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Is football eating itself? Not before it eats other sports first

The World Cup has become so big that it now puts all other sports in the shade, laments Ed Warner. I remember the summer of 1976 as a swathe of bleached playing fields, jumpers for goalposts and pick-up games of cricket. There happened to be an international football tournament that

  • Ed Warner
  • June 25, 2026
  • 0 Comments

Thursday 25 June 2026 7:00 am  |  Updated:  Wednesday 24 June 2026 3:54 pm

The World Cup has become so big that it now puts all other sports in the shade, laments Ed Warner.

I remember the summer of 1976 as a swathe of bleached playing fields, jumpers for goalposts and pick-up games of cricket. There happened to be an international football tournament that June, but I defy anyone to remember having watched Antonin Panenka’s iconic chipped penalty in real time, however often its retelling in the 50 years since.

The 1976 Uefa European Championship comprised just four teams: Panenka’s victorious Czechoslovakia, penalty shoot-out losers West Germany, the Netherlands and hosts Yugoslavia. All over in four matches spanning five days.

England’s qualifying campaign had come up short the previous November, leaving the way clear for Bjorn Borg, Chris Evert. Johnny Miller, Alberto Juantorena, Nadia Comaneci, David Wilkie, Niki Lauda, James Hunt, Viv Richards and Michael Holding to create the ‘76 heatwave’s sporting headlines.

The behemoth that is the 2026 Fifa World Cup threatens to crush awareness of other sports during the current boiling spell. 

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We’re almost exactly halfway through the tournament, with 52 of 103 matches completed, but the truly meaningful stuff doesn’t begin until Sunday with the Round of 32. 

I’ve broken my vow not to watch a full match until then – first to enjoy and then endure England’s opening two fixtures. But highlight clips and written reports are moreish and hard to escape if football is in your blood.

I’m not saying four teams is the ideal tournament size, but one columnist’s call this week for an expansion from 48 to 64 nations to avoid third-place qualification absurdities felt like a knife to my sport-watching soul. It is at times like this that mankind’s tendency to addiction is easy to understand.

The rest of the sporting world has kept turning, but has struggled for airtime. Controversies have cut-through, sure: Ben Stokes’s one-match exile from the England Test team, and the heckling of Wyndham Clark on his way to victory at the US Open, are standout examples. 

That golf major may have struggled for a single column inch without the boorish crowd at Shinnecock Hills, though. Similarly, County Championship cricket only got a mainstream media look-in last weekend to follow Stokes’s exploits for Durham while the England team toiled in his absence.

Would you have known the UK Athletics Championships were taking place in Birmingham had it not been for Keely Hodgkinson’s tears on withdrawing before the start of the 400m final? And it’s too late to buy a ticket if you only realised they were taking place after the event. 

The ICC Women’s T20 World Cup may have passed you by for lack of media oxygen, but there are still tickets available for almost all matches including both semi finals at The Oval next week.

Increasingly, sport away from football and big events is for the cognoscenti, its leaders challenged to find ways to create awareness among potential new audiences. No smart digital media marketing strategy? Might as well curl up now.

The Championships start at Wimbledon on Monday and will benefit from the time difference between the US and London SW19. Perhaps the evening sessions on the show courts will be reserved for lesser matches rather than the superstars of tennis this year.

No difficulty for the All England Club in building publicity for its tournament, even with the smothering World Cup. The return of Serena Williams to the sport is marketing gold dust for the organisers nonetheless. 

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Based purely on one afternoon in the Centre Court stands for an early-round match back in the day, Williams is unarguably the greatest female athlete I’ve ever seen live. Whatever transpires for her in the next fortnight – either in the singles or paired up with sister Venus in the doubles – is sure to be a huge story. If only I’d ever been successful in the Wimbledon ticket ballot…

None of this, of course, is football’s fault. You might think it is in danger of eating itself, but it seems more likely to eat other sports first. 

If you can’t tear yourself away from the World Cup, why not at least vow to seek out alternative sporting entertainment in the month after its final and the start of the domestic football season? The more niche your selection, the shorter the queue at the ice cream van is likely to be.

Dog ate my homework

The other big pre-Wimbledon story has been the four-year ban handed to Marketa Vondrousova for refusing an out-of-competition no-notice doping test. My first reaction, as only the most casual tennis follower, was: who? 

And therein lies one of tennis’s real challenges in recent years, for Vondrousova not only won the women’s singles in 2023 but was the first unseeded woman to do so.

As to a four-year ban, the player’s refusal took me back to my early days at UK Athletics and excuses I heard from those who had missed (rather than refused) tests. 

A door bell not working, changed travel plans after an earlier than expected exit at a champs, getting “lucky” in a nightclub and spending the night in a stranger’s bed. Each counting towards the “three strikes” ban rule. 

An outright refusal is something else entirely, however, and I’m not surprised at a four-year ban that’s in line with the regulations.

“Unpredictable testing is an essential tool to protect clean sport.”

International Tennis Integrity Agency’s CEO, Karen Moorhouse

Those comparing Vondrousova‘s case with the very short bans given to Jannik Sinner (three months) and Iga Swiatek (one month) for failed tests in 2024, or earlier reduced-on-appeal bans for Simona Halep and Maria Sharapova would do well to argue for lesser leniency in such cases in future than more of it for Vondrousova’s. Expect much of such comparisons in the inevitable appeal.

Saints alive!

I pressed send too early on a draft of my newsletter yesterday. One reader responded to my false start:

“That’s good news Ed – maybe we can have a mention of Northampton Saints’ mighty triumph in the final version! Third consecutive major final – two Prem titles in three years – start of a period of dominance?”

There you go, happy to oblige. Had it been football, that would have been a different matter…

Snow joke (sorry!)

And another reader of my fat-fingered release replied to my 1976 reminiscences:

“By contrast the previous year had the only instance of snow stopped play. Derbyshire v Lancashire at Buxton. June 2nd 1975. Clive Lloyd had hit a big hundred on the Saturday in Lancashire’s 477-2. And inevitably one of the umpires was Dickie Bird.”

Ed Warner is chair of GB Wheelchair Rugby and writes his sport column at sportinc.substack.com

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