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Alan Ferguson

FIFA official overseeing World Cup pitch preparation and surface compliance.

Last refreshed: 6 April 2026

Key Question

Will MetLife Stadium's pitch be ready in time for the World Cup Final?

Latest on Alan Ferguson

Common Questions
Who is Alan Ferguson FIFA?
He is FIFA's field management chief, overseeing pitch preparation at all 2026 World Cup venues.Source: background
Will the MetLife pitch be ready for the World Cup Final?
As of late March 2026 the final sections were still being laid. Ferguson himself said delivery certainty only comes when the pitch is in.Source: background
Why are so many World Cup stadiums replacing their pitches?
Eight US venues used artificial surfaces that do not meet FIFA standards; all must convert to hybrid grass before the tournament.Source: background

Background

Alan Ferguson is FIFA's field management chief, responsible for overseeing pitch preparation and surface compliance at all 2026 FIFA World Cup venues. He came to public attention in April 2026 when he acknowledged uncertainty over whether MetLife Stadium's hybrid pitch would be delivered on schedule, saying: "Obviously, you never know until you actually deliver the pitches." The comment drew attention because MetLife is set to host the World Cup Final on 19 July and was still laying final pitch sections in late March, 67 days before the final .

Ferguson's role oversees an unprecedented conversion challenge: eight of the 16 US venues are replacing artificial surfaces with hybrid grass before the tournament, a process driven by FIFA's post-Copa América 2024 mandate. His team coordinates with venue operators, pitch contractors, and the governing body's compliance auditors to ensure surfaces meet FIFA's strict dimensional and quality standards ahead of each stadium's final audit, required no later than 45 days before its first match.

His hedged public statement is significant beyond one stadium. It signals that FIFA's own oversight function has real uncertainty at a late stage, and that the organisation's contingency planning is being tested by the sheer scale of simultaneous pitch conversions across a geographically dispersed, multi-venue tournament. The success or failure of the pitch programme will be one of the defining logistical legacies of the 2026 World Cup.