Half-time at a football game is normally a chance to grab a drink or snack, make a mad dash for the toilets or vent with friends about some questionable refereeing or defending. But at this year's World Cup final between Spain and Argentina, for the first time in the tournament's history, there will be a half-time show - complete with performances from Madonna, Shakira, BTS and Justin Bieber. This was reported by Qazaqyia.kz citing BBC News.
It's already caused controversy in the sporting world as the performance means the break will last up to 25 minutes - when the International Football Association Board (Ifab) states players are entitled to a maximum 15-minute stoppage. The show will take place on Sunday night at the MetLife Stadium in New Jersey and has been described by governing body Fifa as a "landmark celebration at the intersection of sport, music and global impact".
Does a performance like this, during the most-watched sporting event in the world, herald something similar coming soon to a stadium near you? And do fans want that? It is expected that both the BBC and ITV will screen the full show, with punditry filling the gap while the stadium staging is put up and taken down.
At last year's Club World Cup final, which was also organised by Fifa and held in New Jersey, there was a 24-minute half-time featuring live music from Coldplay, J Balvin, Doja Cat and Tems. Sports broadcaster Betty Glover, who has been covering the World Cup across the US for the last month, worked at last year's Club World Cup final in the same stadium. "There's a battle to get more Americans involved and fall in love with this game - it's obviously not their main sport, but when you're walking around speaking to people, more are getting on board with it," she tells the BBC.
James Massing, whose team at Live Nation is responsible for putting on the World Cup final half-time show, says "expectation from fans has heightened" when it comes to big sporting events, meaning music could feature more in future. He tells the BBC the sports industry needs to innovate because it is "competing with any other live experience - going to the museum, going to the theatre, going to the cinema". Massing, who has also worked on the Super Bowl and the Club World Cup final show, feels adding a musical performance makes "a final feel like a final".
But British football content creator Ellis Platten is "not a fan" of some initiatives at this year's World Cup, including the half-time show or the hydration breaks. The hydration breaks take place 22 minutes into each half and have been used to show adverts on some US networks. "I get that it's the World Cup final, but it's the most-watched event in the world already and I don't think you need to add these things to it," he tells us. "Being a football fan in a stadium, by the end of half time people are quite restless."
Ifab have previously rejected proposals to extend football half-times beyond 15 minutes, citing concerns over player welfare and the potential for injury after prolonged inactivity. "You'd almost have to make a sub at half time because of player welfare," Platten notes. He adds: "They're not thinking about that, they're just thinking 'oh we can have Justin Bieber on stage' but Messi's in a World Cup final - I think he's slightly more important."
Glover agrees and says she is "not sure football needs" a half-time show. "The World Cup this year feels very American, I'm watching coverage in the US and you've got so many adverts, they barely do any analysis," she says.
Massing says "there is no compromise when it comes to the integrity of the sport" and adds that "player welfare is absolutely fundamental" when organising half-time shows.
