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🚨🗣️ NEW: Thierry Henry reacts to reports that journalists were allegedly prevented from asking questions in Spanish during the Brazil, Morocco, and Netherlands press conferences involving Hakimi, Vinícius Jr., and Frenkie de Jong:
“I’ve covered World Cups for many years, and honestly, this situation is baffling.
Are we really saying that a World Cup co-hosted by Mexico can restrict journalists from speaking Spanish? That’s like hosting Formula 1 and telling drivers they can’t use their engines.
We saw it with Hakimi. We saw it with Vinícius Jr. And now similar reports are emerging around Frenkie de Jong. The players understood the questions. The journalists spoke one of the world’s most spoken languages. Yet somehow, the language itself became the issue.
Gianni Infantino speaks often about inclusion, diversity, and making football accessible to everyone. Fair enough. But then explain this contradiction. How can FIFA promote diversity in every campaign while creating headlines because Spanish-speaking journalists are allegedly being told to switch languages at a tournament hosted in part by Mexico?
Spanish isn’t some niche language. It’s spoken by hundreds of millions of people across the world. If a journalist from Mexico, Spain, Argentina, Colombia or anywhere else asks a question in Spanish and the player understands it, why create barriers where none exist?
The irony is striking. FIFA repeatedly says football belongs to everyone, yet this controversy has left many fans wondering whether some voices are more welcome than others.
Perhaps there’s a logistical explanation. Perhaps it’s about translation. But perception matters and right now, the perception isn’t good.
Because what fans see is simple: a World Cup partly hosted by a Spanish-speaking nation, players who understand Spanish, journalists speaking Spanish, and officials reportedly asking them not to use it.
If this is progress, it needs a far better explanation. Because from the outside looking in, football’s governing body appears to be undermining its own message.
FIFA wanted a celebration of diversity. Instead, it may have handed the internet a debate that won’t disappear anytime soon.


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