Gianni Infantino Qatar Switzerland Australia New Zealand state Indiana Football FIFA Sporting UPS voice COST cup Gianni Infantino Qatar Switzerland Australia New Zealand state Indiana

'Best' Women's World Cup generates $570m for FIFA - Infantino

channelnewsasia.com

SYDNEY : FIFA chief Gianni Infantino said on Friday the Women's World Cup had generated more than $570 million in revenue and enabled soccer's global governing body to break even, despite raising the prize purse tenfold compared to the 2015 edition.The Swiss, in a typically combative speech, said the ninth edition of the FIFA showpiece event had been the "best and greatest and biggest", and vindicated the decision to raise the prize money and expand the field from 24 to 32 teams. "Some voices were raised, would it cost too much?

We don't make enough revenues, we will have to subsidise. And our opinion was, well if we have to subsidise, we will subsidise, because we have to do that," he told the FIFA Women's Football Convention. "But actually, this World Cup generated over 570 million U.S.

dollars in revenues, and so we broke even. We didn't lose any money and we generated the second highest income of any sport, besides of course the men's World Cup, at a global stage."That was one of the few comparisons to men's football in Infantino's speech.

The $440 million prize purse for the men's World Cup in Qatar is still considerably more than the $152 million being shared by the women in Australia and New Zealand."I say to all the women, you have the power to change.

Related News
Fox News Flash top sports headlines are here. Check out what's clicking on Foxnews.com.
Ireland head coach Andy Farrell names his 33-man squad for the Rugby World Cup on Sunday and it's a panel likely to be short on surprises, with most pundits of the view that only two or three slots remain genuinely up for grabs.
Spain are first-time world champions after a scintillating final performance against England in Sydney. They join Germany as the only countries to have won the men's and women's FIFA World Cups in history.
NEW YORK: Negotiations over television broadcast rights for the Women's World Cup that nearly led to the tournament being blacked out in key countries, gave way to record viewership in the end, as soccer powerhouses Spain and England clashed in a finale that capped a tournament of thrills.
The Women's World Cup may have ended after Spain took home its first title on Sunday, but its legacy has just begun. This year, around two billion people tuned in to watch the games, a stark jump from the 1.12 billion who did the same just four years earlier. 
[FILE] England’s forward #11 Lauren Hemp (L) celebrates scoring her team’s first goal during the Australia and New Zealand 2023 Women’s World Cup quarter-final football match between Colombia and England at Stadium Australia in Sydney on August 12, 2023. (Photo by DAVID GRAY / AFP)

Latest News

Change privacy settings
This page might use cookies if your analytics vendor requires them.