World football governing body, FIFA, are considering introducing penalty shoot-outs to the World Cup group stages at the 2026 tournament to be hosted in USA, Mexico and Canada,
The Mail quoting The Athletic, the decision to implement shootouts – either before kick-off or at full-time – in tied group stage matches in 2026 is being discussed.
As a result there will be an extra knockout round following the groups, with the top two sides set to qualify from the 16 three-team groups – a system adopted following a unanimous FIFA vote.
Staging the shootouts after games does however give rise to potential collusion between the countries involved – something FIFA would understandably be eager to avoid.
A situation could arise in which a particular result benefits both sides in question, and thereby eliminating the third team in the group.
Since 1986 the final round of fixtures in each group has been played at the same time in order to prevent such a circumstance from arising.
So far in Qatar the group stage has seen nine draws – with five of them goalless – which has left several groups coming down to the wire in order to decide who progresses.
And FIFA’s chief officer for technical development Marco van Basten has long been a proponent for the introduction of shootouts to help decide tight groups.
“Shootouts could indeed be an option for tournaments with groups of three in which you play against two opponents,” he told German outlet Sport Bild.
“It can get pretty tight. If one team for instance draws one match 0-0 and wins the other 1-0, there’s a high risk that all three teams are level on points and goals in the end.”
The 2026 tournament will be the largest in the competition’s long history since it was first played in 1930, when Uruguay won the first of their two titles.
However, although a unanimous vote has already passed on the topic of three teams, the conventional four-team group format has reportedly not been entirely written off.
With 48 teams set to qualify, it is mathematically possible to have 12 groups of four with the top two sides progressing as well as the eight best third-placed teams.
It is thought that the current format decreases the risk of two teams playing out a game that merely benefits the both of them, such as 1982’s “Disgrace of Gijon”.
West Germany beat Austria 1-0 – a result that sent both sides through to the next round at the expense of Algeria, who had beaten Chile earlier the same day – with the two sides controversially playing out the rest of the game largely uncontested.
However Bayern Munich’s Champions League-winning coach Ottmar Hitzfeld believes that the final game of the group stages is already a ‘boring’ affair, and a change to the three-team system would increase excitement.
“The third match in the group stage in the World Cup is often boring since the big nations are usually already through,” he claimed.
“With this format, tension would be guaranteed from the beginning and we would swiftly move to the knockout stage.”