FIFA says the United States bid needs stronger guarantees offederal government support and Qatar’s desert heat could putplayers’ health at risk at a 2022 World Cup.FIFA’s technical advisers provided reasons to reject all nine2018 and 2022 World Cup bidding projects in evaluation reportspublished Wednesday, 15 days before its executive committee choosesthe two winners in a secret ballot.The assessments are designed to highlight legal, commercial andorganizational risks that soccer’s governing body could face inopting to entrust a bidder with the tournament that earns FIFAabout 95 percent of its income every four years.”We feel we have accomplished our work in the spirit ofintegrity, objectiveness and transparency,” Harold Mayne-Nicholls,the Chilean who led the inspections, said in an introduction to histeam’s report.The United States and Qatar are hoping for the 2022 World Cup,along with Australia, South Korea and Japan. Russia is up againstEngland, Spain-Portugal and Belgium-Netherlands for the 2018tournament.However, the 24-person executive body – and two members inparticular – have more pressing World Cup issues.FIFA published summaries of the technical reports as its ethicscourt sat for a third day to investigate allegations published by aBritish newspaper that voters and bidders have been corruptlytrading votes behind the scenes.The ethics panel will announce Thursday if Amos…