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HomeSportsWorld Cup’s new ‘hydration breaks’ aren’t about player safety

World Cup’s new ‘hydration breaks’ aren’t about player safety

The 2026 FIFA World Cup will look a little different next year.

Thanks to built-in “hydration breaks” in each half.

FIFA confirmed the addition to the upcoming World Cup over the weekend, stating that the decision “prioritises player welfare throughout next summer’s tournament co-hosted by Canada, Mexico, and the United States.” Under the format, the referee will stop the match 22 minutes into each half to allow players to hydrate during a three-minute break.

This follows a similar initiative that was used at the Club World Cup this year. Matches were played in the United States this past summer, and breaks were implemented 30 minutes into each half. However, according to FIFA this is a “streamlined and simplified version” of the breaks previously utilized at tournaments such as the 2025 Club World Cup, and there will be “no weather or temperature condition in place.” This means the breaks will happen during each match, whether indoors or outdoors, to ensure equal conditions for all teams.

During the Club World Cup this past year, breaks were only implemented during matches played in extreme heat.

“For every game, no matter where the games are played, no matter if there’s a roof, (or) temperature-wise, there will be a three-minute hydration break. It will be three minutes from whistle to whistle in both halves,” said Manolo Zubiria, a FIFA official, during an announcement this past weekend.

However, there is an added aspect to these hydration breaks, one that the circumstances of the announcement gives away.

Commercials for those watching on television.

Zubiria made the announcement at the World Broadcaster Meeting, held in Washington D.C. over the weekend, following Friday’s World Draw. And according to this report from ESPN, the decision to implement hydration breaks at each match was made “after consultation with coaches and broadcasters.”

Now each match will have a convenient place for broadcasters to drop in commercials during the flow of play, rather than relying on picture-in-picture formatting or overlay advertisements during the match itself.

Of course, we will probably get those as well. Broadcast rights are not exactly cheap after all.

In addition, the mandatory hydration breaks now turn each match into a four-quarter affair, giving teams the chance to strategize during those three-minutes breaks.

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