Spain’s 16,500-kilometer World Cup odyssey highlights the logistics gamble of FIFA’s expanded tournament format
The 2026 World Cup's sprawling North American footprint is testing teams, broadcasters, and the multi-billion dollar sports betting markets built around fair competition.
Spain has traveled more than 16,500 kilometers and crossed six time zones just to reach the semi-finals of the 2026 FIFA World Cup. Their opponent, France, has had a considerably lighter travel schedule.
The semi-final takes place in Dallas, the latest stop on a continental road trip that has taken Spain across the United States, Canada, and Mexico, the three co-hosts of the first-ever 48-team World Cup. France, meanwhile, has benefited from a far more consolidated travel path.
A World Cup built for scale, not for players
Spain’s journey is the poster child for that tradeoff. Over 16,500 kilometers of air travel since the tournament began, with six time-zone changes stacked on top. France, by contrast, appears to have drawn a friendlier hand from the scheduling gods. Their travel logistics have been described as significantly lighter, a gap that becomes material when you’re talking about elite athletes performing at the highest level every few days.