Poll finds support for English FA to step in if Qatar stripped of World Cup 2022

The construction site for the Lusail stadium north of Doha. (AFP file photo)
Updated 05 February 2019
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Poll finds support for English FA to step in if Qatar stripped of World Cup 2022

  • Ipsos MORI poll finds a third of Brits support English bid to host tournament if Qatar is stripped as host
  • Just 5 per cent support Qatar holding the tournament at all

LONDON: A third people in the UK believe the allocation of the football World Cup 2022 to Qatar was the wrong decision, a survey has found.

Furthermore, many believe the English FA should step in with a bid to host the competition should the tiny emirate no longer be able to host the event.

Qatar’s hosting of the tournament has been rocked by controversy ever since the shock FIFA decision to give the country the event was made in 2010. Allegations of rampant corruption during the bidding process and the treatment of workers building the stadiums have sparked widespread calls for Qatar to be stripped of the event -  possibly leading to another country to step in. 

In the UK, there is “very little support” for Qatar hosting the prestigious and historic tournament, according to the poll by Ipsos MORI, which was commissioned by Cornerstone Global strategy consultants. Just 5 percent of those asked felt it was the right decision.

“Active football supporters or those with an interest in the World Cup were more likely to feel it was the wrong decision,” the poll found.

About half said they were in favor of an independent investigation into the way the Qatar bid team ran its campaign.

Some 38 percent said they would want the English FA to step in with a bid should Qatar be stripped of the tournament.


Sabalenka says Kyrgios match will not harm women’s tennis reputation

Updated 11 December 2025
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Sabalenka says Kyrgios match will not harm women’s tennis reputation

  • Sabalenka will play the Australian, ranked 672 in the world, on December 28
  • “I am not putting myself at any risk,” the 27-year-old Belarusian told the BBC

LONDON: World number one Aryna Sabalenka says she is not concerned that losing to Nick Kyrgios in this month’s ‘Battle of the Sexes’ exhibition could damage the reputation of women’s tennis.
Four-time Grand Slam champion Sabalenka will play the Australian, ranked 672 in the world, on December 28.
“I am not putting myself at any risk,” the 27-year-old Belarusian told the BBC. “We’re there to have fun and bring great tennis. Whoever wins, wins.
“It’s so obvious that the man is biologically stronger than the woman, but it’s not about that. This event is only going to help bring women’s tennis to a higher level.”
Some have criticized the event which has echoes of the original 1973 Battle of the Sexes match in which women’s trailblazer Billie Jean King was challenged by 55-year-old former Grand Slam winner Bobby Riggs who claimed women’s tennis was far inferior to men’s.
King won the match in Houston with the contest attracting a reported 90 million television viewers.
Unlike Riggs, Kyrgios is still an active Tour player although he played only five professional matches in 2025 because of the injuries that have dogged his career.
“It’s not going to be an easy match for Nick,” Sabalenka said. “I’m going to be there competing and showing women are strong, powerful and good entertainment.
“He’s in a lose-lose situation. I’m in a win-win situation.”
Kyrgios, the former world number 13, said in September that women can’t return men’s serves and that he would beat Sabalenka without having to try 100 percent.
However, he said the match would increase respect between the men’s and women’s Tours.
“So I can’t do anything other than hope me and Aryna play our best tennis and, at the end of the day, whoever wins, that our handshake afterwards solidifies the union between males and females in the tennis world,” he said.