Main articles: FIFA World Cup

Map of FIFA World Cup hosts
Early World Cups were given to countries at meetings of FIFA's congress. The choice of location was highly controversial, given the three week boat journey between
South America and
Europe, the two centres of strength in football at the time. The decision to hold the first cup in
Uruguay, for example, led to only four European nations competing
[1]. The next two World Cups were both held in Europe. The decision to hold the second of these, the
1938 FIFA World Cup in
France was controversial, as the American countries had been led to understand that the World Cup would rotate between the two continents. Both
Argentina and
Uruguay thus boycotted the tournament.
[2] After
World War Two, to avoid any future boycotts or controversy, FIFA began a pattern of alternation between
the Americas and Europe, which continued until the
2002 FIFA World Cup. The system evolved so that the host country is now chosen in a vote by FIFA's executive committee. This is done under a
single transferable vote system. The decision is currently made six years in advance of the tournament.
Voting Results
===
1930 FIFA World Cup===
Bids:
#
#
#
#
#
#
Before the
FIFA Congress could vote on the first-ever World Cup host, a series of withdrawals led to the election of Uruguay; The Netherlands and Hungary withdrew; this was followed by Sweden withdrawing in favor of Italy; then both Italy and Spain withdrew, in favor of the only remaining candidate Uruguay. The FIFA Congress met in
Barcelona on
May 18 1929 to ratify the decision, and Uruguay was chosen without a vote.
Results:
#''
#
''withdrew in favor of Uruguay''
#
''withdrew in favor of Uruguay''
#
''withdrew in favor of Italy''
#
#
===
1934 FIFA World Cup===
Bids:
#
#
Sweden withdrew before the vote, allowing the only remaining candidate (Italy) to take the hosting job for the 1934 World Cup. The decision was ratified by the FIFA Congress in
Stockholm and
Zurich on
May 14 1932, and the
Italian Football Federation accepted the hosting duties on
October 9 1932.
Results:
#''
#
===
1938 FIFA World Cup===
Bids:
#
#
#
Without any nations withdrawing their bids before the vote, the FIFA Congress convened in
Berlin on
August 13 1936 to decide the next host of the World Cup. Electing France took only one ballot, as France had more than half of the votes in the first round.
Results:
#'', 19 votes
#, 4 votes
#, 0 votes
1942 FIFA World Cup
Bids:
#
#
The outbreak of
World War II cancelled both the 1942 and 1946 World Cups; therefore, no vote was taken to determine a host.
===
1950 FIFA World Cup===
Bid:
#
The 1950 World Cup was originally scheduled for 1949, but the day after Brazil was selected by the FIFA Congress on
July 26 1946 in
Luxembourg City,
Luxembourg, the World Cup was rescheduled for 1950.
Result:
#''
===
1954 FIFA World Cup===
Bid:
#
The 1954 World Cup hosting duty was decided on
July 26,
1946, the same day that Brazil was selected for the 1950 World Cup, in Luxembourg City. This World Cup was also (in addition to the 1950 FIFA World Cup) pushed back a year on
July 27,
1946, changing the date from 1953 to 1954. Brazil had an official bid for the 1942 World Cup, but the Cup was cancelled after the outbreak of World War II.
Result:
#''
===
1958 FIFA World Cup===
Bid:
#
As in most of the earlier World Cup bidding, the World Cup bidding process went unopposed, and the FIFA Congress ratified the choice of Sweden (who had withdrawn their bid for the 1930 World Cup) as the host in
Rio de Janeiro on
June 23 1950.
Result:
#''
===
1962 FIFA World Cup===
Bids:
#
#
#
Despite Germany withdrawing before the vote, which took place in
Lisbon on
June 10 1956, there were still two remaining bids, which allowed for a vote by the FIFA Congress. There was only one round of voting, with Chile winning over Argentina.
Results:
#'', 32 votes
#, 11 votes
#
===
1966 FIFA World Cup===
Bids:
#
#
#
Spain withdrew from the bidding prior to voting by the FIFA Congress, held in
Rome on
August 22 1960. Again, there was only one round of voting, with England defeating Germany for the hosting position.
Results:
#'', 34 votes
#, 27 votes
#
===
1970 FIFA World Cup===
Bids:
#
#
The FIFA Congress convened in
Tokyo on
October 8 1964. One round of voting saw Mexico win the hosting duties over Argentina.
