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FIFA

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

The FIFA headquarters building in Zurich, Switzerland, featuring flags from around the world.

FIFA, short for the Fédération Internationale de Football Association, is the group that helps manage and grow the game of association football, also called soccer. It began on 21 May 1904 by countries such as Belgium, Denmark, France, and others. Today, FIFA includes 211 teams from all around the world.

FIFA organizes major soccer events like the World Cup, which started in 1930, and the Women's World Cup, which began in 1991. It works to ensure soccer is played fairly and openly everywhere. FIFA also earns a lot of money from sponsors; in 2022, it made over US$5.8 billion.

FIFA has faced some difficult times. Some leaders were accused of unfair actions and mistakes. This led to investigations and some leaders being suspended. Still, FIFA remains very important in the world of soccer.

History

Main article: History of FIFA

As football grew, one group was needed to manage the sport around the world. This led to the start of FIFA on May 21, 1904, in Paris. The countries that started FIFA were Belgium, Denmark, France, the Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, and Switzerland.

The first leader of FIFA was Robert Guérin, followed by Daniel Burley Woolfall from England. FIFA began organizing tournaments, including one at the 1908 Olympics in London. Over time, more countries joined, such as South Africa, Argentina, Canada, Chile, and the United States.

During World War I, it was hard for FIFA to continue because many players were away and travel was limited. After the war, FIFA continued and later organized the first World Cup in 1930 in Montevideo, Uruguay.

Identity

The FIFA flag is blue with the organization's logo in the middle. This flag was first used during the 2018 FIFA World Cup opening ceremony in Moscow, Russia.

FIFA also has a special anthem. This anthem was first used during the 1994 FIFA World Cup and was made by a composer from Germany. It is played at the start of important FIFA events like the FIFA World Cup, FIFA Women's World Cup, and other big tournaments. Since 2007, FIFA often uses this anthem at the beginning and end of broadcasts about their events.

Presidents of FIFA

Main article: List of presidents of FIFA

NoNameCountryTook officeLeft officeNote
1Robert Guérin France23 May 19044 June 1906
2Daniel Burley Woolfall England4 June 190624 October 1918Died in office
Cornelis August Wilhelm Hirschman Netherlands24 October 19181920Acting
3Jules Rimet France1 March 192121 June 1954
4Rodolphe Seeldrayers Belgium21 June 19547 October 1955Died in office
5Arthur Drewry England9 June 195625 March 1961Died in office
Ernst Thommen  Switzerland25 March 196128 September 1961Acting
6Stanley Rous England28 September 19618 May 1974
7João Havelange Brazil8 May 19748 June 1998
8Sepp Blatter  Switzerland8 June 19988 October 2015Expelled
Issa Hayatou Cameroon8 October 201526 February 2016Acting
9Gianni Infantino Italy
  Switzerland
26 February 2016Incumbent

Structure

Main articles: Geography of association football and Geography of women's association football

FIFA has six groups that help manage soccer around the world. These groups look after the sport in different parts of the world, like Asia, Africa, Europe, and more. Each country has its own soccer group that belongs to FIFA.

FIFA headquarters in Zürich, Switzerland

There are 211 countries that play soccer under FIFA’s rules. Some places that aren’t countries also have their own teams. FIFA can stop countries from playing if there are big problems.

FIFA’s main office is in Zurich, Switzerland. The group that makes the big decisions is called the FIFA Congress. Leaders from each country meet once a year to talk about rules and choose leaders for FIFA. The FIFA Council helps make decisions when the Congress isn’t meeting.

The President of FIFA is the main leader. The current president is Gianni Infantino. There are many other groups that help with different jobs.

Governance

The rules that control football, called the Laws of the Game, are looked after by a group called the International Football Association Board (IFAB). FIFA has four members on this board. The other four members come from the football groups of England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland. These five countries created IFAB in 1882. Any changes to the Laws of the Game need agreement from at least six members.

FIFA has its own rules called the FIFA Statutes. It has different groups that help make decisions.

FIFA makes sure football is played fairly around the world.

In 2018, FIFA started letting referees use video to check big decisions during games. This change happened after an important game in 2010 where a ball crossed the goal line but the referee did not see it.

After Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, FIFA decided not to let Russian teams play in its games.

Recognition and awards

FIFA gives out awards each year to honor great players, coaches, and teams in international football. The best men’s and women’s players get special prizes, along with awards for the top coach and best team lineup.

FIFA also has awards for special achievements, like the most beautiful goal of the year or the best goalkeeper in the World Cup. In 2000, they gave awards to name the greatest football club and player of the 20th century.

FIFA Peace Prize

In 2025, FIFA started a new award called the FIFA Peace Prize. This prize is for people who work hard to bring peace and unity. The first prize was given to Donald Trump at the 2026 World Cup draw in Washington, D.C.

FIFA variants

FIFA manages many kinds of football. These include Association football, recognized for men in 1904 and for women in 1988. Other kinds are Futsal, recognized for men in 1986 and women in 2023, Esports recognized in 2004, and Beach soccer, recognized for men in 2005 and women in 2019.

Tournaments

See also: List of association football competitions and FIFA International Match Calendar

Current title holders

See also: Portal:Current events/Sports, 2026 in association football, 2026 in sports, and FIFA International Match Calendar

eSports

See also: Portal:Current events/Sports and 2026 in sports

CompetitionYearChampionsDetailsRunners-upNext
Men's national teams
FIFA World Cup (qualification)2022 (qual.)Argentina Final France2026 (qual.)
Men's Olympic Football Tournament
(U-23)
2024 (qual.)Spain Final France2028 (qual.)
FIFA U-20 World Cup2025 (qual.)Morocco Final Argentina2027 (qual.)
FIFA U-17 World Cup2025 (qual.)Portugal Final Austria2026 (qual.)
FIFA Futsal World Cup2024 (qual.)Brazil Final Argentina2028 (qual.)
FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup
(see BSWW)
2025 (qual.)Brazil Final Belarus2027 (qual.)
FIFA Series2026Australia 
Aruba 
Azerbaijan 
Bulgaria 
Finland 
Kazakhstan 
Puerto Rico 
Rwanda 
Uzbekistan 
RR
Final
Final
Final
RR
RR
Final
Final
RR
 Cameroon
 Liechtenstein
 Sierra Leone
 Indonesia
 New Zealand
 Namibia
 U.S. Virgin Islands
 Grenada
 Venezuela
2028
FIFA Youth Series2025Paraguay Final New ZealandTBD
FIFA Arab Cup
(senior teams of the UAFA (Arab world))
2025 (qual.)Morocco Final Jordan2029
FIFA ASEAN Cup
(senior teams of the AFF (Southeast Asia))
TBD
Women's national teams
FIFA Women's World Cup (qualification)2023 (qual.)Spain Final England2027 (qual.)
Women's Olympic Football Tournament2024 (qual.)United States Final Brazil2028 (qual.)
FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup2024 (qual.)North Korea Final Japan2026 (qual.)
FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup2025 (qual.)North Korea Final Netherlands2026 (qual.)
FIFA Futsal Women's World Cup2025 (qual.)Brazil Final Portugal2029 (qual.)
FIFA Series2026
Men's club teams
FIFA Club World Cup2025 (qual.)Chelsea EnglandFinalFrance Paris Saint-Germain2029 (qual.)
FIFA Intercontinental Cup2025Paris Saint-Germain FranceFinalBrazil Flamengo2026
Women's club teams
FIFA Women's Club World Cup2028
FIFA Women's Champions Cup2026Arsenal EnglandFinalBrazil Corinthians2027
CompetitionSeasonGameWinner
(Player/Gamer ID)
DetailsRunner-up
(Player/Gamer ID)
Next season
Esports
FIFAe World Cup2023EA Sports FIFA 23ManuBachoore - Manuel Bachoore NetherlandsFinalAustralia Mark Zakhary - Mark11N/A
2024Football Manager 2024Ichsan Taufiq (manager), Manar Hidayat (assistant) IndonesiaFinalGermany Sven Golly (manager), Terry Whenett (assistant)N/A
2025Rocket LeagueThéo Sabiani-juicy, Axel Touret-Vatira, Alexis Bernier-Zen FranceFinalSaudi Arabia Yazid Bakhashwin-Kiileerrz, Saleh Bakhashwin-Rw9, Mohammed Alotaibi-trk5112026
2025eFootball ConsoleOstrybuch,
Zilo,
Rdk.GG (coach)
Poland
FinalItaly
Suprema_Ettorito,
Naples,
thesvnom (coach)
2026
eFootball MobileJXMKT ThailandFinalBrazil JUNINHOEFOITBALL
FIFAe Club World Cup
(part of the FIFAe Club Series)
2023EA Sports FIFA 23RBLZ Gaming GermanyFinalUnited Kingdom FUTWIZN/A
2026Football Manager 2026Final2027
FIFAe Nations Series
(part of the FIFAe Nations Cup)
2023EA Sports FIFA 23
(Paulo Henrique Chaves)
(Pedro Henrique Soares)
(Paulo Neto) Brazil
FinalNetherlands
(Levi de Weerd)
(Manuel Bachoore)
(Emre Yilmaz)
N/A
FIFAe Continental Cup2023FIFA Online 4FaZe Clan ThailandFinalChina Manchester City EsportsN/A

