Football World Cup: How football became a game-changer for the Middle East The frontpage story in world football this summer worried about young French phenomenon Kylian Mbappe's choice to sign a three-year agreement delay with Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) at the outlay of following his enduring dream move to Spanish giants Real Madrid. Football fans from all over the world can book Football World Cup tickets from our online platform WorldWideTicketsandHospitality.com. Football fans can book Qatar Football World Cup Tickets on our website at exclusively discounted prices.
PSG, which is possessed by the state-funded Qatar Sports Investments, made the 23-year-old Mbappe the highest-paid footballer in the world, and even allegedly gave him a $125m signing bonus, an almost unheard-of fee for a side retentive it's player. In a far less stated story, in late May the Argentine national football side annulled an arranged friendly game against Israel, replying to calls to pull out of the game by the Palestinian Al-Khader Football Club, whose 19-year-old player Mohammad Ali Ghoneim was shot dead by Israeli job militaries in April. Away in new weeks, the Egyptian national football side found itself at the heart of a major regional disaster. Following its appalling 2-0 defeat to Ethiopia in the qualifiers for next year’s Africa Cup of Nations, feelings ran high as followers and political officials could not help then draw connections between the side’s performance on the pitch and Egypt’s continuing feud with Ethiopia over its construction of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, which Egyptians reflect an experiential threat to the country’s admission to Nile waters.