Football Australia demanded on Wednesday that the prohibition on public watch parties for the 2026 World Cup in Federation Square, Melbourne, be lifted.
The governing body expressed its “extreme disappointment” with the Melbourne Arts Precinct’s decision, citing prior instances of “dangerous” fan behavior in the square.
According to Martin Kugeler, chief executive of Football Australia, “the FIFA World Cup is the biggest sporting event in the world and unites Australia’s multicultural communities while reinforcing our national identity.”
For Australian sports enthusiasts, live sites produce memorable moments.
“This decision goes against this tradition, and Melbourne is one of Australia’s sporting and multicultural capitals,” he continued.
The Melbourne Arts Precinct, which oversees the square, decided not to have World Cup watch parties due to certain supporters’ actions, according to Katrina Sedgwick, chief executive.
She told national broadcaster ABC, “This problem is really with a very small group of fans who, unfortunately, behave in a way that is just antisocial and frankly, dangerous.”
“The problem arises when there are a lot of people in a crowded square and people are smuggling in flares,” she explained.
According to Sedgwick, some individuals were hurt by flames during earlier World Cup screenings.
“I believe we counted over 100 flares and fireworks that had been set off in the square on the last night of the Socceroos game that we screened.”
On June 13, the Socceroos play their first World Cup match against Turkey in Vancouver. Six days later, they play their co-hosts, the United States, in Seattle, and on June 25, they play Paraguay in California.
Craig Foster, a former Socceroo, criticized the Federation Square watch party restriction on social media, writing, “All stakeholders should be working to overturn this absurd decision.”


