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World Cup 2010 NewsWorld Cup MilestonesJuly 10There were more red cards - 28 - and yellow cards - 305 - than in any previous World Cup. 16 penalties were awarded. Germany's Klose won the Golden Boot with 5 goals. Altogether there were 147 goals in 64 matches (average 2.30 per match) compared with 161 (average 2.52 per match) in 2002. The fastest goal was Carlos Gamarra's own goal after 4 minutes in the England v Paraguay match. Germany had the best attack, scoring 10 goals while Switzerland did not concede a goal, though they became the first team to miss all three of their penalties in the shootout with Ukraine. Oh...and Italy beat France in the final and Germany secured third-place....see you in 2010.
World Cup MilestonesJune 28Brazilian striker Ronaldo became the leading scorer in World Cup history with his goal in Brazil's 3-0 win over Ghana yesterday. Ronaldo's tally stands at 15 from 18 matches, one more than German marksman Gerd Muller with 14.
Korea BluesJune 27Fifa, world football's governing organization, was forced to block emails to its web site coming from Korea after over 4 million angry Koreans bombarded the site complaining over the refereeing decisions in their team's game with Switzerland. A South Korean fan organization organized a petition suggesting Fifa would have to replay the match if it received 5 million complaints. World Cup MilestonesJune 26Sunday's Portugal v The Netherlands round of 16 match equalled the World Cup record for bookings in a single match at 16, and broke the record for red cards with 4. Portugal's Deco and Costinha were sent off for Portugal and Khalid Boulahrouz and Gio van Bronkhorst got their marching orders for The Netherlands from Russian referee Valentin Ivanov. Beckenbauer Hat-TrickJune 25World Cup organizer and German soccer legend Franz Beckenbauer married for the third time on Friday. His new bride is Heidi Burmesteron, his long-term partner, with whom he has a 5-year-old son. English Hooligans Cause Trouble in StuttgartOver 100 English hooligans were arrested for public order offences in Stuttgart in the early hours of Saturday night after trouble flared as the English troublemakers sang racist and provocative songs and hurled glasses and bottles at opposing supporters. World Cup MilestonesJune 23Marcus Allback's goal for Sweden against England was the 2000th goal scored at the World Cup since 1930. Lucien Laurent of France scored the first goal against Mexico in Uruguay in 1930. England's Graham Poll became the first World Cup referee to show a player THREE! yellow cards before finally dismissing him. Josip Simunic received his second yellow card after ninety minutes and should have seen a red card at this stage but was finally sent off after the final whistle for his third yellow for dissent. Ticket Scandal, Part IIJune 17Botswana's Ismail Bhamjee, a member of FIFA's Executive Committee, has been selling match tickets at three times their face value, according to news sources. Bhamjee, who has admitted his role in the incident, is now being forced to leave Germany and will resign from all his FIFA World Cup duties. In a signed a statement, he admitted selling 12 tickets for England's match against Trinidad & Tobago for 300 euros each. "I am disappointed about the conduct of a member of the executive committee," stated Fifa president Sepp Blatter. "In such a situation, FIFA acts immediately and firmly." Bhamjee, in a formal statement, apologized and expressed his regrets. RoboCupJune 16RoboCup 2006 has kicked off in Bremen. Over 400 teams from 36 countries are competing in the tournament competing in 11 robot leagues, including categories for humanoid and four-legged robots. This is the 10th time the annual tournament has been held which runs through June 18. Germany are the current world champions in the quadruped category and Japan are heavily fancied in the humanoid division. The stated aim of the organizers is to produce a robotic team capable of beating the human World Cup champions in 2050. Click here for images of RoboCup 2005 held in Osaka. World Cup VirusesInternet security firm McAfee has published a urvey showing many World Cup soccer-related websites harbor dangerous viruses and spyware. 