
Football Can Connect Us All
Creating lasting value for young people and communities around the FIFA World Cup 2026.
A FIFA World Cup is never only about what happens inside the stadiums.
It lives in the streets before kick-off. In the celebrations after the final whistle. In the songs, rituals and connections created between people who may have never met otherwise. In the memories that stay with us long after the tournament ends.
Even for those lucky enough to attend a World Cup in person, the moments people remember most are rarely only about what happened on the pitch. They are about who they shared it with, how it made them feel or what else they did around that game.
At Common Goal, our World Cup memories are linked to moments of celebration with communities we serve. To young people from across the world coming together through football. To festivals, pitches, stories and shared experiences that connect the energy of the tournament back to the people who give the game its meaning in the first place.
Since 2006, Common Goal has worked to ensure football’s biggest moments create opportunities that last beyond the final whistle — creating spaces where young people and communities are not just spectators of the game, but protagonists within it.
That belief has guided our work around World Cups for nearly two decades.
In 2006, during the FIFA World Cup in Germany, Common Goal organised its first international Youth Festival, bringing together 22 teams from five continents. Festivals have travelled from South Africa to Brazil, Russia, France, and Australia, creating spaces where soccer becomes a platform for exchange, expression, and connection that doesn't require a shared language.




Since then, across different tournaments and regions, Common Goal, alongside its community and partners, has enabled:
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Enabling more than 2,000 young people and community members from underserved communities to participate in transformative festivals, creating lasting ripple effects across their communities.
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Providing more than 3,000 young people from underserved communities with the opportunity to attend FIFA World Cup matches.
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Supporting infrastructure development through the creation and improvement of more than 20 football pitches across 15+ countries.
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Mobilising more than 100 athletes to participate in festivals and global campaigns, raising awareness around youth development, mental health, gender equity, climate action, and other critical social issues.
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Unlocking and helping direct more than €30 million in investment towards World Cup legacy initiatives that strengthen communities through football.
Our World Cup legacy track record
2006
Festival 06 brings the global network together for the first time in Berlin, establishing a lasting football for good legacy alongside the FIFA World Cup™ for the first time.
2010
Co-led the official FIFA World Cup legacy programme, including the creation of 20 community centres across Africa and the organisation of the Football for Hope Festival 2010 in Johannesburg.
2014
Co-led the Football for Hope Festival 2014 in Rio de Janiero, an official event of the FIFA World Cup 2014.
2018
Co-led FIFA Foundation Festival 2018 in Moscow, an official event of the FIFA World Cup 2018.
2019
Co-organisation of Festival 19, the first festival during the FIFA Women’s World Cup, in France in collaboration with Sport dans la Ville
2022
World Cup campaign alongside adidas “The other Half” and 1% ball sales towards football Equal Play Effect, accelerating gender equity across football for good communities.
2023
Co-organisation of Festival 23 in Australia in collaboration with Football United, during the FIFA Women's World Cup.
Powering athlete-driven campaigns that advance mental health alongside the USWNT, climate action through a collective of 47 athletes, and gender equity with the German Women's National Team.
How Common Goal in showing up in 2026
This year, as the FIFA World Cup 2026 unfolds across the United States, Canada and México, that work continues in new ways.
Not through one single initiative, but through a growing ecosystem of partnerships, programmes and collective efforts designed to ensure the tournament creates value for the communities at the heart of the game.
CENTERING YOUTH AND COMMUNITY
Powering Community participation – Soccer Forward Fests engaging over 100,000 people across the United States with over 500 locally-led community events centering joy, community, and connection.
Once-in-a-lifetime World Cup Experiences – 1,738 Player Escort opportunities across 13 cities and 34 football for good organizations, including tickets to the matches.
Intercultural exchange – 500 teams competing in Lay's Replay Leagues across 12 countries for the opportunity for one team from each country to visit Mexico City or Los Angeles during the World Cup and attend a match.
ENABLING FUNDING OPPORTUNITIES
Through strategic partnerships and direct giving, we are supporting $4.75 million in funding opportunities to 75+ football for good organizations across 6 continents, committed or pledged through a range of partnerships.
Powering global donation platforms that enable fans to contribute meaningfully to the legacy of the world cup, including World Football Giving Day and adidas store activation with Adyen during the World Cup.
SPOTLIGHTING FOOTBALL FOR GOOD
Spotlighting football for good, with millions in value with FOX Sports 1% pledge and FootballCo.
Storytelling and showcasing football for good solutions at adidas Foundation Power of Sport, Wharton Leadership Conference, and ongoing social spotlights.
Learn more about all initiatives here:

