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Tuesday, May 21, 2019

FIFA apologises after Women’s World Cup ticket backlash






FIFA has apologised for tweets regarding ticketing for the forthcoming Women’s World Cup that were “published without a full understanding of the situation” and says it is “confident the problems will be solved.”


The governing body faced a backlash on Monday after fans who bought groups of tickets found they were not necessarily seated together.


A two-part message on the tournament’s official Twitter account then stressed that ticketing arrangements could not be changed, saying it had made clear at the time of purchase that “not all seats would be located next to each other.”




FIFA and the Local Organising Committee are confident the problems will be solved and the fans will be able to enjoy the matches as they envisaged.







— FIFA Women’s World Cup 🇫🇷 (@FIFAWWC) May 21, 2019


It added that “an exception could be made for parents whose seats are not next to the seats of their underage children”.


Disgruntled fans replied, calling the situation “ridiculous” and demanding en masse to change the policy.


Another message then appeared on the account, which read: “The previous tweets regarding FIFA Women’s World Cup tickets allocation were published without a full understanding of the situation and we apologise for that. The issues were faced by less than 1 per cent of fans requesting tickets for the semi finals and the final.


“FIFA and the Local Organising Committee are confident the problems will be solved and the fans will be able to enjoy the matches as they envisaged.”




Strange. 4 of 6 Tix pretty much together (3 in 1 row and 1 behind) and then 2 singles not adjoining each other 5 and 10 rows up! Not cool.


— reverie 🏳️‍🌈✨☀️ (@ijbro) May 20, 2019




FIFA had announced at lunchtime on Monday that tickets for the tournament in France, which gets under way on June 7, were now available to print at home.


That was later followed by a message reading: “Dear fans. We have noted some of your comments, re: your tickets.


“When you placed your order, a message indicating not all seats would be located next to each other did appear, before confirmation of your purchase. Unfortunately we will not be able to modify your order.


“However, an exception could be made for parents whose seats are not next to the seats of their underage children (18 years old and younger). For more info, do not hesitate to contact the ticketing customer service team.”


England and Scotland have both qualified for the month-long showpiece and have been paired together in Group D. They play each other at the 35,000-capacity Allianz Riviera on June 9.







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FIFA apologises after Women’s World Cup ticket backlash
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