered bidding - either separately or together - it was simply too rushed of a process.

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But Saudi Arabia seemed conveniently well-prepared though and, as the lone candidate, claimed 2034 bidding rights - arguably the pinnacle of its push to become a major player in global sport in recent years.

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Gakpo breaks down after emotional goal | 00:29

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THE 2034 WORLD CUP: STADIUMS IN THE SKY

Saudi Arabia had previously wanted to make a strange joint bid for 2030 also including Egypt and Greece - FIFA wouldโ€™ve had to change the rules to allow the Saudis to make this bid, but its president Gianni Infantino was willing to do so.

Instead, across 2023 plans changed with Saudi Arabia becoming a sole bidder for the 2034 tournament. This meant it would need to commit to a massive construction plan, with 11 of its 15 stadiums being new (even though previous bidding process required a minimum of seven existing stadiums).

The Saudi bid was given the highest rating in FIFAโ€™s history, with a โ€œmediumโ€ human rights risk and a โ€œlowโ€ environmental protection risk.

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The evaluation flagged concerns over the timing of the tournament - Qatarโ€™s 2022 event had to be moved to November/December, avoiding the traditional northern summer timeslot where temperatures on the Arabian Peninsula can exceed 40 degrees - but said Saudi Arabia โ€œpledges to collaborate closely ... to determine the optimal timing for the competitionโ€.

The New York Times reportedย Infantino played a major role in pushing for Saudi Arabia to host the tournament, to the extent he was โ€œpitchingโ€ the nation when speaking with Italian officials in 2020 - right in the middle of the Covid pandemic - around a role in the abandoned 2030 bid plan.

In that report, a FIFA spokesman said โ€œthe selection of venues for the FIFA World Cup takes place through an open and transparent bidding processโ€ and denied Infantino had โ€œtriggered or initiatedโ€ discussions about the Saudi bid with other nations.

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Netherlands choke in penalty shoot AGAIN | 00:28

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Once Saudi Arabia won the hosting rights, attention turned to the extraordinary plans involved - with human rights groups raising similar concerns to those discussed heading into the 2022 Qatar event.

Migrant workers played a key role in Qatarโ€™s stadium builds, with an official conceding there had been โ€œbetween 400 and 500โ€ worker deaths in the 12 years prior to the tournament; a report by The Guardian estimated the number was closer to 6500.

FIFAโ€™s bid evaluation said the Saudi World Cup had the โ€œgood potential to act as a catalystโ€ for human rights reforms.

Either way, migrant workers will play a role in the construction of the new Saudi venues, some of which appear to be utterly extraordinary.

False claims around a stadium being built atop a skyscraper went viral in late 2025 - fooling anyone who didnโ€™t take two seconds to think about how wide the building would need to be, and the impossibility of how many escalators youโ€™d need to build.

To be clear, the image in the post embedded above is not real... but Saudi Arabia DOES want to build a stadium 350 metres above the ground.

The NEOM Stadium is part of the Saudi plans for โ€˜The Lineโ€™, which was initially slated to be a 500-metre tall, 200-metre wide building spanning 170 kilometres (yes, you read that correctly) with mirrored walls.

It would have - note the past tense - accommodated nine million people, with five kilometres built by 2030 and the entire space-age creation being finished by 2045.

Itโ€™s hard to actually picture this sort of thing in your mind; imagine the Empire State Building, but a bit taller. And then imagine it goes for 170 kilometres. Through the desert.

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A render of the initial plan for The Line in Saudi Arabia, which was to span 170 kilometres. A render of the initial plan for The Line in Saudi Arabia, which was to span 170 kilometres.Source: FOX SPORTS

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The project has reportedly been cut back, with the Wall Street Journal reporting the full-sized project had been budgeted at $US8.8 trillion - which, to be fair, sounds like a good deal when you remember weโ€™re talking about a building that spans most of the distance between Sydney and Canberra.

The city of Neom, on the Red Sea on Saudi Arabiaโ€™s north-west coast, is the centrepiece of the mega-project and includes the planned NEOM Stadium.