Results:
#'', 56 votes
#, 32 votes
===
1974,
1978,
1982 FIFA World Cups===
★ 1974 Bids:
★
★
★
★
★ 1978 Bids:
★
★
★
★
★ 1982 Bids:
★
★
★
★
In an odd set of circumstances, three hosts were chosen in
London on
July 6 1966 by the FIFA Congress. Spain and Germany, both facing each other in the running for hosting duties for the 1974 and 1982 World Cups, agreed to give one another a hosting job. Germany withdrew from the 1982 bidding process while Spain withdrew from the 1974 bidding process, essentially guaranteeing each a hosting spot. Mexico, who had just won the 1970 hosting bid over Argentina just two years prior, agreed to withdraw and let Argentina take the hosting position.
Results:
★ 1974:
★ #''
★ #
''withdrew in exchange for 1982 hosting duties''
★ 1978:
★ #''
★ #
''withdrew, as they had won hosting for World Cup 1970''
★ 1982:
★ #''
★ #
''withdrew in exchange for 1974 hosting duties''
===
1986 FIFA World Cup===
Bid:
★
Host voting, now handled by the
FIFA Executive Committee (or ''Exco''), met in
Stockholm on
June 9 1974 and ratified the unopposed Colombian bid.
Result:
#''
However, Colombia withdrew ''after'' they had already been selected to host the World Cup due to financial problems on
November 5,
1982, just four years before the event was to start. A call for bids was sent out again, and FIFA collected the following interested nations:
★
★
★
In
Zurich on
May 20 1983, Mexico won the bidding unanimously as voted by the Exco, for the first time in FIFA World Cup bidding history (except those nations who bid unopposed).
Results:
#'', unanimous (unknown number of votes)
#(tie), ; 0 votes
===
1990 FIFA World Cup===
Bids:
★
★
★
★
England and Greece both withdrew before the vote, which was to be conducted by Exco in Zurich on
May 19 1984. Once again, only one round of voting was required, as Italy came out on top over the Soviet Union.
Results:
#'', 11 votes
#, 5 votes
#
#
===
1994 FIFA World Cup===
Bids:
★
★
★
Despite having three nations bidding for host duties, voting only took one round. The vote was held in Zurich (for the third straight time) on
July 4 1988. The United States won the bid by receiving a little over half of the votes by the Exco members.
Results:
#'', 10 votes
#, 7 votes
#, 2 votes
===
1998 FIFA World Cup===
Bids:
★
★
★
This vote was held in Zurich for the fourth straight time on
July 1 1992. Only one vote was required to have France take the hosting job over Morocco and Switzerland.
Result:
#'', 12 votes
#, ; combined 7 votes
===
2002 FIFA World Cup===
Bids:
★
★
★
On
May 31 1996, the hosting selection meeting was held in Zurich for the fifth straight time. A joint bid formulated between Japan and South Korea, and the bid was "voted by
acclamation," an oral vote without ballots. The first (and insofar, only) joint bid of the World Cup was approved, edging out the single bid by Mexico.
Results:
#/ (joint bid, voted by acclamation)
#
Controversy
The
2002 FIFA World Cup was the first World Cup held outside the three traditional continents, when the tournament was co-hosted in
Asia for the first time by
South Korea and
Japan. Initially, the two
Asian countries were competitors in the bidding process. But just before the vote, they agreed with FIFA to co-host the event. However, the rivalry and distance between them led to organizational and logistical problems. FIFA has said co-hosting is not likely to happen again, and in 2004 officially stated that its statutes did not allow co-hosting bids.
[3]
===
2006 FIFA World Cup===
Bids:
★
★
★
★
★
On
July 7 2000, the host selection meeting was held for the sixth straight time in Zurich. Brazil withdrew its bid three days before the vote, and the field was narrowed to four. This was the first selection in which more than one vote was required. Three votes were eventually needed. Germany was at least tied for first in each of the three votes, and ended up defeating South Africa by only one vote after an odd abstention (see below).
'Results'| Nation | Vote |
|---|
| 1 | 2 | 3 |
|---|---|---|
| 10 | 11 | 12 |
| 6 | 11 | 11 |
| 5 | 2 | 0 |
| 2 | 0 | 0 |
| 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Total Votes | 23 | 24 | 23 |
|---|
Controversy
The controversy over the decision to award the
2006 FIFA World Cup to
Germany led to a further change in practice. The final tally was 12 votes to 11 in favour of Germany over the contenders
South Africa, who had been favourites to win.
