My long-suffering wife and I are at our weekend home in Central Pennsylvania and when we arose this morning the temperature was 38 degrees Fahrenheit; summer is over around here and as I looked at the MLB Playoff results from yesterday it once again struck me that baseball is intended to be a “summer sport” and not one played in frigid conditions. Nonetheless, the teams still alive in the playoffs continue to soldier on…
And there is a mirror image situation to the “baseball-in-October/November” condition, and it should become very apparent next summer. In the summer of 2026, the FIFA World Cup will be hosted in North America by Canada, Mexico and the US. A report by an independent body found that 10 of the 16 venues for that World Cup tournament “are at very high risk of experiencing extreme heat stress conditions.”
I have no interest in launching into a discussion of “global warming” nor “climate change” other than to say that NASA data taken from space proves conclusively that the planet is getting warmer and that the cause(s) for that warming trend are not nearly as conclusively proven. But the planet is getting hotter and that means the weather in summertime is also getting hotter on average.
Back in 2022, the World Cup was assigned to Qatar where summer temperatures were so extreme that FIFA moved the entire tournament from the traditional May/June/July timeframe to November/December 2022. The 2026 games should not need such a drastic measure, but FIFA has already awarded the 2030 and 2034 tournaments to:
- Morocco/Spain/Portugal in 2030
- Saudi Arabia in 2034.
FIFA has an established rule that determines when game conditions require a stoppage for player hydration breaks; based on last summer’s experience with the Club World Cup events held in North America, there is a high likelihood that such hydration breaks will be needed in most of the venues for next year’s World Cup games. And given the warming trend for the planet, the games in 2030 and again in 2034 will be no better.
In Qatar the weather was hot and humid; in North America in the summer, the weather can also be hot and humid PLUS in some areas there can be violent thunderstorms and windy conditions. Even if you ignore the potential effects on games by wind and rain in the summer, look to the mandatory hydration break threshold as a warning sign.
- According to the independent report, “Temperatures in Atlanta, Dallas, Houston, Kansas City, Miami and Monterrey exceeded that mark for two months or more.”
- Should a major heat event hit Mexico City on a game day, there would be the added stress on players of heat plus playing at elevation exceeding 7,000 feet.
It may be time for FIFA and the various major soccer leagues around the world to figure out how to play the FIFA World Cup tournaments in the cooler months of the year depending on where the games are assigned.
- If Finland were the host nation, summer games would probably be OK.
- If Nigeria were the host nation, summer games would not be a good idea.
Moving on … The timing of some events just cannot be established with certainty; the chicken/egg conundrum immediately comes to mind. However, some are sufficiently independent of each other, leading to the case where either one could come first or last. Now consider the situation where Mark Sanchez is recovering from his stabbing and facing felony charges for the fight leading to the stabbing while Sanchez was reportedly “intoxicated”. So, which comes first:
- FOX fires Sanchez as a color analyst – – OR – –
- Sanchez announces that he is going into alcohol rehab?
And then you can add an OVER/ UNDER element to that question and determine when the first of those two actions takes place.
- I’ll set the OVER/UNDER date at Halloween …
Finally, having spent time on the World Cup today, let me close with this from Pele:
“When you play against dirty players or very tough players, it’s easy to escape because you know what they’re going to do. But when the player is tough but intelligent, it’s much more difficult.”
But don’t get me wrong, I love sports………
Speaking of weather, late last Saturday I switched from the DOOK/Cal game to the look in on the UNLV/Wyoming contest and was shocked to see white stuff all over the place! Viewing from here in far SW TX, with temps still in the 80s and sun all day…it was a real surprise. Just sayin’