News

Integrated Sports Media To Distribute
South American World Cup Qualifiers

on Pay Per View;
10 Games in January in Rounds 15 and 16


TENAFLY, N.J. (Jan. 5, 2022) — Unbeaten Brazil and Argentina have booked their passage to the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar later this year. While the two top national teams in South America cruised to the finals, the race for the other two automatic qualifiers, plus a spot in an intercontinental playoff against a team from Asia, remains up for grabs with four match days remaining in the continent’s marathon qualifying tournament.

With only a mere four points separating teams from fourth (Colombia) through ninth (Paraguay),  qualifying resumes after the Christmas holiday and New Year’s Day with 10 games scheduled to be played over six days, and Integrated Sports Media, the leader in pay-per-view soccer matches, is again making the matches available to soccer fans in the United States.

Integrated Sports will offer matches on cable and satellite Pay Per View, and to commercial establishments across the U.S. The matches, which cost $29.95 each, also continue to be available on cable via iN Demand along with satellite providers DIRECTV and DISH.

Because of the delays and postponements, qualifying in South America will spill over into March, with the World Cup finals slated to begin in the Middle Eastern nation in late November. The tournament will run from Nov. 21 to Dec. 18.

Five-time champion Brazil and two-time titlist Argentina waltzed to berths in the Middle Eastern finals with victories on Matchday 13, with Argentina winning at Uruguay for the first time in 12 years. Those two 1-0 victories came before Brazil and Argentina played to a scoreless draw in Buenos Aires on Matchday 14.

With matters settled at the top of the 10-nation table, interest has shifted to the seven countries (last-place Venezuela has only 7 points from 14 games and has been virtually eliminated) still alive, each with 12 points still up for grabs.

Surprising Ecuador is in the pole position for one of the automatic qualification berths, sitting in third place 6 points in front of Colombia. Ecuador took all 6 points from its two matches in November (vs. Venezuela and at Chile), but faces a daunting challenge when it hosts Brazil on Jan. 27. La Tri then travel to Perú on Feb. 1

Colombia and Perú enter this two-match series of games tied on 17 points, with the Colombians holding on to a precarious lead on goal differential (-1 to -5). Los Cafeteros could put some distance between themselves, Perú and the rest of the table with a home victory over La Blanquirroja on Jan. 28 before a trip to face Argentina on Feb. 1. For Perú, which won both games in the November cycle, Matchdays 15 and 16 could go a long way to determining its fate with games at Colombia and at home to Ecuador on Feb. 1.

Chile and Uruguay are tied on 16 points, and the Chileans will be forced to face visiting Argentina without Arturo Vidal, who was sent off in the crushing home loss to Ecuador. Uruguay’s vaunted Golden Generation has been showing signs of age and is in danger of missing perhaps a final opportunity to play in the World Cup finals. La Celeste has gone five matches without a victory and has fallen to seventh place (on goal differential), but could get back in the running with victories at Paraguay (Jan. 27) and home to last-place Venezuela (Feb. 1).

Bolivia and Paraguay are facing desperate times. Incredibly, eighth-place Bolivia is only 2 points behind fourth-place Colombia, with a game against Los Cafeteros scheduled for March. In this go-round, Bolivia can pad its points total when it plays at Venezuela (Jan. 28) and then hosts Chile. Little short of 6 points will be necessary for Paraguay to remain in the hunt, and it will be a challenging task with games vs. Uruguay and at Brazil.

The Pay-Per-View schedule for Rounds 15 and 16 follows (Home teams listed first; all times Eastern):

Jan. 27

Ecuador v. Brazil, 4 p.m.

Paraguay v. Uruguay, 6 p.m.

Chile v. Argentina, 7 p.m.

Jan. 28

Colombia v. Perú, 4 p.m.

Venezuela v. Bolivia, 5 p.m.

Feb. 1

Bolivia v. Chile, 3 p.m.

Uruguay v. Venezuela, 6 p.m.

Argentina v. Colombia, 6:30 p.m.

Brazil v. Paraguay, 7:30 p.m.

Perú v Ecuador, 9 p.m.

–30—

About Integrated Sports Media:

North America’s leading distributor of International Pay-Per-View and Closed-Circuit sports events has distributed numerous international soccer matches showcasing the National Teams of Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and the USA as part of both CONMEBOL and CONCACAF World Cup Qualifying matches.  In addition, ISM has presented World Championship and world-class boxing matches featuring Tyson Fury, Evander Holyfield, Canelo Alvarez, Julio Cesar Chavez, Roy Jones, Jr., Ricky Hatton, Ivan Calderon, Amir Kahn, Marco Antonio Barrera, Arthur Abraham, David Haye, John Ruiz, and Juan Manuel Lopez , as well as World Championship and world-class mixed martial arts events, showcasing Fedor Emelianenko, Anderson Silva, Tim Sylvia, Bobby Lashley,  Jeff Monson, and Roy Nelson.

