Daniel1991
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I dont really care what this bloke says anymore. The media asks the questions to provoke the answers they want. What do you think about the FourFourTwo article Sepp: England's The Bid To Beat? FIFA president Sepp Blatter has praised Russia's bid for the 2018 World Cup, labelling it "remarkable" - but said England's was the bid to beat.Have your say.
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J-Dog
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I wish he'd just make up his mind about who's "the most obvious choice", instead of changing his mind about it every f***en day.
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Daniel1991
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Yeah i reckon. Now he likes the Russian bid.
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afromanGT
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Sepp just says whatever pleases the suits he's sitting with on any given day. Next week he'll be backing Qatar again ](*,)
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Taz
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At this rate he should just come out and say the entire process is rigged.
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afromanGT
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How do you rig a bidding process?
The whole idea of the bidding process is effectively to bribe the judges.
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sanchez
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"the small but very pleasant bid of the Netherlands and Belgium"
Haha, oh what a pleasant bid.
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Tommycash
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hmmmmmm, I think Australia is in a dismal position with so little infrastructure. but we pulled the olypics off well and this is only marginally larger in terms of infrastructure.
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afromanGT
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Tommycash wrote:hmmmmmm, I think Australia is in a dismal position with so little infrastructure. but we pulled the olypics off well and this is only marginally larger in terms of infrastructure. Marginally larger? Seriously? That was just Sydney, this is the WHOLE of Australia. Size of Sydney: around 2500km^2. Size of Australia: only 7,600,000km^2, give or take two or three Sydney's. And granted most of taht is desolate wasteland, but you get the picture. It's much easier to get from one side of Sydney to the other than from Perth to Brisbane. Especially on a budget following your football team. Australia's downfall WILL be infrastructure.
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tjwhalan
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This guy is almost has bad as his asian counterpart ffs
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hugie
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Blatter is a media whore and just travels the world pumping up every bid but what he says here is true. England is a no brainer. If they go to England (like Germany in 06) it will be an awesome World Cup. Top stadiums, top public transport, completely set up already to put on a World Cup. Other countries have to not only convince FIFA but then put together a successful enough argument that they should have the Cup before England. It's a tough sell!
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joeb76
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What a dick this guy is. ""Russia is not a country but a continent and Russia has big plans to expand."
Ummm... exactly how are they planning on expanding . . .taking over Asia?
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macktheknife
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I think he failed geography.
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Master Baiter
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Next comes his admission that he says that about all the Bidders.
England have obviously upped their , how do you put it, their cash incentive .......
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The Oz Scouser
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I disagree 100% with the idea that we dont have the Infrastucture. MCG, Suncorp, SFS, Olympic Stadium and the new Gold Coast Stadium for the Gayfl are sorted (This stadium can be upgarded to 45000 people). Upgrades to Newcastle (already underway) Canberra, Geelong, Adelaide Oval (already Underway), Townsville. Possibly build Three New Stadiums one in Perth or Upgrade of Subiaco (Currently Underway) Build a new Stadium in Hobart and a new Western Sydney Stadium that Rovers could play at.
As well our accomodation is established, public transport well established, Capital City Airports are at a high standard already, safety is a non issue and I'd say tickets would be snapped up asap if we had the 2022.All of these things cannot be said about South AFrica.
The Bid for 2022 is going to be the strongest by far as the Yanks and Japanese have had a World Cup that Established the codes league. FIFA is all about Legacy. If we get 2022 the legacy for football in this country will be massive. We would have 12 years to build for the tournament which is a lot more then any other World Cup in history.
2018 should go to Europe and I hope the poms get it as it would be amazing.
When you talk about Infrastutucre, its not just the stadiums that FIFA look at. I still dont know how South Africa got he WC but Africa needed to get a World cup.
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afromanGT
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Quote:Capital City Airports are at a high standard already, But damn near impossible to get to in Melbourne on public transport. The only way that Australia is getting a world cup is if we convince FIFA that they're expanding into a new market, but they're not.
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sydneycroatia58
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afromanGT wrote:Quote:Capital City Airports are at a high standard already, But damn near impossible to get to in Melbourne on public transport. The only way that Australia is getting a world cup is if we convince FIFA that they're expanding into a new market, but they're not. The only other thing is if we can convince them of how they could take advantage of a very well run World Cup on Asia's doorstep.
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afromanGT
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A Very 'well run' World Cup with shit public transport.
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sydneycroatia58
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afromanGT wrote:A Very 'well run' World Cup with shit public transport. Who knows in 12 years we could have adequate public transport:lol: :lol:
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socceroossupporter
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I now consider the importance of Blatter's announcements on par with internet pop-up adverts.