Saudi Arabiaโ€™s World Cup bid book estimated the venue would have a capacity of 45,000 people, hosting group stage, round-of-32, round-of-16 and quarter-final games.

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It was also to be built on top of a marina, carved into The Line.

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A computer render of the NEOM Stadium including the nearby marina. A computer render of the NEOM Stadium including the nearby marina.Source: Supplied

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โ€œWith a pitch situated more than 350 metres above the ground, stunning vistas and a roof created from the city itself, the stadium will be an experience like no other,โ€ the bid book reads.

โ€œIt will sit at the heart of a new sports-focused neighbourhood, adjacent to the Health and Well-Being District and the University, easily accessed from multiple levels in THE LINE.โ€

The Line was also proposed as the host of the 2034 World Cup draw.

Itโ€™s unclear whether the NEOM Stadium will go ahead as planned, with the Saudi Public Investment Fund recently re-evaluating its priorities, including pulling funding from LIV Golf.

But the futuristic design - the stadiums kinda look like Halo maps - wasnโ€™t limited to that one venue.

The ROSHN Stadium, for example, looks like a series of green shards cutting into the air - its post-World Cup primary use is designated as a โ€œcommunity stadiumโ€.

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The ROSHN Stadium is surrounded by a "crystalline" structure and supposed to glow in the night sky. The ROSHN Stadium is surrounded by a "crystalline" structure and supposed to glow in the night sky.Source: FOX SPORTS

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The Prince Mohammed bin Salman Stadium in Qiddiya, meanwhile, is surrounded by a series of seemingly-floating purple rectangles, like some sort of mid-assembly Transformer.

These will be utterly remarkable buildings if they are completed as designed, though itโ€™s unclear how much is truly possible.

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The Prince Mohammed bin Salman Stadium appears to be cut into the side of a cliff. The Prince Mohammed bin Salman Stadium appears to be cut into the side of a cliff.Source: FOX SPORTS

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A street-level view of the Prince Mohammed bin Salman Stadium. A street-level view of the Prince Mohammed bin Salman Stadium.Source: FOX SPORT
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Posted
12 hours ago, JohnS said:

They did their best. Tony Popovic, Australia's coach, favoured an inexperienced, yet talented team and they made it to the knockout stages. Australia and Egypt have never won a knockout stage match at the World Cup before so today was going to be a first for both teams.

john, getting to the knockouts was certainly an achievement but for me, 32 out of 48? that is every kid wins a prize stuff and the more matches, the more money. i did not see today's game but i cringed when i saw the headlines about how egypt should be ashamed for their tactics about taking dives. lord spare me, pot kettle. soccer players are taught to dive before they can walk.ย 

for me, we had a terrific game, especially the first half, against turkey. but realistically, saved by the keeper. he was sensational. we were very ordinary against the states. against paraguay, seemed that both sides were too scared of losing and it was why soccer can be so hard to watch. so in our six halves in the opening rounds, we had four where we did not score. but we got through so can't argue. no idea about today except i saw the penalties in the highlights. seriously? do we not practice them? especially in this comp? we were dire. we can bitch about players diving and jostling and all manner of crap all we like but when it came to the crunch, when we needed to kick penalties, we failed dismally. sad but hey, every chance the socceroos went further in their world cup than the wallabies will next year. and that will be embarrassing.ย 

how about argentina!! who would have been our next opponents - good luck, egypt. sneak through on an own goal in extra time against cape verde. that might have caused a few riots down in BA. if i was coach, not sure i'd have caught the plane home. ever again. would have been a bigger loss than the falklands.ย 

Posted

No Canadian finishing. Very poor game by Morocco, flopping all over the place. Just did enough to win.

Oh well, time for a cigar!

Posted
3 hours ago, rckymtn22 said:

No Canadian finishing. Very poor game by Morocco, flopping all over the place. Just did enough to win.

Oh well, time for a cigar!

Just enough? 3-0?

But yes, flopping is part of the training ๐Ÿคฃ

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