by floyd__streete » 08 Oct 2009 13:58
by Thaumagurist* » 08 Oct 2009 14:15
by Barry the bird boggler » 08 Oct 2009 17:32
by Royal Rother » 08 Oct 2009 17:50
wiki Warner has been accused of corruption on BBC's Panorama for repeatedly taking advantage of his position for financial gain. FIFA's auditors, Ernst & Young, estimated that his family made a profit of at least $1 million from reselling 2006 World Cup tickets that Warner had ordered.
Minutes of FIFA’s executive committee indicate that a fine of almost $1 million, equal to the expected profiteering, was imposed on the family. Despite numerous reminders from FIFA, only $250,000 has been paid.
After Trinidad and Tobago visited Scotland for the friendly match on May 30, 2004 at Easter Road, Edinburgh, Jack Warner asked SFA President John McBeth for the cheque for the game to be made out to him personally and not the FA of Trinidad and Tobago. McBeth refused to issue the cheque to Warner. Warner also approached several members of staff at the Scottish Football Association in an attempt to get the money due to the T&T FA.
by Dirk Gently » 08 Oct 2009 22:46
Barry the bird boggler Given where the money is in the game, and by far the majority of those countries who are actually capable of hosting the thing, what is the point in only having the tounament in Europe once every 12 or 16 years (supposedly)...
by Compo's Hat » 09 Oct 2009 00:25
Seal On top of that Warner has it in for England as some Daily Mail investigative journalist as been snooping around him for about 10 years trying to expose his dealings. Therefore he feels the entire British media are against him so he is not shy of sticking to England. No smoke without fire of course and he is without doubt a dodgy fooker, but that's the background as to why he gets involved.
Dirk Gently To grow the game across the world, and not just in the areas where it is already most successful?
by LoyalRoyalFan » 09 Oct 2009 17:29
Wimb Well having been at the speech, Warner was at least passionate he also spoke about increasing the pace of the game and giving fans more value for money
by Victor Meldrew » 09 Oct 2009 20:15
LoyalRoyalFan English Football has the best facilitates in the world.
by LoyalRoyalFan » 09 Oct 2009 20:37
Victor MeldrewLoyalRoyalFan English Football has the best facilitates in the world.
Presumably you are talking about "facilities".
If you are, what about access to grounds?
The road and rail access to most of our grounds is diabolical.
We have old fashioned stadia like Old Trafford,Anfield,Goodison,Villa Park,Stamford Bridge and White Hart Lane which although being quaint can hardly be described as having the best facilities.
Wembley and The Emirates are fine when you get there if you can find a convenient way of getting there.
The North-East grounds are modern and not too bad to reach,likewise Man City.
If only the National stadium had been built somewhere like the Ricoh it would have been much more accessible for so many more people than the ludicrous position that is Wembley.
We are long overdue the competition for footballing reasons but I'm afraid you sound like a modern politician or an RFC chairman/manager by declaring that English football has the best facilities as if it were a fact.
by Victor Meldrew » 09 Oct 2009 22:22
LoyalRoyalFanVictor MeldrewLoyalRoyalFan English Football has the best facilitates in the world.
Presumably you are talking about "facilities".
If you are, what about access to grounds?
The road and rail access to most of our grounds is diabolical.
We have old fashioned stadia like Old Trafford,Anfield,Goodison,Villa Park,Stamford Bridge and White Hart Lane which although being quaint can hardly be described as having the best facilities.
Wembley and The Emirates are fine when you get there if you can find a convenient way of getting there.
The North-East grounds are modern and not too bad to reach,likewise Man City.
If only the National stadium had been built somewhere like the Ricoh it would have been much more accessible for so many more people than the ludicrous position that is Wembley.
We are long overdue the competition for footballing reasons but I'm afraid you sound like a modern politician or an RFC chairman/manager by declaring that English football has the best facilities as if it were a fact.
But which other countries have good facilities then? The Nou Camp in Spain isn't the easiest to get too. England is where football was created, it's where the world's most popular league is played in and why shouldn't the 'older' grounds get the taste of World Cup football?
by Rev Algenon Stickleback H » 10 Oct 2009 22:08
LoyalRoyalFanVictor MeldrewLoyalRoyalFan English Football has the best facilitates in the world.
Presumably you are talking about "facilities".
If you are, what about access to grounds?
The road and rail access to most of our grounds is diabolical.
We have old fashioned stadia like Old Trafford,Anfield,Goodison,Villa Park,Stamford Bridge and White Hart Lane which although being quaint can hardly be described as having the best facilities.
Wembley and The Emirates are fine when you get there if you can find a convenient way of getting there.
The North-East grounds are modern and not too bad to reach,likewise Man City.
If only the National stadium had been built somewhere like the Ricoh it would have been much more accessible for so many more people than the ludicrous position that is Wembley.
We are long overdue the competition for footballing reasons but I'm afraid you sound like a modern politician or an RFC chairman/manager by declaring that English football has the best facilities as if it were a fact.
But which other countries have good facilities then? The Nou Camp in Spain isn't the easiest to get too. England is where football was created, it's where the world's most popular league is played in and why shouldn't the 'older' grounds get the taste of World Cup football?
Rev Algenon Stickleback H Anfield, for example, isn't up to current world cup standards. The stands are too close to the pitch, which is itself too small for the world cup, being too narrow and too short.
prostak Royalee,
- 3 of your cited stadiums are yet to be built, and two of those are still without even planning permission.
- I can't imagine FIFA being too keen on a bid proposing only 3 host cities and, in Sunderland, one host post-industrial hellhole. That would be the lowest number since 1962.
- The Olympic Stadium (which you associate for no clear reason with a club who have had their offer of tenancy rejected - note also a post-Games capacity of 25.000) will be an athletics stadium - and will remain so.
- The Denbigh Stadium in Milton Keynes holds 22.000, although I'll grant you Tinpot Benito Winkelman has grand visions of this increasing by 10.000. Even with that increase, though, which recent World Cup venue is this larger than?
- Platini is currently nothing to do with FIFA.
- Of late, there has been a definite effort by the governing bodies to award tournaments to economically developing nations with the intention of helping to accelerate that development through football. Maybe it's just fashionable, maybe it's genuinely a hitherto-undiscovered sense of social responsibility from Blatter et al, but in Poland at least (the only one of the forthcoming host nations I have strong knowledge of), the forthcoming Euro Championships are already having an impact on construction and regeneration.
Other than that, great post.
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