The real winners of World Cup advertising aren’t paying FIFA a cent, and Australian brands should be paying attention

As the FIFA World Cup unfolds across stadiums in the United States, Canada and Mexico, the more interesting story for Australian marketers and investors is not happening on the official sponsor boards. It is happening on TikTok and across social media, where brands with no contractual relationship to FIFA are generating roughly double the engagement of those who paid for the privilege.

That gap matters tells a story beyond where value actually sits in the modern sports economy, and Australian businesses watching from a distance should be asking whether they are positioned to capture it.

The numbers behind the moment

Global advertising spend tied to the 2026 World Cup is projected to reach 10.5 billion US dollars, according to marketing research firm WARC Media, just shy of the 12.6 billion recorded for the 2018 tournament in Russia. That is an extraordinary amount of capital chasing attention around a single sporting event, and it reflects something Australian football stakeholders have argued for years: football is not a niche sport competing for marginal advertising dollars. It is one of the largest commercial vehicles on the planet.

Yet the most engaging brand activity during this tournament has not come from the companies writing the biggest cheques. Market intelligence firm Meltwater found that non-sponsor brand collaborations generated nearly 61 million engagements in the buildup to the tournament, compared with 33 million for official sponsors. Since the tournament began, non-sponsor brands have surpassed 57,000 social media mentions against just over 43,000 for sponsors.

Lego, which holds no official sponsorship, accounted for 82% of the most engaging non-sponsor posts across platforms. Nike, also outside the official sponsor tier, generated more than 70 million YouTube views for a campaign featuring Erling Haaland and Cristiano Ronaldo alongside Kim Kardashian and LeBron James. Its rival Adidas, an official sponsor constrained by FIFA’s brand guidelines, managed roughly 7 million views for a comparable campaign.

Why this should matter to Australian capital

The lesson here is not that sponsorship is worthless. It is that the value of football as a commercial asset is no longer confined to the official channels that have traditionally controlled access to it. A brand with creative freedom, cultural fluency and the speed to act on a real-time moment can now outperform a brand that paid tens of millions of dollars for exclusive rights.

“A big takeaway from this World Cup is that you don’t need an official sponsorship to own the cultural moment anymore,” Meltwater CEO John Box said. “The brands that will win the next tournament aren’t necessarily the ones with the biggest budgets, but instead the ones who are set up to see what’s trending in real time, the creativity to connect it back to your brand, and the speed to act before the moment passes.”

For Australia, that is a meaningful signal. The AFC Women’s Asian Cup, held on home soil earlier this year, generated record attendance and unprecedented engagement for women’s football in this country. Football Australia and the state federations have spent the months since making the case for sustained government and private investment in facilities and pathways to capitalise on that moment. What the World Cup advertising data demonstrates is that the commercial opportunity around football extends well beyond what governing bodies control. A brand does not need to be a Football Australia partner to build genuine equity in the sport’s cultural moment. It needs to understand the audience and move faster than the official sponsors can.

The cost of restriction, and the value of nerve

Some of the tournament’s most successful brand moments have come directly from the limitations FIFA imposes on non-sponsors. Levi’s, whose naming rights branding at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara had to be covered for tournament matches, turned the restriction into the most commented and shared post in the company’s history by leaning into the absurdity on social media. Gillette did the same at its Massachusetts stadium, designing its mandatory cover to resemble shaving foam.

“What started as a naming rights sponsorship restriction at the Levi’s Stadium became the most commented and shared post in Levi’s history,” the company’s chief marketing officer Kenneth Mitchell wrote. Mentions of the brand rose 44% after the tournament began, with engagement nearly quadrupling once the stadium covering campaign launched.

There is a lesson in that for Australian companies considering football sponsorship at any level, from the A-Leagues down to state league naming rights deals already common across Football Victoria, Football SA and Football Queensland competitions. Constraint handled with genuine creative nerve can generate more value than an unrestricted but conventional campaign. The companies thriving in this tournament are not simply spending more. They are reading the cultural moment and reacting to it with speed and irreverence that larger, more risk-averse sponsors struggle to match.

A market still undervalued

Andrew Rohm, professor of marketing at Loyola Marymount University, frames the split as a contest between “the expected and the unexpected.” Companies unconstrained by FIFA’s rules are simply having more fun, and audiences are responding to that authenticity.

That dynamic should be read by Australian investors and brand strategists as evidence of an underpriced asset. Football’s audience in Australia has grown substantially, driven by the Asian Cup, the Socceroos’ continued World Cup qualification and a women’s game generating record broadcast and attendance figures. The commercial infrastructure around the sport in this country, sponsorship rates, broadcast deals, naming rights, remains comparatively modest next to that of the AFL and NRL. The American experience suggests the ceiling for football-adjacent commercial value is far higher than current Australian sponsorship pricing reflects, particularly for brands willing to move with creativity rather than simply buying the largest available signage package.

As Jared Watson, assistant professor of marketing at NYU’s Stern School of Business, put it, audiences are responding to brands that feel adversarial to the commercialisation of the game itself, even as that commercialisation accelerates. FIFA’s introduction of mandatory in-game hydration breaks, criticised by fans as a thinly veiled advertising mechanism, has only sharpened that appetite for brands seen as standing apart from the money grab.

