Why the World Cup Visa Drama and Ticket Tensions Matter Before the Big Kickoff

Estadio Azteca, Mexico CityThu Jun 11 2026
Just one day before the World Cup opener in Mexico City, FIFA’s top leader faced questions about two problems that keep popping up every time the world’s biggest football tournament rolls around: visas and ticket prices. While stadiums prepare for massive crowds, officials admit they can’t do much when travelers get turned away at borders—even if their papers seem fine on paper. Take Somali referee Omar Abdulkadir Artan, who was stopped from entering the U. S. despite having an approved visa. FIFA calls the denial a government decision but still says it’s “working behind the scenes” to smooth things over. The U. S. claimed Artan had ties to groups linked to terrorism, a claim FIFA can’t challenge but can only try to explain away. It raises a bigger question: when countries take sides in geopolitics, who really controls who gets to play football?
Ticket costs sparked another debate. FIFA boasts selling over six million tickets, but critics argue prices start at sixty dollars—cheap for American sports finals, but still too high for most fans in poorer countries. The organization insists every dollar goes back into growing the game worldwide, yet the logic feels weak when seats end up scalped online at five times the price. Demand was ten times higher than expected, proving how badly people want to see the expanded 48-team tournament. At the same time, the same governing body pushes a message of unity while complaining that immigration rules are out of its hands.
https://localnews.ai/article/why-the-world-cup-visa-drama-and-ticket-tensions-matter-before-the-big-kickoff-50797394

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