Connecting the tournament back to communities with Soccer Forward Fests
In partnership with U.S. Soccer’s Soccer Forward Foundation, Common Goal continues its 20 year track record of centering youth, communities, cross-cultural exchange, and the joy of football within the context of FIFA World Cups.
The 2026 Soccer Forward Fests mark 20 years since Common Goal's first Youth Festival, held alongside the 2006 FIFA World Cup in Germany, when 22 teams from five continents gathered in Marienplatz around the conviction that the game had a unique power to bridge cultural differences and advance peace. Since then, festivals have travelled from South Africa to Brazil, Russia, France, and Australia, creating spaces where soccer becomes a platform for exchange, expression, and connection that doesn't require a shared language.
In 2026, with a World Cup spanning three countries and 48 nations, one festival did not feel like enough. So together with Soccer Forward, we asked communities across the United States to make their own. More than 500 communities engaging over 100,000 people have already answered “let’s go!” Each Fest is distinctly local. Together, they shape a national story of what soccer can mean when it leads with community.
Expanding opportunities for young people to be part of the World Cup with Quaker Escorts programme
Together with Quaker and PepsiCo, Common Goal is helping connect young people to one of football’s biggest moments through the FIFA World Cup 26™ Player Escort Programme.
The initiative will connect 1,738 young people from community organisations across North America and Canada to one of football’s most iconic experiences: walking onto the pitch alongside players during the tournament.
But the programme is about much more than a ceremonial moment: alongside matchday experiences, thousands of young people and families are participating in educational programming focused on wellbeing, nutrition and healthy lifestyles — helping connect the excitement of the tournament with long-term personal development and community impact.

Strengthening football for good across North America with Play Coll3ctive
In collaboration with adidas Foundation and Beyond Sport, Common Goal is helping strengthen the organisations creating opportunities for young people through sport across North America through Play Coll3ctive.
Play reflects our shared belief that physical activity is not a privilege but a right. Every young person deserves safe spaces for movement, equitable access to programmes, and sustained investment in their ability to be active.
Coll3ctive anchors the initiative in collaboration, connecting organisations supporting young people across communities.
The number 3 signals what makes it distinct: it connects work across three countries, spans three years of sustained financial support, and brings together three strategic partners — adidas Foundation, Common Goal and Beyond Sport — each contributing complementary strengths.
With $3.78 million in financial support to 21 project partners across 16 host cities over three years and the Play Coll3ctive is one example of how the momentum of the World Cup can help build stronger foundations that continue creating impact long after the final whistle.

Creating a new tradition in football: World Football Giving Day
In the lead-up to the FIFA World Cup 2026, that collective energy was already visible through the first-ever World Football Giving Day.
Across more than 100 countries, athletes, clubs, brands, creators, community organisations and supporters came together to spotlight football’s power to create positive change.
Supported by partners including Footballco, the day reached football audiences around the world through stories, campaigns and community-led activations. From global creators like IShowSpeed, to athletes supporting causes close to their hearts, to organisations mobilising their own communities, it became a shared moment across football culture — helping redirect attention towards the people and projects using the game to change lives every day.

Turning football culture into everyday impact with adidas and Adyen across Europe
This summer, together with adidas and Adyen, Common Goal is also bringing football for good directly into everyday fan experiences through a new Giving integration in 180 adidas stores across 22 countries in Europe.
During the FIFA World Cup 2026, fans will be invited to support football for good organisations at checkout, with donations matched to help grow impact across communities worldwide.
It is another example of how football’s cultural energy can be redirected towards something bigger than the tournamnet itself — creating pathways for more people to participate in positive change.
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Using the power of media to change the narrative of football with FOX Sports
Since 2018, FOX Sports and Common Goal have collaborated to help make football more diverse, inclusive and accessible for all.
Through its commitment to the Common Goal 1% pledge in 2022, FOX Sports has dedicated at least one percent of its FIFA World Cup coverage to amplifying stories from across the football for good community. Across the tournaments in 2022, 2023 and again in 2026, this collaboration has helped bring new voices, perspectives and community-led solutions into mainstream football culture in the United States.
Beyond the 1% pledge, FOX Sports and Common Goal are working together to center youth voices and connect the FIFA World Cup with with the communities using football to create opportunity and change every day.
Football can connect us all
At a time when many young people are searching for belonging, football remains one of the few cultural forces capable of creating shared experiences at a truly global scale.
But connection only becomes meaningful when it creates opportunity.
That is why Common Goal continues working to ensure the FIFA World Cup 2026 is not only remembered for what happened on the pitch, but also for what it made possible beyond it.
For young people.
For communities.
And for the future of football itself.
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