Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
2026 FIFA World Cup
15APR

FIFA scans 1,248 players for 3D offside

1 min read
09:43UTC

Every player at the tournament will be digitally modelled in one second. No federation has asked about data consent.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

FIFA will 3D-scan every player for automated offside calls, with no federation publicly raising data consent questions.

FIFA will digitally scan all 1,248 players at the tournament to create personalised 3D avatars for semi-automated offside technology. 1 Scans take one second per player. The system was tested at the Intercontinental Cup in December 2025, with Lenovo providing the hardware and Hawk-Eye Innovations delivering the VAR system. No federation has publicly raised questions about player data consent.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

To make offside decisions faster and more accurate, FIFA will create a digital 3D model of every player at the tournament. Each player stands in a scanner for one second before the tournament; the system then uses that model to automatically judge offside calls during matches. The technology itself sounds impressive and solves a genuine problem (slow, disputed VAR offside calls). The question nobody seems to be asking publicly: who owns these 3D body scans of over 1,200 players, and what can be done with them after the tournament?

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    No public consent framework means players' 3D biometric data could be retained, licenced or used commercially by FIFA or Lenovo after the tournament.

    Post-2026 · Medium
  • Precedent

    Mass biometric scanning of athletes as a condition of tournament participation sets a template that other sports bodies will consider adopting.

    2027 onwards · High
  • Opportunity

    Accurate semi-automated offside could reduce match stoppages and disputes, improving the viewing experience for the 48-team expanded format's larger fixture volume.

    June-July 2026 · High
Mentions:FIFA →
First Reported In

Update #3 · USA beaten 5-2 at World Cup host venue

AI News / Lenovo· 29 Mar 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
FIFA scans 1,248 players for 3D offside
The most radical officiating technology deployment in World Cup history will model every player's body in 3D for real-time offside calls, with no public discussion of player data consent.
Different Perspectives
Argentina / Lionel Scaloni
Argentina / Lionel Scaloni
Scaloni confirmed Messi for a record sixth World Cup on 28 May, choosing the 38-year-old captain's institutional authority over 18-year-old Franco Mastantuono's development potential. Commercial as well as sporting considerations weigh on any Messi decision, and Argentina's AFA was never likely to backstop an exclusion on pure sporting logic.
DFB / Rudi Völler
DFB / Rudi Völler
Völler issued informal guidance to Germany's squad on around 27 May to keep politics and sport separate, stopping short of the formal ban that produced Qatar 2022's OneLove armband collision. The approach gives the federation documented deniability while preserving each player's legal freedom to act independently.
England Football Association / Thomas Tuchel
England Football Association / Thomas Tuchel
Tuchel cut Alexander-Arnold, Foden and Palmer on system grounds, the clearest signal yet that the FA has genuinely ceded selection authority to the coaching staff. England travel without Palmer, one of the Premier League's sharpest creators, accepting a narrower build-up vocabulary against low-block opponents in exchange for off-ball discipline.
Football Supporters Europe / Euroconsumers
Football Supporters Europe / Euroconsumers
The fan coalition's Article 102 TFEU complaint, filed in March and unacknowledged past the April deadline, was confirmed for assessment by the European Commission on 28 May. Brussels logging the file gives the complainants a live regulatory record FIFA must preserve, building on the European Super League judgment that exposed FIFA and UEFA rules to EU competition scrutiny.
New York and New Jersey Attorneys General / UNITE HERE Local 11
New York and New Jersey Attorneys General / UNITE HERE Local 11
On 28 May, Letitia James and Jennifer Davenport subpoenaed FIFA under their broad state authority to pursue an entity trading in their states, regardless of FIFA's Swiss registration; that same week UNITE HERE Local 11 moved its campaign to California privacy law, filing with the CPPA over FIFA accreditation data shared with DHS and ICE without worker consent.
FFIRI / Mehdi Taj
FFIRI / Mehdi Taj
Taj framed Tijuana as resolving entry friction while simultaneously demanding multiple-entry US visas, because single-entry papers would strand the squad in Mexico after the first match-day crossing. Both are needed: the camp solves accommodation, the visa solves the border crossings Iran's three group matches require, the first before 15 June.