24% of websites hosting screensavers for Angola were found to be infected, followed by Brazil with 17.2%, then Portugal 16.2%, Argentina 13.6% and the USA 13%. Pfister U-turnJune 13Otto Pfister is back. The 68-year-old coach will sit on the bench as Togo take on South Korea under a closed roof at the Waldstadion in Frankfurt. Intervention by the players and the Togolese Football Association persuaded the German to return, but the pay dispute involving his squad remains to be settled. World Cup Stadia Roofs To Close?June 12Complaints from broadcasting companies may lead to the closing of stadia roofs at Frankfurt and Gelsenkirchen due to the 'unslightly' reflections cast by the roof supports. However this move seems unlikely as temperatures continue to rise across Germany. The first World Cup game played in a covered stadium at the Silverdome in Detroit in 1994 saw pitch side temperatures rise to uncomfortable levels for both spectactors and players. None of Germany's covered stadiums enjoy the air conditioning of Sapporo's high-tech stadium in Japan where England defeated Argentina in 2002. Togo Coach QuitsJune 10Togo's coach Otto Pfister has walked out on the national team after a dispute over pay between his squad and the Togolese Football Association. Former assistant Kodjovi Mawuena will now be in charge of the side for their first match with South Korea. Pfister, who took on the job in March after Stephen Keshi was sacked after a poor African Cup of Nations blamed the Togolese FA for the off-field problems. The Togolese Prime Minister Edem Kodjo has offered to travel to Germany to help solve the problems of players' World Cup bonuses. Ticket Scam in Japan & China7 June 2006In shades of a ticketing scandal that left many Japanese fans outside of French stadiums begging for tickets in 1998, now we read that some 600 fans in Japan that purchased ticket plans will receive neither the tickets and travel vouchers they paid for nor a refund. According to the Asahi Shinbun newspaper, 608 customers who bought tickets from a Japanese travel agent, Max Air Service, will not be going to Germany. After Max announced it could not obtain a refund from its Chinese contractor, it has been front page news in Japan. The Chinese contractor failed to get the tickets, and has refunded 41.2 million yen of the payments but has yet to account for the remaining 30.8 million--and says it cannot. For its part, Max has said that it is unable to refund its customers. France Tickets "Missing"Over 900 tickets (552 group tickets and 355 conditional second round tickets) for France's games in Group G have gone AWOL in Strasbourg after arriving at the courier company DHL's offices from Paris. The electronic chips in the tickets have been deactivated by the German Organizing Committee following the discovery of the loss and will now be unusable. The King of Beers Has German Fans Furious6 June 2006In a country with more than 1,200 breweries, Budweiser has been named the official beer for the Germany World Cup. The maker of the American lager has secured an almost complete monopoly on beer sales at the stadiums hosting matches. It is not just the taste (or lack thereof) that has Germans seeing red; Budweiser does not meet Germany's rigid purity laws, which state that beer can only be brewed from malt, hops, and water. The King of Beers uses rice. Regional beers, moreover, are a source of great pride for Germans. Ticket Scam in Paraguay4 June 2006Officials in Paraguay
are suspected of selling nearly half of their country's allotment
of tickets
for the England match
to scalpers, who are then charging fans up to £645 ($1,213)
a seat. Some 1,500 of the South American nation's allocation of
3,300 tickets
for the first match have gone "missing."Four travel
companies in Asuncion selected to sell these tickets
have made allegations that they were essentially robbed. However,
in spite of the shortage in Paraguay,
tickets
are easy to find in Europe - for a price. One tout was selling tickets