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sydneycroatia58
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socceroossupporter wrote:I now consider the importance of Blatter's announcements on par with internet pop-up adverts. What's better imo is that he came out and said that he says this to all the bids about how good they are but yet the media still runs with it when he says something:lol:
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afromanGT
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sydneycroatia58 wrote:afromanGT wrote:A Very 'well run' World Cup with shit public transport. Who knows in 12 years we could have adequate public transport:lol: :lol: Yeah, and New Zealand is the next world superpower.
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mattx
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From The Age today. It looks like we don`t even have the stadiums sorted for our bid yet, but the AFL will benefit if we get the world cup...And I think that is a good thing. Win/Win. Quote:MCG still not locked in to bid DAN SILKSTONE May 6, 2010 AUSTRALIA'S World Cup bid has still not secured access to the MCG as the AFL continues to hold out signing over its control of the stadium, citing a host of concerns.
With Australia's bid book due to be submitted by the end of the month and already having been sent to the printers, the MCG - which the AFL has consistently said it does not oppose being used for the tournament - is still to be formally secured.
The major sticking point is a demand by the AFL that soccer guarantees that the AFL season will go ahead - something that requires a ruling from FIFA as to whether AFL is a ''major'' sport. A major sport is prohibited from running simultaneously with the World Cup.
The AFL is also demanding a guarantee that the MCG will not be out of action for longer than 10 weeks. It is concerned that FIFA will require the city's largest stadium for longer periods before and after the tournament.
The stand-off, which has driven bid team members to distraction in recent weeks, could be decided as soon as today, with speculation last night the parties were close to settling their differences.
The news comes as rival contender Japan withdrew from the 2018 bid process yesterday, saying it had been advised that the tournament would almost certainly be awarded to a European bidder and it made more sense to focus on 2022.
Barely a week after praising Qatar's 2022 bid during a visit to the emirate, FIFA boss Sepp Blatter described Russia's bid as ''remarkable'' and again re-stated his preference that a European nation be awarded hosting rights for 2018. Blatter was less forthcoming about the joint Dutch-Belgian bid, describing it as ''small but very pleasant''.
Despite the clear FIFA preference for a European tournament in 2018, Football Federation Australia maintained yesterday that it would not withdraw from that race in favour of channelling its efforts into 2022.
''We are absolutely still in it and we are not going anywhere,'' a spokesman said.
''Europe might think it [the World Cup] is going to Europe, but 24 people have to vote on that and nothing is guaranteed.''
Another of the AFL's hoped-for outcomes - a new stadium at Blacktown that could be configured for use by Greater Western Sydney - has been rebuffed, with the FFA successfully arguing that Australian football has already obtained a hugely beneficial legacy through the bid process, including large-scale refurbishments of Adelaide Oval, Subiaco, Carrara and Geelong's Skilled Stadium.
The World Cup bid was instrumental in securing all of those projects and two of them - Geelong and the Gold Coast - will be used solely by AFL clubs after the World Cup.
News Ltd newspapers reported yesterday that Blacktown had won the race to be the 12th and final stadium in the bid book and that a 50,000-seat facility would be built there - a project costed at almost $300 million and to be jointly funded by the New South Wales and federal governments.
The report also suggested that the playing surface would be oval-shaped, as a concession to the AFL, which is looking for a home ground for its new Western Sydney franchise.
But The Age can reveal that the capacity will be 41,000 and the surface will be rectangular, meaning that Greater Western Sydney must look elsewhere for a home.
Instead, the stadium will become the new home of the A-League's incoming West Sydney Rovers, a competitor to the AFL in the turf war for the Western Sydney market.
It is also possible that the Wests Tigers rugby league team, or a hypothetical Western Sydney Super 15 Rugby franchise, could one day call the stadium home.
The Blacktown stadium deal will be officially announced next week, part of a slew of announcements before the bid book is sent to FIFA.
Among the announcements will also be a new $700 million-plus stadium for Perth. The stadium, likely to be located on the site of the existing Subiaco, would accommodate more than 60,000 people and be configured as rectangular for the World Cup but returned to an oval shape for use by the city's two AFL clubs.
As with the other venues under discussion, it will only be completed in the event that Australia's World Cup bid is successful.
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afromanGT
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:lol AFL isn't a major sport. It's not like it will draw international attention other than for people to go "look what these idiots are doing with a rugby ball"
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Krueger
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It will be hard for Australia to get the World Cup. Good work, great people behind, and the big money makers, thats what we need, and a good WC in South Africa. But at the end, its time to get the Cup down under. Andre Germany
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