FIFA World Cup 2026 sponsorship landscape stays traditional as Michelob Ultra skips crypto playbook
The beer giant's 'Superior Player of the Match' award for Belgium's De Ketelaere highlights a broader trend: major sports sponsors are still choosing legacy marketing over token-gated fan engagement.
While crypto firms have been elbowing their way into major sporting events for years, one of the biggest sponsorship deals at the 2026 FIFA World Cup is refreshingly analog. Michelob Ultra, Anheuser-Busch’s low-carb beer brand, is the Official Beer Sponsor of the tournament, and its marquee activation, the “Superior Player of the Match” trophy, involves zero blockchain, zero NFTs, and zero fan tokens.
The latest recipient of that trophy is Belgian forward Charles De Ketelaere, who earned the honor after scoring twice in Belgium’s 4-1 dismantling of the United States in the Round of 16 on July 6-7, 2026. It’s a straightforward fan-voted award.
What happened on the pitch
De Ketelaere, the 25-year-old Atalanta attacker, was the decisive figure as Belgium knocked the host nation out of the World Cup. His two goals anchored a comprehensive Belgian performance that ended 4-1, sending the US home and advancing Belgium to the quarterfinals.
The “Superior Player of the Match” trophy he received was designed in collaboration with artist Victor Solomon. Lionel Messi, who holds the all-time record with 11 Player of the Match awards in World Cup history, unveiled the trophy back in December 2025 as part of Michelob Ultra’s global campaign launch.
The award is determined by fan votes after each match, giving supporters a direct say in recognizing standout individual performances.
The crypto-shaped hole in sports sponsorships
Rewind to the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar. Crypto.com was everywhere. Algorand was an official FIFA blockchain partner. Budweiser (also Anheuser-Busch, notably) launched NFT campaigns tied to the tournament. Fan token platforms like Socios saw surges in activity around national team tokens.
Fast forward four years, and the same parent company behind Budweiser is running its World Cup sponsorship through Michelob Ultra with a completely traditional marketing playbook. No token-gated voting. No digital collectible trophies minted on-chain. No QR codes leading to a wallet download. Just a beer brand, a trophy, and a fan vote.
The 2026 World Cup, co-hosted across the US, Canada, and Mexico, is the biggest stage in global sports. The fact that beer money, not token money, is funding the individual player awards says something about which sponsors FIFA is prioritizing this cycle.