and a night in a hotel for as much as €940 ($1,768). New Berlin Station Opens28 May 2006Europe's largest railway station opened today in Berlin. The new station, located not far from the Reichstag and the Chancellery, was eight years in construction and completed at a cost 700m euros. The station links lines in the north and south of Berlin with those in the east and west of the capital. Up to 300,000 people and 1,100 trains a day are expected to use the new five-storey, 46m steel and glass structure, which stands close to where a part of the Berlin Wall used to be. Terrorist & Neo-Nazi Threat23 May 2006A German police report by the German Federal Criminal Agency (BKA) leaked to Stern warns that "the biggest danger for the World Cup 2006 is in the threat of Islamic terrorism". The report mentioned 21 "high-risk" games which "from the perspective of the perpetrator, would be particularly rewarding". Matches involving the United States, England, Spain, Poland, Australia and Italy were included in the high-risk category due to those countries' involvement in the conflict in Iraq as well as the symbolic opening game in Munich and the final in Berlin. Security fears also concern the 300 big-screen viewing areas situated around Germany - which can hold up to 50,000 people as at the site in Hamburg. In Frankfurt giant screens will be floated on the River Main while fans watch from the riverbanks. There will be no bag searches and experts warn these public-viewing areas are at the greatest risk from potential attack. Football hooligans and Neo-Nazis also pose a threat, with extreme rightists planning a march in support of Iran's President Ahmadinejad, who has indicated he may attend the Iran v Mexico game in Nuremberg. Ahmadinejad has made statements denying the Holocaust. Spain TV CoverageAround 40% of Spaniards risk missing out on free-to-air TV coverage of the World Cup. A new channel LaSexta was awarded the rights by FIFA but due to a shortage of expensive set-top boxes - which can cost up to US$640 - many rural areas may not be able to receive coverage. Goleo Maker Files for Bankruptcy18 May 2006The maker of the mascot for this year's World Cup has declared
itself bankrupt after the toy flopped on the market. Italian Ref Has Accreditation Withdrawn14 May 2006Italian referee Massimo
De Santi had his World Cup accreditation
withdrawn by the Italian soccer federation (FIGC) after he was accused
of taking part in match-fixing in Serie A matches. The Italian federation
sent letters to FIFA to cancel his accreditation papers, and also
those for linesmen Alessandro Griselli and Marco Ivaldi, and officials
Paolo Bergamo and Pierluigi Pairetto. De Santi, Griselli, and Ivaldi
had been chosen to officiate in the World Cup in June. Italian prosecutors
are currently investigating into illegal betting.
FIGC will not be nominating a replacement team. Scalping and Reselling in Japan9 May 2006The Japanese media is beginning to report on scalpers in Japan
who are reselling tickets to Japan's first round matches. Demand
is huge, and in spite of official attempts to stamp it out, it is
common and rampant. Web sites advertising
match tickets
are doing a brisk business, according to the daily newspaper Yomiuri. Cologne Brothel Takes Down Saudi and Iranian Flags25 April 2006After receiving threats of violence from angry muslims, a brothel
in Cologne has
to remove the flags of Saudi
Arabia and Iran from
a huge World Cup advertising
banner.The banner, which measured 24-meters-high by 8-meters-wide
(78 by 26 ft), was hanging on the side of a building. The massive
banner included a nearly nude woman and the following slogan: "The
world as a guest of female friends. The world as a guest of friends."
In addition, the flags of the 32 nations in the World Cup were shown
below. Following the threats, the brothel blacked out the flags
of Saudi Arabia and Iran. World At Your Feet
21 April 2006"World At Your Feet" England's official World Cup song, can be heard today for the first time on Radio 1 and on The Sun web site, complete with an interview with Danny McNamara the lead singer of Embrace and the lyrics! Refs Get A Pay Rise
Fifa announced that referees' salaries for the 2006 World Cup
will rise to US$40,000, double their salary for World Cup 2002 in
Korea and Japan. "Golden Ball" for Final19 April 2006 The Teamgeist Berlin (team spirit), or Adidas-made Golden
Ball, will be used on July 9th at the Final of the World Cup. A
giant model of the ball was displayed in Berlin by Franz Beckenbauer,
former German great and current president of the German Organizing
Committee.