For more information on upcoming Integrated Sports events visit www.integratedsportsnet.com.

Contact:

Doug Jacobs

[email protected]

South American World Cup Qualifiers on
Pay Per View;
15 Games in October in Rounds 11, 5 and 12

TENAFLY, N.J. (September 23, 2021) — The South American World Cup qualifying marathon is set for its second series of three games over eight days in Rounds 11, 5 (games rescheduled from last March 30) and 12 in October and Integrated Sports Media, the leader in pay-per-view soccer matches, has got the games covered for you.
Integrated Sports will offer matches on cable and satellite Pay Per View and to commercial establishments across the U.S. The matches, which cost $29.95 each, also continue to be available on cable via iN Demand along with satellite providers DIRECTV and DISH.
Eight of the 10 nations involved in qualifying for the 2022 World Cup in Qatar have played nine matches (the Brazil-Argentina match on Sept. 5 was abandoned) because games have been
postponed several times because of the coronavirus pandemic that has ravaged parts of the South American continent. In addition, in March European clubs declined to release players for qualifiers
because of the danger of contracting the virus while traveling internationally. Now, however, FIFA has ended those temporary exclusion rules and will require clubs to release players for international
duty.
To compensate for the postponements, CONMEBOL, the regional governing body, decided to play the qualifiers in September and October on triple matchdays, which were approved by FIFA. In all,
South American nations and players could be asked to play a dozen international matches over the next seven months — in addition to their global club commitments.

The round-robin qualifying tournament calls on each nation to play home and away against nine opponents for a total of 18 matches, which will send the top four qualifiers to Qatar with a fifth
nation involved in an intercontinental playoff.
Because of the delays and postponements, qualifying in South America will spill over into March 2022, with the World Cup finals slated to begin in the Middle Eastern nation in late November. The
tournament will run from Nov. 21 to Dec. 18, 2022.
The September series of games for the frontrunners — Brazil and Argentina — did nothing to make anyone think the two powerhouses will not be in Qatar in November 2022. Brazil’s record remained
perfect (8-0-0, 24 points) as it opened a 6-point lead over Argentina. In addition, Brazil set a CONMEBOL record in qualifying by notching its sixth straight shutout. Argentina bossed Bolivia to the tune of 3-0 with Lionel Messi getting all the goals and breaking Pelé’s scoring record in
South American internationals.
Uruguay, playing without its stars Luis Suárez and Edinson Cavani, grabbed 7 of a possible 9 points in the three matches, dropping points to only Perú in a 1-1 draw. La Celeste moved up to third place, two points ahead of Ecuador. Ecuador and Colombia are tied on points, each with 13, in the battle for the fourth automatic qualification spot. Colombia took 5 points from the three games, earring away draws in Bolivia and Paraguay, then beating Chile at home.
The four nations at the bottom of the table — Perú, Chile, Bolivia and Venezuela — would all need to run the table in the next three games, no easy task, to have any chance of qualifying.
The Pay-Per-View schedule for Rounds 11, 5 and 12 follows (Home teams listed first; all times Eastern):
Thursday, Oct. 7
Paraguay v. Argentina, 7 p.m.
Uruguay v. Colombia, 7 p.m.
Venezuela v. Brazil, 7:30 p.m.
Ecuador v. Bolivia, 8:30 p.m.
Peru v. Chile, 9 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 10
Bolivia v. Peru, 4 p.m.
Venezuela v. Ecuador, 4:30 p.m.
Colombia v. Brazil, 5 p.m.
Argentina v. Uruguay, 7:30 p.m.
Chile v. Paraguay, 8 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 14
Bolivia v. Paraguay, 4 p.m.
Colombia v. Ecuador, 5 p.m.
Argentina v. Peru, 7:30 p.m.
Chile v. Venezuela, 8 p.m.
Brazil v. Uruguay, 8:30 p.m.

About Integrated Sports Media:
North America’s leading distributor of International Pay-Per-View and Closed-Circuit sports events has presented World Championship and world-class boxing matches featuring Evander Holyfield,
Roy Jones, Jr., Ricky Hatton, Ivan Calderon, Rocky Martinez, Nicolai Valuev, Amir Kahn, Marco Antonio Barrera, Arthur Abraham, David Haye, John Ruiz, and Juan Manuel Lopez. In addition, Integrated Sports Media has distributed numerous international soccer World Cup Qualifying and Friendly matches showcasing the National Teams of Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and the USA, as well as World Championship and world-class mixed martial arts events featuring Fedor Emelianenko, Tim Sylvia, Bobby Lashley, Bob Sapp, Jeff Monson, and Roy Nelson. For more information on upcoming Integrated Sports events visit www.integratedsportsnet.com.