Ghana head coach Carlos Queiroz has criticized the decision to expand the World Cup to 48 teams, saying it has devalued the qualification process and turned the tournament into something “vulgar and ordinary.”This is the first World Cup to feature 48 teams, with the previous 32-team format being in place since 1998. But the actual decision to expand the tournament was taken in 2017, with FIFA president Gianni Infantino pushing hard for the extra teams.Infantino’s justification was that it increased “access” to the tournament so that more nations and fans could enjoy being part of the world’s most popular sporting event. Critics, however, have suggested his real motivation was to boost FIFA’s revenues and cement his position at the top of the game.Queiroz has managed 11 different national teams during a coaching career that spans more than four decades and, when Ghana beat Panama last in their opening game in Toronto on June 17, the 73-year-old became the oldest manager to win a World Cup match.That win, combined with a hard-earned point against England last week, was enough to secure qualification for the knockout rounds as one of the best third-placed teams. But despite that achievement, the former Manchester United assistant coach is far from convinced that any third-placed teams should be going beyond the group stages.Speaking to the media after Ghana’s 2-1 defeat to Croatia in Philadelphia on Saturday, Queiroz said: “I believe that value comes when things are rare.“The number of teams that can qualify for this competition can turn it into something vulgar and ordinary. When so many teams can qualify, is the value still rare? That would seem debatable to me but it is only my opinion.”Queiroz was appointed as Ghana’s manager in April, which meant he became only the second coach after the legendary Bora Milutinovic to appear at five consecutive World Cups, having taken Portugal to the 2010 competition and then Iran to the next three editions. He also led South Africa to the 2002 World Cup.Infantino and FIFA have long-claimed that the revenues from the World Cup help the growth of football in many countries around the world. (Carl Recine / Getty Images)Queiroz would appear to be in the critics’ camp. And, like others, he is particularly worried about the expanded tournament’s impact on the qualifying competitions.“The real success now in South America would be in not qualifying,” he said, referring to the fact that six of South America’s 10 teams now qualify for the World Cup, with the seventh-place team getting a second chance to do so via the inter-confederation play-offs.“Who did not qualify in Europe? The qualification tournaments start to lose their significance if everyone qualifies. Qualification should be serious, it should be very tough, very competitive.“The World Cup should be something with meaning and significance. It should be rare. But, as you know, today money talks in the game.“Where we used to talk about football, it is now moneyball.”Queiroz and Ghana can now look ahead to a round-of-32 game against Colombia, the winners of Group K, in Kansas City on July 3.“I have just told my players that the real world championship starts in the next round,” he added.“The group stage is the warming-up and qualification for the next round is like a credit card but now you have to start paying. Everything goes to the winner, every game is drama, nobody can hide. That starts next game.”The Athletic has contacted FIFA for comment.Jun 28, 2026Connections: Sports EditionSpot the pattern. Connect the termsFind the hidden link between sports terms
FIFA’s 48-team expansion has made World Cup ‘vulgar and ordinary’, says Ghana coach
Ghana head coach Carlos Queiroz has criticized the decision to expand the World Cup to 48 teams, saying it has devalued the qualification process and turned the tournament into something “vulgar and ordinary.” This is the first World Cup to feature 48 teams, with the previous 32-team format being in place since 1998. But the actual decision to expand the tournament was taken in 2017, with FIFA president Gianni Infantino pushing hard for the extra teams. Infantino’s justification was that it increased “access” to the tournament so that more nations and fans could enjoy being part of...










