FIFA President Gianni Infantino earlier this week raised the prospect of adding another 16 teams which would reduce the pool of countries with sufficient infrastructure.
"From a 2026 perspective, pick a number (of finalists) and North American can handle it," Victor Montagliani, president of the North and Central America and Caribbean soccer confederation, told The Associated Press. "A CONCACAF bid would be strong regardless of what number we finally set on."
The World Cup was last staged in the CONCACAF region by the United States in 1994. The Americans are keen on another shot at hosting in 2026, potentially linking up with neighbors Canada and Mexico.
After the troubled bidding process for the 2018 and 2022 tournaments, which sparked years of corruption investigations, FIFA will be hoping for a smoother 2026 vote. Originally earmarked for 2017, the decision by the FIFA membership is now not due until 2020.
With Africa, South America, Europe and Asia hosting the World Cups between 2010 and 2022, it had been widely accepted that it should be North America's turn for the first time since 1994.
"There has to be some sort of rotation or else you look what is happening with the Olympics," Montagliani said, referring to Tokyo hosting the 2020 Olympics between the 2018 and 2022 Winter Games in Pyeongchang, South Korea, and Beijing.
"I don't think it's a good thing that it keeps on going to one area. It's not a World Cup that belongs in one region. So I think so sort of rotation needs to occur because the World Cup belongs to the world and we need to respect that." Montagliani applauded Infantino for "thinking outside the box" by floating the idea of a 48-team World Cup.
there will be an "exhaustive process of review and cost benefit analysis." The format and bidding process will begin to be discussed next week when Infantino chairs a FIFA Council meeting in Zurich.
In outlining one potential format earlier this week, Infantino said "You could have a tournament in which the 16 best teams advance to a group stage and the other 16 will came out of a 'playoff' ahead of the group stage, and the World Cup could end up with 48 teams."
The more pressing issues for FIFA center on the 2018 World Cup with the spotlight increasingly on Russia over racism and doping in sport, and the involvement in the war in Syria.
"It's a very delicate situation because we are a sport," he said. "You try to as much as possible stay out of the geopolitics of the world because it's a just a dangerous thing (to mix) and so it is a bit of walking a tightrope.
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