FIFA World Rankings

The FIFA World Rankings are a way to show how good national soccer teams are. They are updated every month. The rankings are made by FIFA, the group that helps run soccer around the world.

The rankings look at how teams do in games, how strong their opponents are, and how recent the games are. Points are given based on these things. Teams with more points are higher in the rankings.

The rankings help decide which teams can play in big tournaments like the World Cup. They also show which countries have the best soccer teams at any time.

The top teams often change, so the rankings can move up and down each month. This makes it fun to watch and see which teams are doing well.

More about FIFA

Sponsors of FIFA

Some big companies help support FIFA. These include well-known names like Adidas, Coca-Cola, HyundaiKia, Lenovo, and Visa. These partners help make international football events possible.

FIFA+

In April 2022, FIFA started FIFA+, a service that shows up to 40,000 live matches each year. This includes 11,000 matches for women’s teams. It also offers old matches from past FIFA World Cups and FIFA Women’s World Cups, along with special documentaries. Eleven Sports helps provide these live matches on the FIFA+ platform.

FIFA+ shows all matches from youth World Cups for both boys and girls, starting with the 2023 FIFA U-20 World Cup. It also showed the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup live in places like Japan, Brazil, Indonesia, and Thailand.

FIFA+ has rights to show competitions in Oceania, including the OFC Champions League and the OFC Women’s Olympic Qualifying Tournament. It also covers New Zealand’s domestic leagues and national teams.

Competitions

As of 16 May 2025, FIFA+ covers these competitions:

International

  • OFC Women’s Champions League
  • OFC U-16 Men’s Championship
  • OFC U-16 Women’s Championship
  • OFC Men’s Champions League
  • OFC U-19 Men’s Championship
  • OFC U-19 Women’s Championship
  • OFC Men’s Nations Cup
  • CAFA Nations Cup (final and third-place match only)
  • UNCAF Women’s Interclub Championship
  • COSAFA Cup
  • COSAFA Women’s Champions League
  • COSAFA Women’s Championship
  • COSAFA U-17 Youth Championship
  • COSAFA U-17 Women’s Championship

National

Only in: !Nicaragua

Channels

Corruption

Further information: 2015 FIFA corruption case

In 2006, a book by journalist Andrew Jennings talked about problems inside FIFA. It mentioned unfair deals and voting for big FIFA choices. A TV program showed that some FIFA leaders might have gotten secret payments.

In 2015, many FIFA leaders were arrested for unfair deals and secret payments. This made people question how FIFA was run.

The choice of Russia to host the 2018 World Cup and Qatar to host the 2022 World Cup was criticized. Some people thought there might have been unfair voting or secret deals.

Many people have asked FIFA to change how it is run to prevent these problems. Some sponsors have also shown concern about these issues.

Images

A stunning photograph of Earth taken from space during the Apollo 17 mission.
Icon of a female soccer player, representing women's association football.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on FIFA, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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