World Cup Games on TV in North America14 April 2006USA: SUM (Soccer United Marketing) hold the rights. The
games will be shown on: ABC - 12 games ESPN- 21 games ESPN2 - 31
games, Univision - 56 games, Telefutura - 8 games, KBS World - 64
games. Also online at ESPN360. http://www.worldcup2006ontv.com/games?tzd=-7
New Legislation vs Ebay11 April 2006New UK legislation which came into effect yesterday bans the unlicensed sale of any tickets to this summer's World Cup in Germany. It was already an offence to sell tickets to England's group games. Fifa and the British government are upping pressure on the UK auction site Ebay.co.uk to remove ticket listings for World Cup tickets. UK law does not cover overseas web sites such as eBay.com. DFB Opens Nazi Era Archives
The German soccer federation (DFB) has opened its archives from the 1930s, following the publication of a book commissioned by the DFB, Fussball unterm Hakenkreuz (Football Under The Swastika), that reveals the extent of the federation's collaboration with the Nazi regime in the 1930s. Jewish players, club officials and members of the press were all "deemed unacceptable" following the Nazi rise to power. FV Kahlsruhe and former international Julius Hirsch, a Jew, was later murdered in Auschwitz. The best English language retelling of this period is Ulrich Hesse-Lichtenburger's book Tor! The Story Of German Football. World Cup Security Threats4 April 2006In addition to concern over the threat of English thugs, German
officials are also casting a wary eye to the east. Fans in Poland,
Croatia, and the Ukraine are problematic because the Germans don't
know which ones are hooligans. This stands in contrast to England
and Holland, where police have extensive records on troublemakers--and
have passed those files on to the German hosts. World Cup Referees31 March 2006Fifa has named 23 referees for the 2006 World Cup with 7 back-up officials. In all 36 referees were on duty in 2002 in Korea/Japan. Graham Poll (England) and Markus Merk (Germany) appear again on the list this time around along with Peter Prendergast (Jamaica), Coffi Codjia (Benin), Lubos Michel (Slovakia), Kyros Vassaras (Greece), Jorge Larrionda (Uruguay), Carlos Batres (Guatemala) and Mark Shield (Australia). First Name | Surname | Country | Date of Birth Essam Abd El Fatah, Egypt 30/12/1965 Note: Referees Batres and De Bleeckere are subject to fitness tests. Seven referees, together with their assistants, have been nominated as back up officials in case of injury to any of the main group of 23 referees. Khalil Al Ghamdi, Saudi Arabia 02/09/1970 Source: FIFA Teams' Hotels22 March 2006Angola - Ringhotel Celler Tor, Celle; Argentina -
Hotel Herzogs Park, Herzogenaurach; Australia - Wald Schlosshotel
Friedrichsruhe, Zweiflingen; Brazil - Kempinski Hotel Falkenstein,
Konigstein im Taunus (Group stage); Brazil - Schlosshotel Lerbach,
Bergisch Gladbach (Knockout stage); Costa Rica - Holiday
Inn Walldorf, Heidelberg; Croatia - Dorint Resort & Spa,
Bad Brückenau; Czech Republic - Lindner Hotel & Sporting
Club Wiesensee, Westerburg; England - Hotel Buhler Hohle,
Baden Baden; Ecuador - Bristol Hotel, Bad Kissingen; France
- Schlosshotel Munchhausen, Aerzen; Germany - Schlosshotel
im Grunewald, Berlin; Ghana - Maritim Hotel, Wurzburg; Iran
- Ringhotel Krone Schnetzenhausen, Friedrichshafen; Italy
- Landhaus Milser, Duisburg; Ivory Coast - Robinson Club
Fleesensee, Fleesensee; Japan - Hilton Bonn, Bonn; Mexico
- Hotel Freizeit In, Göttingen; Netherlands - Parkhotel
Adler, Freiburg; Paraguay - Sport Academy Oberhaching, Baden
Baden; Poland - Sport Academy Barsinghausen, Hannover; Portugal
- Sport Academy Klosterpforte - Marienfeld; Serbia Montenegro
Hotel Weissenburg, Billerbeck; Saudi Arabia - Hotel Dolce,
Bad Nauheim; South Korea - Grandhotel Schloss Bensberg, Cologne;
Spain - Sport Academy Keiserau, Kamen; Sweden - Park
Hotel, Bremen; Switzerland - Kurhotel Furstenhof, Bad Betrich;
Togo - Hotel Waltersbuhl, Wangen; Trinidad & Tobago
- Hotel Landhaus Wachtelhof, Rotenburg; Tunisia - Mercure
Hotel, Schweinfurt; Ukraine - Seminaris SeeHotel, Potsdam;
USA - Park Hyatt Hamburg, Hamburg; Ticket Humor
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