The 2026 FIFA World Cup runs on Lenovo hardware and artificial intelligence. As the tournament's Official Technology Partner, Lenovo is fielding more than 17,000 Lenovo and Motorola devices across stadiums and team training sites in the United States, Canada, and Mexico — supported by a deployment of over 200 engineers stationed throughout all three host countries.
Sub-5-Second Broadcast, Globally
At the infrastructure core is an IPTV delivery system anchored by ThinkSystem SR635 V3 servers at the International Broadcast Center in Dallas, Texas. The servers ingest, transcode, and distribute all match content through ten channels to over 1,000 screens across FIFA venues — with end-to-end latency cut to under five seconds, making near-synchronous live viewing possible at unprecedented scale.
For the referee camera, Lenovo has added AI-powered stabilization software that processes footage in real time, reducing motion blur by 50% and delivering a much cleaner first-person broadcast perspective.
Football AI Pro: Equal Access for Every Nation
The most consequential piece of the deployment may be Football AI Pro, a generative AI analytics assistant available to all 48 participating teams — regardless of budget. Built using Lenovo's AI Factory, the platform processes hundreds of millions of FIFA-owned data points and surfaces tactical insights through text, video, graphs, and 3D visualizations before and after each match.
FIFA is explicit about the equity angle: the system is designed to eliminate the analytical gap between well-funded football federations and smaller nations, giving every team the same depth of preparation tools.
3D Player Avatars in VAR
Another notable addition is AI-enabled 3D player avatars, scanned in approximately one second per player to capture accurate body dimensions. These feed directly into the semi-automated offside technology and appear in broadcast replays as more legible VAR offside graphics. The system was already tested at the 2025 FIFA Intercontinental Cup before being scaled to the full World Cup.
Command Centers and Oversight
Lenovo is running a Technology Command Center in Miami alongside a Tournament Operation Center, monitoring all critical systems in near real time for the tournament's 104 total matches — with incident detection and rapid resolution built into the operational flow.
With approximately 6 billion viewers expected to tune in globally, the scope of Lenovo's infrastructure commitment represents one of the largest single-event technology deployments in the history of professional sports.