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Sports

Football Australia demands Victoria lift ban on public World Cup screenings at Federation Square

Football Australia has formally asked the Victorian government to reverse its decision barring public screenings of Socceroos matches at Melbourne's Federation Square, warning the ban deprives supporters of a defining World Cup experience.
/ @Premier_League · Telegram

Football Australia has formally appealed to the Victorian government to reverse its decision barring public screenings of Socceroos World Cup fixtures at Melbourne's Federation Square, calling the ban a setback for fans who helped qualify the national team for the tournament.

The governing body confirmed on 6 May 2026 that it had lodged a formal request with the state government demanding the ban be lifted before Australia's group-stage matches begin. The dispute centres on the Victorian government's refusal to permit large-screen broadcasts at the city's central public precinct, with authorities citing crowd-management concerns and the behaviour of a minority of spectators during previous events.

The decision has drawn sharp criticism from supporters' groups and former players, who argue it penalises the broader fan base for the actions of a small number of individuals. Federation Square, which hosted large crowds during the 2006 and 2010 World Cup campaigns, has long served as an informal national gathering point for Australian football fans unable to secure match tickets.

Football Australia said its appeal was framed as a matter of principle rather than logistics — the governing body wants the Victorian government to distinguish between isolated incidents and the genuine enthusiasm of supporters who have followed the Socceroos through a competitive qualifying campaign.

The Victorian government has defended its position, arguing that large public gatherings in the city's densest precinct require careful risk management. A spokesperson for the government said previous events had produced behaviour that warranted closer scrutiny of future screenings, and that alternative venues remained available for fans seeking a communal viewing experience.

The structural tension here is not unusual in sport governance: the tension between a host city's commercial and reputational interests and the desire of national sporting bodies to cultivate fan culture. Victoria's decision treats Federation Square as a venue requiring special consideration rather than a civic asset deployed in service of national sporting objectives. The ban signals that administrative risk-aversion can override the symbolic value of public screenings, even when alternative management strategies — ticket lotteries, managed entry points, enhanced security presence — might mitigate the concerns without shutting down the event entirely.

The global context sharpens the stakes. Australia co-hosted the 2023 Women's World Cup with New Zealand, an event that drew millions of domestic viewers and generated substantial goodwill toward the sport's governing structures. The men's team enters the 2026 World Cup with a generation of players who emerged during that post-tournament surge in participation and fan engagement. A decision that alienates supporters at this moment carries reputational cost for Football Australia and for the sport's institutional standing in a country where football still competes with rugby league and Australian rules football for mainstream attention.

For now, the dispute remains live. Football Australia's formal request awaits a government response, and the outcome will set a precedent for how Australian cities handle public screenings during major tournaments. The question is whether Victoria prioritises the manageable risk of a contained screening or the harder-to-quantify value of a city united around its team. The sources do not indicate when a decision is expected.

This article was written from the desk using BBC Sport and Guardian Australia reporting published 6 May 2026.

© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire