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No other sporting event captures the world's imagination like the FIFA World Cup™. Ever since the first tentative competition in Uruguay in 1930, FIFA's flagship has constantly grown in popularity and prestige.
A group of visionary French football administrators, led in the 1920s by the innovative Jules Rimet, is credited with the original idea of bringing the world's strongest national football teams together to compete for the title of World Champions. The original gold trophy bore Jules Rimet's name and was contested three times in the 1930s, before the Second World War put a 12-year stop to the competition.
When it resumed, the FIFA World Cup™ rapidly advanced to its undisputed status as the greatest single sporting event of the modern world. Held since 1958 alternately in Europe and the Americas, the FIFA World Cup™ broke new ground with the decision in May 1996 to select Korea and Japan as co-hosts for the 2002 edition.
Since 1930, the 17 tournaments have seen just seven different winners. However, the FIFA World Cup™ also has been punctuated by dramatic upsets that have helped create footballing history -- the United States defeating England in 1950, North Korea's defeat of Italy in 1966, Cameroon's emergence in the 1980s and its opening-match defeat of the Argentinean cup-holders in 1990.
Today, the FIFA World Cup™ holds the entire global public under its spell. An accumulated audience of more than 28.8 billion people in 213 countries watched the 2002 tournament in Korea/Japan, including approximately 1.1 billion for the final alone, while over 2.7 million people flocked to watch the 64 matches in the 20 stadia.
After all these years and so many changes, however, the main focus of the FIFA World Cup™ remains the same -- the glistening golden trophy, which is the embodiment of every footballer's ambition.
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