For Australian businesses weighing whether football deserves a larger share of marketing budgets, or whether the sport represents a genuine investment opportunity beyond marketing spend, the message from this World Cup is consistent. The capital is already flowing toward football at a scale most other sports cannot match. The only open question is which brands move quickly enough, and with enough creative conviction, to capture the value before the moment passes them by.

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How Australian Support for the World Cup Has Changed Since 2022

Sodden, rowdy and 7,000-strong, the crowd that gathered at Federation Square before dawn on Saturday for Australia’s clash with the United States offered a vivid illustration of how much, and how little, has changed in Australian football support since Qatar 2022.

The scenes themselves were familiar: fans queuing from 2am, flares lit during the anthem, a barrier breach as the precinct hit capacity within minutes of opening. But the fact the screening happened at all says something about the shifting institutional weight football now carries in Australia.

Just this May, the Melbourne’s Arts Precinct had decided not to screen Socceroos matches at Fed Square this tournament, citing crowd damage and arrests during a 2022 World Cup screening. Football Australia publicly pushed back, and the Victorian Government ultimately overturned the decision, with security and police presence increased to manage the risk. That a state government intervened to guarantee a public screening reflects how central these gatherings have become to football’s standing in Australia, not just as a peripheral fan event but a piece of cultural infrastructure worth a premier’s political capital.

A Tournament Inherited, Not Just Attended

The scale of public interest now sits on a different foundation than it did in 2022. Football Australia’s most recent National Participation Report recorded an 11% increase in total participation to 1,911,539 people, with women and girls’ participation rising 16% to 221,436. Industry analysis attributes much of that growth to the “Matildas effect” following the home Women’s World Cup in 2023, projecting 407,000 new junior participants by 2027 on the back of that tournament and Football Australia’s broader infrastructure strategy. Whatever happens to the Socceroos in the United States, the crowd at Fed Square this year is drawn from a participation base substantially larger than the one watching from lounge rooms and pubs in Qatar.

That shift shows up in how fans say they’ll engage with this tournament regardless of results. New industry research found 79% of intended Australian viewers plan to keep watching the World Cup even if the Socceroos are eliminated, an 11-point increase on 2022, suggesting interest is becoming less tied to the national team’s results than it once was. The same research found television remains dominant, with 88% of viewers planning to watch on TV, rising above 90 per cent for evening and weekend matches, even as audiences increasingly split their attention across streaming and second screens.

Crowd Behaviour as the Unresolved Question

What hasn’t shifted is the tension over crowd conduct at public screenings, and what it costs football’s civic standing when things go wrong. The Melbourne Arts Precinct’s chief executive was explicit in 2026 that damage and behaviour during 2022 screenings were the basis for initially declining to host watch parties this time, despite trouble-free crowds during the 2023 Women’s World Cup.

Saturday’s flares and barrier breach will likely feed that same debate going into the knockout stages, even as the broader numbers tell a story of a sport with a far deeper public footing than it had four years ago. The Fed Square images from 2022 prompted other Australian cities to scramble together live sites once the Socceroos reached the knockout rounds, reflecting a pattern likely to repeat if Australia progresses from Group D, with Friday’s match against Paraguay now carrying outsized weight for a campaign that began with what fans, by their own description, considered horrible refereeing and a result short of expectations.

Referee Omar Artan appointed to UEFA Super Cup Final

The Somali referee will officiate the 2026 UEFA Super Cup in August between Paris Saint-Germain and Aston Villa.

 

World Cup controversy to Super Cup support

As 2025’s CAF Men’s Referee of the Year, Artan stands as one of the world’s leading match officials.

His expertise and skill allowed him to enter FIFA’s international list in 2018, and has since proved an outstanding ability as a referee, culminating in the CAF Men’s Referee of the Year award last year.

Despite Artan’s capabilities and reputation, his dream of officiating this summer’s World Cup tournament met a premature ending. The referee couldn’t enter into the US after arriving on a diplomatic passport and single entry visa, and was subsequently forced to return home to Somalia.

But Artan’s journey as a referee on the global stage is far from over, as UEFA and CAF confirmed that Artan will officiate the UEFA Super Cup clash between Champions League winners, PSG, and Europa League winners, Aston Villa, in Salzburg this August.

 

Upholding the partnership

In April of this year, UEFA and CAF signed a new Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), which promised to utilise mutual support to encourage development, inclusion and wellbeing in football.

The MoU aligns unity, cohesion and partnership between two powerhouse continents of world football.

And now, the alignment is stronger and clearer than ever. In the midst of a major blow to Artan’s personal and professional dreams, UEFA and CAF’s partnership provided an opportunity.

“Omar is an excellent young but already experienced referee, who has proven himself at the highest competition level of the Confederation of African Football,” said UEFA President Aleksander Čeferin via media release.

“Football is made to connect people, and UEFA wants to show its respect to Omar and his outstanding officiating skills, which had earned him such a prestigious nomination.”

Furthermore, CAF President, Dr Patrice Motsepe, outlined why the initiative perfectly embodies the nature of a partnership between UEFA and CAF.

“This is a great honour for Omar Artan and for African referees and is also an excellent example of football bringing together and uniting people from Africa and Europe and worldwide.”

 

Final thoughts

Out of bitter disappointment and controversy comes a far more positive reflection of football’s influence and impact. It also proves that an MoU is more than just signatures, but a genuine promise to support the game and all within it.

A partnership like this has the power to help millions at once.

But sometimes, helping just one person is all it takes to prove its worth.

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