Canada’s dream of hosting a men’s World Cup dates back to 1976 Montreal Olympics
The quest for Canada to host a men’s FIFA World Cup dates back some 50 years for Walter Sieber.
Sieber, then director general of sports for the Montreal Olympics, was sitting next to then-FIFA president João Havelange at the men’s football final at Olympic Stadium on July 31, 1976. Despite the rain, an enthusiastic crowd of 71,617 took in East Germany’s 3-1 win over Poland.
“At a certain time, (Havelange) turned to me and said, ‘Hey, by the way, you have done such a famous organization, one day Canada should have the World Cup,'” Sieber recalled with a laugh. “So that was the very first time where in my mind, (the) World Cup came up.”
The Swiss-born Sieber, who became an integral part of the Olympic and FIFA machine after moving to Quebec in 1966, tried to bring the 1986 World Cup to Canada after host Colombia pulled out in 1982, saying it did not have the economic resources to meet FIFA’s demands.