New Zealand FIFA member Charles Dempsey, who was instructed to vote for South Africa by the
Oceania Football Confederation, abstained from voting at the last minute. If he had voted for the South African bid, the tally would have been 12-12, giving the decision to FIFA President
Sepp Blatter, who was widely believed then to have voted for South Africa.
[4] Dempsey was among eight members of the executive committee to receive a fax by editors of the German satirical magazine ''
Titanic'' on Wednesday, the night before the vote, promising a
cuckoo clock and
Black Forest ham in exchange for voting for Germany. He argued that the pressure from all sides including "an attempt to bribe" him had become too much for him.
[5]
Consequently, FIFA decided to rotate the hosting of the final tournaments between its constituent confederations until at least
2014.
[6]
===
2010 FIFA World Cup===
Bids:
★
★ /
★
★
The first World Cup bidding process under continental rotation (the process of rotating hosting of the World Cup to each confederation in turn) was the
2010 FIFA World Cup.
3 This will be the first World Cup held in Africa. It will be the largest sporting event ever held on that continent, as the Olympics have yet to visit Africa. After it was confirmed by FIFA that joint bidding would not be allowed in the future, Libya and Tunisia withdrew both of their bids on
May 8 2004. On
May 15 2004 in Zurich (the seventh time in a row that a host selection has been made there), South Africa, after a narrow loss in the 2006 bidding, defeated perennial candidate Morocco to host, 14 votes to 10. Egypt received no votes.
Results:
#, 14 votes
#, 10 votes
#, 0 votes
#
''withdrew on
May 8 2004 after joint bidding was not allowed''
#
''withdrew on
May 8 2004 after joint bidding was not allowed''
Future World Cups
2014 FIFA World Cup
Bid:
★
The host country for the
2014 FIFA World Cup, which FIFA has earmarked for
South America, will be named in November 2007. The expected choice is
Brazil since
CONMEBOL, the South American Football Federation, has already indicated their preference
[7].
Colombia had expressed its real interest in hosting the 2014 World Cup, but withdrew. Chile and Argentina had shown some interest, hoping to follow the same path as Korea-Japan 2002. FIFA initially indicated that they might back out of the rotation
[8], but later decided to proceed. The official bidding procedure for
CONMEBOL member associations was opened in December 2006, and the FIFA Executive Committee is scheduled to reach a decision on the host country in November 2007.
[9]
2018 FIFA World Cup
Main articles: 2018 FIFA World Cup
Possible Bids:
★
★
★
★
★
★
★ , and (joint bid)
Since FIFA is yet to announce whether the rotation system will continue for this World Cup, countries from several different confederations have expressed their interest in hosting. Countries that have announced their interest include
Australia,
[10]
Canada,
[11]
England[12],
Mexico.
[13] and the
USA[14]. The
Benelux countries have expressed interest in a joint bid.
[15]
References
1. History of 1930 World Cup, BBC. Retrieved on April 13, 2006.
2. France 1938, FIFA World Cup site. Retrieved on April 13, 2006.
3. Host nation of 2010 FIFA World Cup™ - South Africa, FIFA Media Release, May 15, 2004. Retrieved on January 8, 2006.
4. "FIFA president Blatter a big loser with Germany getting 2006 World Cup" by Robert Wagman, ''SoccerTimes'', July 7, 2000. Retrieved on January 8, 2006.
5. "German magazine takes credit for bribery hoax", ''IOL'', July 7, 2000. Retrieved on January 8, 2006.
6. Australia can host World Cup, by Matthew Hall, published 18 September 2005
7. Brazil set to host World Cup, BBC. Retrieved on April 11, 2006.
8. "Games win inspires bid to host 2018 World Cup" by John Goodbody, ''The Times'', November 16, 2005. Retrieved on January 8, 2006.
9.
10. [1]
11. [2]
12. bbc.co.uk FA yet to make 2018 bid decision
13. El Universo
14. [3] US plan bid to stage 2018 FIFA World Cup
15. Benelux trio to apply to host 2018 World Cup
Other sources
★
FIFA World Cup Host Announcement Decision (PDF)
★
Election Procedure, as of 2010 host selection (PDF)