Singapore playing at the World Cup should be more than just a pipe dream

Singapore playing at the World Cup should be more than just a pipe dream


One possibility is for South-east Asian governments to explore a joint bid to host the 2038 edition

[SINGAPORE] Whenever the Fifa World Cup comes around, the question about whether Singapore will ever have the opportunity to compete in the quadrennial tournament inevitably surfaces.

Singapore, of course, has never qualified for football’s grandest tournament, although many fans and the country’s policymakers and sports authorities continue to harbour ambitions of somehow seeing the Lions play at the World Cup Finals one day.

After all, if fellow tiny nations such as Cape Verde and Curacao can qualify, then why not Singapore? Even Iceland, with a population of about an eighth of Singapore, has produced a team that has reached the World Cup finals before, in 2018.

If population is a key factor, then some have pointed out that Singapore – with some 3.2 million citizens – should be able to form a squad of 25 to 30 players that can compete with the very best.

One way to improve standards is to attract foreign talent and grant them citizenship.

France is one example of a success story. They won the World Cup on home soil in 1998 with a strong squad that contained several overseas-born players like Patrick Vieira and Marcel Desailly who were born elsewhere and granted citizenship.

Singapore has tried to do likewise over the years with limited success, as many of the foreign-born players were far from reaching anywhere near world-class standards.




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