Grant Wahl, 48, helped build soccer’s
popularity in the United States through his vivid reporting for Sports
Illustrated, CBS Sports and other media.
Wahl collapsed in the press tribune during
Friday’s Argentina-Netherlands game. The Wall Street Journal said he suffered a
suspected heart attack.
Wahl’s wife Celine Gounder, a renowned
epidemiologist, said on Twitter: “I’m in complete shock.”
A Qatar organising committee spokesperson
said “he received immediate emergency medical treatment on site, which
continued as he was transferred by ambulance to Hamad General Hospital.”
“We offer our deepest condolences to
Grant’s family, friends and his many close colleagues in the media,” the
statement added.
World Cup ‘stress’
Organisers did not mention an incident just
before the November 21 match between the United States and Wales when Wahl was
stopped as he entered the stadium for wearing a rainbow shirt in support of
LGBTQ rights.
Qatar criminalises homosexuality and Wahl said
security guards told him the shirt was “political”.
Widespread tributes were paid to the
journalist who had been covering his eighth World Cup, starting with the 1994
tournament in the United States.
“His love for football was immense and his
reporting will be missed by all who follow the global game,” said FIFA
president Gianni Infantino in a statement.
“Grant made soccer his life’s work, and we
are devastated that he and his brilliant writing will no longer be with us,” US
Soccer said.
The “entire US Soccer family is
heartbroken,” it added.
“Fans of soccer and journalism of the
highest quality knew we could count on Grant to deliver insightful and
entertaining stories about our game, and its major protagonists: teams,
players, coaches and… many personalities that make soccer unlike any sport.”
Wahl said on his subscription newsletter
earlier this week that he’d gone to a clinic at the media center in Qatar, “and
they said I probably have bronchitis.”
“My body finally broke down on me. Three
weeks of little sleep, high stress and lots of work can do that to you… I could
feel my upper chest take on a new level of pressure and discomfort,” he wrote.
With some antibiotics and “some heavy duty
cough syrup” Wahl said he was “feeling a bit better just a few hours later. But
still: No bueno.”
Wahl joined Sports Illustrated, then the
leading US sports publication, in 1996 to report on soccer. He remained at the
magazine until 2020, joining CBS Sports a year later.
He also had a subscription email newsletter,
and was posting to that during the World Cup. He was recently among journalists
honoured by the International Sports Press Association (AIPS) for their work.
US State Department spokesman Ned Price
tweeted: “We are deeply saddened to learn of the death of Grant Wahl” and added
that US authorities have been “in close communication” with his family.