Why Brands Need Creators To Win The 2026 World Cup

Argentina v Venezuela - FIFA World Cup 2026 Qualifier

BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINA – SEPTEMBER 04: Lionel Messi of Argentina celebrates after scoring the team’s third goal during the South American FIFA World Cup 2026 Qualifier match between Argentina and Venezuela at Estadio Más Monumental Antonio Vespucio Liberti on September 04, 2025 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. (Photo by Marcelo Endelli/Getty Images)

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The 2026 FIFA World Cup is expected to be one of the biggest advertising moments in modern media history. But unlike previous tournaments dominated by television commercials and corporate sponsorships, this World Cup may ultimately be defined by creators.

Today’s football audiences consume tournaments across YouTube, TikTok, Instagram, Twitch and livestream communities simultaneously. Fans follow memes, reactions, watchalongs, creator commentary, livestream debates and behind-the-scenes content throughout the tournament cycle.

The 2026 World Cup may become the moment sports marketing fully adapts to that reality.

The Real Competition Is Now For Online Attention

The most important evolution happening ahead of the 2026 World Cup is that creators are becoming the primary distribution strategy in a world where audience attention itself has become fragmented.

A fan watching a World Cup match may also be consuming creator reactions on YouTube, following clips on TikTok, participating in Discord communities and engaging with football commentary across multiple platforms at the same time.

The live match remains valuable. But the surrounding creator ecosystem shapes how audiences experience the event itself.

According to the Nielsen 2025 Global Sports Marketing Report, younger sports audiences are consuming content across fragmented digital ecosystems rather than through traditional linear television alone.

Meanwhile, the WARC Influencer Marketing 2025 Report found that creator-led advertising continues to grow significantly faster than broader digital advertising categories.

For marketers preparing for the World Cup, the implication is that reach alone is no longer enough, brands now need cultural participation.

Creator-Native Brands Already Understand The Playbook

Some of the fastest-growing sports-related brands already operate with a creator-first mindset.

Prime Hydration is perhaps the clearest example. Built around the audiences of KSI and Logan Paul, Prime scaled globally through internet culture, creator distribution and sports fandom long before relying on traditional advertising infrastructure. Its rapid rise demonstrated how creator-led distribution can build a sports brand at global scale.

Meanwhile, sports betting platforms like FanDuel and DraftKings have embraced creator partnerships, podcasts, livestream personalities and social-first sports content to drive engagement around major sporting events.

The commercial ecosystem surrounding global sports is also becoming creator-driven. During major tournaments, creators now influence everything from merchandise sales to fantasy sports engagement and betting behavior. Media companies and sports platforms are building creator partnerships around fan participation products, including fan engagement campaigns and popular comparison sites like Sportsbook Review highlighting betting bonuses tied to major sporting events.

Even legacy sportswear giants are adapting. Adidas has leaned into creator-led football culture across YouTube, TikTok and social-first storytelling campaigns designed to resonate with younger audiences beyond traditional athlete endorsements.

The common thread is that the most effective sports marketing behaves like internet culture rather than corporate advertising.

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The Sidemen Show What The Future Looks Like

Perhaps no group better illustrates this transformation than Sidemen.

Their annual Sidemen Charity Match has evolved into a major online sporting event generating millions of livestream viewers, viral clips and global social engagement. More importantly, it demonstrates how creators themselves can become sports entertainment infrastructure.

Their content blends fandom, livestreaming, internet humor, influencer culture and community participation in ways that feel native to younger audiences. For brands, that environment offers something difficult to achieve through traditional advertising alone: sustained attention and cultural credibility.

Traditional advertising still delivers scale but creators deliver trust and participation, something modern audiences value more.

The YouTube Culture And Trends Report 2025 highlights how creator-led entertainment and participatory fandom are shaping the way younger audiences engage with live events, including sports.

By the time the 2026 World Cup begins, many younger fans may spend as much time consuming creator commentary, reactions and livestream content around matches as the matches themselves.

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Why The Economics Favor Creator-Led Campaigns

The economics behind this transformation are also becoming difficult for marketers to ignore.

Traditional World Cup advertising remains enormously expensive, particularly for brands competing for premium television placements during major matches. Creator-led campaigns, by comparison, often generate longer engagement windows, stronger community interaction and significantly more social distribution.

Creators also provide flexibility that broadcast advertising often cannot. A global campaign built for television may remain static for months. Creators, however, can adapt instantly to viral moments, local fan reactions, controversies and online trends throughout the tournament.

That adaptability is especially valuable for a World Cup hosted across the United States, Canada and Mexico, where digital communities and fan cultures will vary dramatically by region.

According to the eMarketer Influencer Marketing Forecast 2025, creator-led advertising spending continues accelerating as brands prioritize engagement and community-driven distribution over traditional reach metrics.

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The Future Of Sports Marketing Will Be Community-Driven

None of this means traditional World Cup advertising is disappearing. Broadcast rights remain among the most valuable assets in media and television will still command enormous audiences during the tournament.

But the broader marketing ecosystem around sports is evolving rapidly.

The Deloitte 2025 Sports Industry Outlook notes that sports, entertainment and digital media are converging as younger audiences gravitate toward interactive and community-driven experiences.

The broader lesson for marketers is that attention itself has become community-driven. In the creator economy, audiences no longer want to be marketed to during cultural moments — they want to experience those moments alongside personalities they already trust.

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Ian Shepherd

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