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The 2026 FIFA World Cup stands out for one reason above all: scale. The tournament will span 16 cities across the U.S., Canada and Mexico, expand to 48 teams and deliver 104 matches. That jump in games and venues creates a content burden for broadcasters and digital platforms that dwarfs previous editions.
Beyond sport, the 2026 event is shaping up as a crucible for global media technology. With many matches staged in North America, viewers in other regions—especially East Asia—will face awkward kickoff times that rule out watching everything live. That’s why networks and platforms are placing a premium on postgame highlights, analysis packages and short-form video to keep fans engaged.
The 2022 Qatar World Cup was compact: 32 teams, 64 matches, concentrated locales. The 2026 tournament will be far more dispersed across countries, cities and time zones. That fragmentation makes it essential to repackage content around the specific games and players fans actually care about.
Industry leaders now argue that the value lies less in simply owning live rights and more in shaping the fan experience after the final whistle. Building a continuous “24-hour fan journey”—from pregame context pieces and real-time key moments to postgame highlights and player-by-player breakdowns—has become a strategic priority.
BBC Sport’s editorial director Andrew Hague put it plainly at industry forums: “Live broadcasts are vital, but the postgame experience is the core of fan retention.” Outlets need formats that let fans catch up quickly through highlights and stay excited for what’s next.
The rub is scale. Producing tailored clips in real time for 104 matches will likely exceed what human editors can handle. The critical bottleneck is speed—identifying moments from global stars and formatting them for short-form platforms, social channels and OTT services in minutes, not hours.
Enter AI-driven sports content tools. Video-technology firm WSC Sports offers systems that automatically analyze match footage and generate key highlights and player-specific clips in real time.
The company says it used AI automation during the 2022 World Cup to produce more than 30,000 highlight clips across 64 matches, roughly 3,000 of which focused on Lionel Messi and Kylian Mbappé. Highlights distributed to Google platforms reportedly drew over 61 million views.
WSC also provided automated solutions to broadcasters in more than 20 countries and says digital-platform viewers exceeded 20 million. BBC’s streaming channels recorded more than 100 million plays for related content.
AI isn’t a cure-all, though. Major questions remain about whether automatic systems can capture match context, emotional arcs and cultural nuance, and how to keep quality control tight on auto-generated content. Preserving a broadcaster’s brand identity and editorial voice amid automation is another open challenge.
Still, many in the industry expect 2026 to accelerate a shift in how sports content is produced. The media race that once centered on live telecasts is moving toward full-day content experiences that keep fans engaged around the clock.
The 2026 North American World Cup will showcase the world’s best players—and serve as a large-scale experiment in just how much AI can change the way fans consume the game.











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