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Miami Herald
Miami Herald
Sport
Greg Cote

Greg Cote: Miami will be World Cup host because these two men shared a dream and determination

MIAMI _ This was Joe Robbie's ahead-of-its-time dream in the 1980s, a vision nurtured and carried forward this decade by Stephen Ross. On Wednesday, more than 30 years after Robbie imagined it, the shared dream came real.

Miami will host World Cup soccer.

It isn't official, no. The host cities for the winning 2026 North American bid have not been finalized. But you can be assured the strong favorites will include the stadium Robbie built in 1987 with private funding, the one Ross bought and recently refurbished and rechristened Hard Rock Stadium.

Wednesday's FIFA vote in Moscow, ahead of the 2018 World Cup that begins Thursday in Russia, awarded the '26 gem-event to a joint bid by the United States, Canada and Mexico. It will be the 23rd men's World Cup and only the fourth held in North America, after Mexico hosted in 1970 and 1986, and the U.S. hosted in 1994.

It was interesting to see the "United Bid" so harmoniously successful in its soccer venture, considering President Donald Trump's relationship with his neighbors, threatening to build a wall between the U.S. and Mexico and more recently seeming to feud with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

The U.S. national team failed to qualify for the 2018 World Cup, a surprise and huge disappointment. An embarrassment, even. For many Americans it has deflated interest in this World Cup, but Wednesday's vote provided some solace and salve. It may be tough to get too excited about something eight years away, but if anything merits that, it is the world's biggest sporting event, one that dwarfs the Super Bowl internationally, one on a global scale rivaled only (and that's arguable) by the Olympic Games.

The Rose Bowl in Pasadena was site of the '94 World Cup final as one of nine U.S. cities chosen to host matches, including Orlando and its Citrus Bowl. Fourteen other American stadiums were considered including Miami's Orange Bowl and then-Joe Robbie Stadium, but both venues were cut from the final bid.

It won't happen again.

Robbie, the Dolphins' founding father, had international soccer very much in mind when he conceived and had designed his stadium that opened for business in 1987. It was revolutionary thinking. The NASL's heydays were past. Major League Soccer did not exist. But Robbie envisioned a place for the global game in his stadium _ in Miami.

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