With one week to go, FIFA deny World Cup spoiled by money-making

Joseph

One week before the World Cup starts, the head of football’s world governing body Sepp Blatter has fought off accusations that the tournament will be ruined by big business.

Host nation Germany kick off the 64-match tournament against Costa Rica next Friday in the spectacular high-tech Munich stadium, starting the ball rolling on a month of action to decide the winners of a trophy which remains the pinnacle of footballing achievement.

Yet days before the big kick-off, there have been complaints from the German organisers that the marketing of this tournament has reached unacceptable levels.

Polls in Germany have shown that the public is growing sick of World Cup-related advertising and product tie-ins.

US brewing giant Anheuser-Busch paid 40 million dollars (31 million euros) to be one of the 2006 World Cup’s 15 official sponsors, sparking outrage in Germany where all but one local beer will be banned from the stadiums in favour of Budweiser.

Franz Beckenbauer, the head of the World Cup organising committee, called on Thursday for football to be “cleaned up” because he was afraid the sport was selling its soul to big business.

“We need to talk about the limits of money-making.”

FIFA President Sepp Blatter, who has seen the amount of money paid by the World Cup sponsors rise sharply in his eight years at the helm, said the accusations were untrue.

“This is not about the commercialisation of football,” Blatter said in an interview with the Tagesspiegel newspaper.

“What is important is a partnership between football, the economy and television which benefits all sides.”

But he indicated that changes to the marketing of the World Cup would be made after the finals in Germany.

“We will aim for the optimum, not the maximum,” the 70-year-old former Swiss lawyer said.

There was an early test for the tournament’s security arrangements when the US team flew into the northern port city of Hamburg to take up their heavily-guarded headquarters in a central hotel.

Security around coach Bruce Arena’s squad will be tight due to the possibility of attacks from Islamic extremists.

Host nation Germany was putting its much-criticised defence to another test against Colombia in Monchengladbach on Friday, while England take on Jamaica in Manchester on Saturday before travelling to Germany on Monday.

England’s hopes of having Wayne Rooney fit for the World Cup received a boost on Friday when the forward underwent his most vigorous training session since breaking a bone in his foot in April.

Rooney, the team’s most influential player, will have a scan on Wednesday to determine whether he has any chance of playing in the later stages of the tournament.

Another of Europe’s big guns, the Netherlands, have strength in depth, according to coach Marco Van Basten who was delighted after seeing a second-string lineup recover from a goal down to beat fellow qualifiers Mexico 2-1 in Eindhoven on Thursday.

“I picked a reserve team tonight and they proved to me that they are all ready to play a part in the World Cup,” said the legendary former striker.

South Korea, the surprise semi-finalists on home soil in 2002, also rested many of their key players including Manchester United midfielder Park Ji-Sung as they were held to a goalless draw by Norway in Oslo.

In other matches on Friday, Italy face the sternest hurdle of their troubled preparations when they face Ukraine in Lausanne and Sweden take on Chile in Solna.

Meanwhile, Japanese fans have been warned that their tradition of leaping into rivers to celebrate victories of their team will not be welcomed in Germany.

“Don’t jump into the Rhine,” Bonn mayor Barbel Dieckmann said, as hundreds of fans descended on the team’s training camp there.

“The quality of the water in the Rhine is good but it flows very fast… There is the danger of drowning,” she added.

Source:Soccer News

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