A Four-Section Bracket for the 48-team World Cup

Abstract

The expansion of the FIFA World Cup to 48 teams in 2026 introduces structural challenges in tournament design. To populate a 32-team knockout bracket from 12 groups of four, the current FIFA rules select the eight best third-placed teams using a global ranking across all groups. This global coupling creates several major problems: a combinatorial explosion of 495 possible bracket configurations; a fundamentally biased and unequal selection of third-placed qualifiers; lack of a clear path for group winners; vulnerability to collusion and ranking manipulation; and no guarantee of same-group separation beyond the first knockout round. We propose a simple unified solution called the four-section bracket (FSB) rule: split the 12 groups into four sections of three groups. All group winners, runners-up, and the two best third-placed teams in each section advance. Group winners remain in their home sections as local anchors, while lower-ranked qualifiers are transferred to other sections according to a fixed, symmetric rule. This structure guarantees same-group separation until the semifinal, protects the top eight group winners with a predictable knockout path, and reduces bracket complexity from 495 configurations to just one invariant topology per section, recovering the symmetry of the traditional 32-team format. We show substantial improvements in competitive fairness and scheduling predictability.

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