FIFA gives every 2026 World Cup team a bespoke AI agent for match analysis FIFA will provide all 48 teams at the 2026 World Cup with Football AI Pro, a generative AI assistant co-developed with Lenovo, to democratize match analysis. The system, trained on hundreds of millions of data points, offers text reports, video summaries, and 3D visualizations for pre-match and post-match use only. FIFA gives every 2026 World Cup team a bespoke AI agent for match analysis Football AI Pro, built with Lenovo, trains on hundreds of millions of data points to democratize analytics across all 48 participating nations. FIFA just handed every team at the 2026 World Cup the same AI-powered scouting department. Football AI Pro, a generative AI assistant co-developed with Lenovo, will be available to all 48 squads competing across the US, Canada, and Mexico this summer. What Football AI Pro actually does The system is powered by what FIFA calls a specialized “Football Language Model,” trained on hundreds of millions of FIFA-owned data points spanning matches, player performance, and tactical patterns. The outputs aren’t just spreadsheets. Teams can pull text reports, video summaries, statistical graphs, and 3D visualizations covering more than 2,000 distinct metrics. Coaches can ask questions in multiple languages, and the system responds with analysis tailored to the prompt. It’s restricted to pre-match and post-match use only. No sideline consultations, no halftime AI huddles. FIFA drew a clear line between augmenting preparation and interfering with the actual game. Privacy safeguards are baked in as well, designed to protect user data and prevent teams from accessing each other’s queries or analytical strategies. The tool was publicly unveiled around January 2026 at Lenovo Tech World events tied to CES, positioning it as a flagship example of enterprise AI applied to global sport. The democratization promise, and its limits The expanded 2026 format, with 48 teams instead of the traditional 32, makes democratization more urgent. Sixteen additional squads means more teams with smaller budgets entering the competition. Giving them all the same analytical baseline is FIFA’s way of saying the expansion isn’t just about selling more tickets. No blockchain in sight, but the data play matters There is no blockchain component, no tokenized data layer, and no digital asset integration anywhere in this initiative. FIFA’s official communications and all reporting on Football AI Pro make zero mention of crypto or Web3 technology. FIFA has previously dipped its toes into blockchain through NFT partnerships and digital collectibles programs. The decision to keep Football AI Pro entirely within traditional enterprise infrastructure, partnering with Lenovo rather than any Web3 platform, signals where FIFA sees reliable, tournament-critical technology versus experimental territory. Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy https://cryptobriefing.com/editorial-policy/ .