
This 2026 FIFA World Cup has a different feel to previous editions.
The tournament has arrived with political tension, visa issues, brutal ticket prices, huge travel costs and an atmosphere that has not always felt welcoming to supporters. Those problems have shaped the backdrop, but another concerning shift is now happening during the games themselves.
Football in North America — particularly in the US — has always had to resist the forces of business attempting to extract maximum profit from The Beautiful Game. This World Cup is a prime example, because FIFA have found new ways to turn even the natural flow of a match into another revenue opportunity.
FIFA’s insatiable appetite for profit is ruining the feel of the World Cup
The signs are everywhere.
Dynamic ticket pricing has helped make the tournament brutally expensive for fans. Broadcasters have been handed new windows to run adverts. Hospitality packages have leaned heavily into the premium market. Even stadium names have been stripped back to protect FIFA’s commercial partners.
This World Cup feels more commercialised toward FIFA than toward the World Cup as an event. The spectacle is still there, but too often it feels like the football is being built around the business model rather than the other way around.
The most obvious example is the hydration break.
Hydration breaks make sense in extreme heat. Nobody should argue against player safety in Qatar, parts of the United States — anywhere conditions demand it.
But at this World Cup, the breaks are mandatory in every match, regardless of temperature. They last three minutes, come midway through each half and effectively split the game into four quarters.
FIFA can point to player welfare, but fans can see what is happening. Songs are allowed to finish. Broadcasters have time to cut away. Stations can return from adverts before play properly resumes.
It feels less like a medical necessity and more like the first step toward turning football into a format that better suits American television, and that’s where fans should be far more angry.
If a referee stops a game in dangerous heat, nobody complains. If a referee stops a game because the rulebook now demands a commercial-friendly pause, fans are right to ask what the sport is becoming.
There have already been games where the conditions have not looked dangerous enough to justify stopping the match. When the roof is closed, the temperature is controlled and players have barely broken a sweat, it becomes harder to sell the break as purely about safety.
That is the problem. The break may be dressed up as player welfare, but it feels more like a cash-grab. It ruins the rhythm for players, it disrupts the flow for fans in the stadium, and it changes the experience for those watching at home.

Once commercial breaks become normal inside football matches, they will be very hard to remove. What is sold as protection today can become a permanent broadcast feature tomorrow.
FIFA went from Qatar to the United States, Canada and Mexico. Next comes Spain, Portugal and Morocco. After that, Saudi Arabia will host.
Maybe it is too much to say every host choice has been shaped around conditions that make hydration breaks easier to justify. That would sound a bit too tinfoil hat.
But would anybody really put it past Gianni Infantino and co?
The World Cup is meant to feel like the purest version of football. This one too often feels like a test case for how much of the sport can be sold without supporters walking away.






