Two-time World Cup winner Ronaldo Nazario will lead a special taskforce created to try to eradicate racism, discrimination, and violence in South American soccer.
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South America has six direct berths in the next World Cup, a 48-team tournament to be hosted by the United States, Canada and Mexico. Argentina was assured of one of the six spots when seventh ...
Qualification for the 2026 World Cup is in full flow across the globe and some nations are starting to book their spots in the tournament in North America. Teams from Oceania, South America and Asia ...
The participating nations in 2026 will come from all six FIFA confederations: UEFA (Europe), CONMEBOL (South America), AFC ...
Brazil can prove their critics wrong by ending their winless run against old foes Argentina, coach Dorival Jr said ahead of ...
fans can turn their attention back towards the final few weeks of the European domestic season and the burgeoning campaigns in the United States and South America. International breaks are often ...
In addition to Ronaldo, former FIFA Secretary General Fatma Samoura and former Argentina player Sergio Marchi, president of FIFPRO South America, will be part of the task force.
and violence in South American soccer, the sport's continental governing body said Thursday. “Its mission will be to design policies and establish prevention and sanction mechanisms that ...