Football rules: Beyonce, Jay-Z to show World Cup final before Paris gig

The first couple of pop has offered to show the game between France and its as-yet-unknown rival ahead of their gig.

Published : Jul 11, 2018 19:40 IST

People celebrate France's victory at a fan zone in central Paris on July 10, 2018 at the final whistle of the Russia 2018 World Cup semi-final football match between France and Belgium.

Who runs the world? Footballers. And not even Beyonce and Jay-Z can compete.

Apparently concerned that the World Cup final will steal the show in Paris on Sunday, where they are due to perform a concert, the first couple of pop has offered to show the game between France and its as-yet-unknown rival ahead of their gig.

“Twenty years after the French team won its first world title, Beyonce and Jay-Z invite people with tickets for their concert to come to the Stade de France at 1600 in order to take advantage of the stadium's screens, as well as those of the production team, to carry Les Bleus towards their final victory,” the organisers of the Paris leg of the couple's On The Run II world tour announced.

The show at the national stadium, which starts at 7.30 pm, is the second Paris date in the tour.

While Saturday's concert is sold out, tickets are still available for Sunday, when France is gunning for its second World Cup title, 20 years after winning the tournament with a 3-0 victory over Brazil at the Stade de France.

Beyonce and Jay-Z are not the only ones to bow to the superior star power of the beautiful game.

Justin Timberlake made arrangements to screen the second semifinal, between England and Croatia, before his show at the 02 arena in London on Wednesday night.

“I heard there's a big game on tomorrow before our show,” Timberlake wrote on Twitter on Tuesday. “So I had a little chat with @TheO2.”

On Tuesday, tens of thousands of people took to the streets of Paris to celebrate the team's semifinal win over Belgium in scenes that are expected to be replicated on a much bigger scale in the event of a final victory Sunday.

In Britain, excitement is also at a fever pitch, with around 32 million people expected to watch Wednesday's game.