This is why the World Cup trophies were handed out by
Emirates air hostesses
By Rafat Ali, Skift July 14, 2014 / http://qz.com/234378/this-is-why-the-world-cup-trophies-were-handed-out-by-emirates-air-hostesses/
Because the
world’s largest international airline paid a giant sum for it, that’s why.
Emirates, along with other Gulf region airlines, has taken over sports
sponsorships around the world, and this World Cup is no exception.
Emirates
isn’t shy about throwing around large piles of cash to get top billing at
sporting events. And it’s the TV viewers the airline is after, and the World
Cup Final is as big as it gets, hence the final ceremony.
Emirates’
current shirt sponsorships deals are with some of the hottest football clubs in
the world including AC Milan, Paris St Germain, and Arsenal. It’s also been an
Official FIFA Worldwide Partner since 2007 providing the airline tons of
publicity during organization’s many events, including the World Cup. As a partner,
it pays an estimated $25-50 million per year, along with other “partners” like
Adidas, Coca-Cola, Hyundai, Sony and Visa.
World Cup 2014: A beautiful
tournament that covered up some ugly truths
Some fantastic football managed to overshadow many concerns, from
corruption at Fifa to the incredible costs for Brazil . The Independent's chief
football writer Sam Wallace looks back on a tournament for which the whole
story has perhaps not been told
SAM WALLACE / RIO DE JANEIRO Monday 14 July 2014 / http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football/worldcup/world-cup-2014-a-beautiful-tournament-that-covered-up-some-ugly-truths-9605713.html
The Policia
Militar in Brazil
drive black 4x4s with a matt finish, the kind you only usually see in Premier
League training ground car-parks. Walking past Botafago metro station in the
centre of Rio de Janeiro on Saturday night I stepped out of the road to let one
pass and from the open back window was a gun barrel casually resting on the
frame, pointing out towards the busy city streets.
This has
been the story of Brazil 2014,
a huge but discreet police operation and nowhere more
than at the heart of the World Cup in Rio ’s
tourist areas. As a television spectacle, in the stadiums and the Copacabana
backdrop to the BBC and ITV studios, the World Cup must have looked like a
ravishing, sunlit party. For Rio itself, a temporary return to its 1930s glory-days
as a playground for millionaires and Hollywood stars when it was the “Cidade
Maravilhosa” and today’s inequalities were much less of concern.
On the
ground, it felt different. If it took this many policeman to ensure a city
operated safely, what would it be like when they all went back to their usual
hours? The estimated security bill for the Brazilian state is £500m. Two days
before Sunday’s final, the authorities made it clear they were taking no
chances around their marquee game with the arrest and jailing of 17 activists
under “temporary prison” legislation at the notorious Bangu penitentiary
outside Rio .
It is
remarkable that the various Brazilian police forces have been unable to stop a
64-year-old Englishman, Ray Whelan, suspected of ticket fraud, evading arrest
by walking out of the service entrance of the most famous hotel in Rio . But they have no problem rounding up those whom they
only suspect might disrupt the proceedings.
The World
Cup finals began with the Sunday Times’ most comprehensive investigation yet
into the wholesale corruption of Fifa over Qatar’s successful bid to host the
2022 tournament, an issue that had been conveniently parked for the duration of
the Brazil 2014. In
the main because Sepp Blatter, the Fifa president, has kept such a low-profile
- so much so that some have wondered whether he has been in the country for the
duration.
As usual,
Fifa will leave with its profits from the event, estimated at £580m, untouched
by the Brazilian taxman, an accord that every host nation has to sign up to,
along with other privileges that would be beyond ordinary citizens. On Sunday
night, Blatter found himself much less unpopular than Brazil ’s
president Dilma Rouseff, who was loudly booed every time she appeared on screen
by the predominantly middle-class Brazilians who attend the games. It was a
first for Blatter, who may request that Dilma accompanies him on more official
events.
This World
Cup finals easily outshone the drab 2010 tournament for the sheer quality of
football. It got off to a flier with Brazil ’s
victory over Croatia and
then onto the Netherlands ’
5-1 destruction of champions Spain .
A general leniency from referees helped at times, but may also have encouraged
the spike in fouls after the group stages. For the organisers, it could not
have worked out better - drawing attention from the pre-tournament concerns
about the deaths of stadium workers and establishing an unstoppable momentum
around the football itself.
After the
first two rounds, the narrative had become whether this was best World Cup of
all-time - a debate that flagged in the four quarter-finals over which only
five goals were scored. But even so, it squeezed out other less-flattering
issues. When a motorway flyover collapse in Belo Horizonte
killed two people four days before Brazil ’s
semi-final there against Germany ,
the victims were not even afforded a minute’s silence before the game. In fact,
you rather got the impression that it was viewed by the authorities as an
inconvenient downer on the general mood.
At that
point, nothing was permitted to interfere with the Brazil team’s progress. While the
country’s major television channels were very much on-message, treating
Neymar’s injury like it was the Kennedy assassination, the mood among ordinary
Brazilians was different. They had thought for some time that Luiz Felipe
Scolari’s team were mediocre. No-one expected the semi-final to be 7-1, but
even so, for all the gloomy talk of “Maracanazo II”, largely from those of us
in the foreign press, there has been no wide-scale wailing in the street. It’s
only football, after all.
When Mario
Gotze popped in the winner in the second half of extra-time in the final on
Sunday, it took the total number of tournament goals to 171, equalling the
record set in France
in 1998. The German football nation is superb, having produced many of the key
players in the great Bayern Munich Champions League winning team of 2013 too.
But generally, this tournament has proved that what qualifies one as a good
player in Europe ’s big-money leagues does not
necessarily translate to a successful summer tournament.
Teams like Colombia , Costa
Rica , Algeria
and the United States
showed that good players, especially those who have been lightly-raced over the
course of a domestic season, can come together and perform with the so-called
best in the world. As for England ,
their performance left a mere thumbprint on this tournament. In terms of
fallout, the Football Association and Roy Hodgson have benefitted from the
distractive capacity of an exciting World Cup.
The
television viewing figures have been remarkable, holding up long after England
were eliminated. The BBC attracted 16.7m viewers for the final, confirmation,
at the very least, that the love burns stronger than ever for football in the United Kingdom ,
however much the home nations’ performances try to kill any domestic optimism.
Before
Sunday’s final, the Fifa montage machine was in full effect on the big screens.
If you went to a game in Brazil dressed as, say, a sausage, or held up a sign
saying that this was the best World Cup ever, then there is a good chance you
were on it. This is how Fifa would like the world to see its four-yearly
pageant, an exuberant meeting of the nations with more face-paint than a Sioux
Indians re-enactment and some football too.
Once again,
one suspects Fifa has got away with it. None of the stadiums collapsed, the
protesters spent the last weekend in jail and the football was pretty good. The
fundamental questions, like how the hell it chose Qatar for 2022, will not be
answered now. Perhaps they never will. But now that Fifa has gone, Brazil itself
will discover the unvarnished truth as to whether it really was all worth it.
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