FIFA World Cup 2026 final unites nations beyond football: Shaji Prabhakaran
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The 2026 FIFA World Cup final between Spain and Argentina is far more than a match to determine the planet's best football side, according to Shaji Prabhakaran, former general secretary of the All India Football Federation (AIFF). Speaking ahead of the title clash, Prabhakaran described the summit contest as a global celebration that transcends sport itself, reflecting football's unique power to bridge cultures, communities, and nations.
A Tournament That Delivered
Prabhakaran said the expanded 48-team format had raised the competitive bar across the board. 'This World Cup so far has been remarkable in terms of what we could witness with the expansion of 48 teams and the way the competition went, and there were real top-class performances, and the final between Spain and Argentina is huge,' he said.
The larger field, introduced for the 2026 edition, was designed to broaden global participation and, by most assessments, delivered on its promise of high-quality football alongside unprecedented geographic diversity in the knockout rounds.
Football as a Force Beyond the Game
Prabhakaran was emphatic that the World Cup's significance extends well beyond ninety minutes of play. 'Football brings people together and nations together and where it is the biggest celebration and it is where the biggest assembly of culture happens,' he said. He added that the impact reaches not just hardcore fans but ordinary citizens worldwide — a testament to football's unmatched global reach.
On the humanitarian dimension, Prabhakaran noted that football provides hope and emotional sustenance to communities facing hardship. 'It also lifts the spirits of people who are kind of suffering because that gives a lot of joy and satisfaction in the life and then they try to look for hope and football gives them that hope,' he said.
Economic Impact: Over $40 Billion Globally
The former AIFF chief highlighted the tournament's formidable economic footprint, citing figures that underscore its scale. 'Economically, it is a huge success, and there is a report in the US that it has contributed $20 billion within the US economy; that's huge, and $20 billion outside the US, there is more than $40 billion impact of this World Cup globally,' Prabhakaran said.
Such numbers position the 2026 FIFA World Cup as one of the most economically consequential sporting events in history, reinforcing arguments for continued investment in football infrastructure across host and participating nations alike.
2 Billion Eyes on the Final
With the Spain-Argentina final expected to draw a global television and streaming audience of 2 billion people, Prabhakaran said the sheer scale of viewership encapsulates what makes football irreplaceable. 'Tomorrow when the final will be, it will be watched by 2 billion people; that is huge, humongous, and that's what football does to the world,' he said.
The final is widely anticipated to be one of the most-watched broadcasts in television history, pitting two of the sport's most decorated nations against each other on the grandest stage. As the world prepares to tune in, Prabhakaran's assessment frames the occasion not merely as a football match, but as a rare moment of collective human experience.