Successful World Cup, rather than World Cup success, for Brazil

By News / Wire

Well before the first kick-off, the World Cup was playing against the odds, with Brazil rushing to finish stadiums, chaos at airports and violent protests in the streets.

But a month after the first game, Argentina’s team is preparing to play Germany in Sunday’s (Monday AEST) final, capping a tournament where football reigned, with beautiful goals and drama on the pitch, while doomsday scenarios never materialised.

When the continent-sized nation won the right to host the Cup in 2007, it wanted to show it was not just the home of the “beautiful game” but also an emerging power that can organise the sport’s biggest events.

While Brazil’s national team was knocked out in a humiliating 7-1 semi-final defeat to Germany, the government is declaring the tournament itself was a success.

“We were able to do the Cup even though they said it would be chaos,” President Dilma Rousseff, who is seeking re-election in October, said.

FIFA and experts agree.

“Brazil is huge, it has a lot of defects and cities have big problems,” said Lamartine da Costa, a sports events expert at the Rio de Janeiro State University.

“But it is the world’s seventh economy. Amid the confusion, when there’s a need to get things done, things generally work out.”

While the stadiums were finished just in time, many of the promised public transport projects were delayed until after the tournament.

And the equal worst defeat in the five-time champion team’s history laid bare a football crisis in the country that gave the world Pele, Garrincha, Zico and Neymar.

While the Selecao was humiliated, the other teams put on a show that made it an exciting tournament full of surprises and goals.

“It was one of the best World Cups when it comes to technique, although it become a bit more tense closer to the final,” Brazil’s 1994 World Cup champion and former midfielder Rai told AFP.

Off the pitch, tourists were delighted by the warmth of the Brazilian people across the nation of sun, samba and picturesque beaches.

The tourism ministry expects to exceed a forecast of 600,000 visitors, double the figure from the 2010 tournament in South Africa.

“This is my 20th World Cup and I can say that this Cup is undoubtedly a great success,” FIFA president Sepp Blatter said. “Where are the problems that could have happened?”

The country did flirt with a major tragedy when an unfinished highway overpass that was part of the Cup-related projects collapsed on four vehicles, including part of a crowded bus, in the southeastern city of Belo Horizonte. Two people died.

Fears of chaos came after the Confederations Cup was marked by massive protests last year, when Brazilians flooded the streets to criticise the World Cup’s record $US11 billion ($A11.90 billion) spending and demand better hospitals, public transport and schools.

But protests were small during the World Cup as football passion took over.

The Crowd Says:

2014-07-14T02:43:11+00:00

Martyn50

Guest


You need to open your eyes to other football codes

2014-07-13T23:17:17+00:00

AR

Guest


"My favourite sport is better than your favourite sport". Stunning insight.

2014-07-13T22:19:43+00:00

Fussball ist unser leben

Roar Guru


And, boring old AR.... over 4 years on this forum, I have yet to see you make one useful contribution to any football discussion. But, you keep hanging around football forums - presumably because you are finally understanding what football fans know ... your preferred sport is boring, dull & insignificant.

2014-07-13T20:18:16+00:00

AR

Guest


Good ol Fuss. I've never seen any other person tie himself in knots defending FIFA on any issue.

2014-07-13T13:20:19+00:00

Fussball ist unser leben

Roar Guru


FIFA = 209 member nations. So, FIFA's profits are used to develop football across all 209 members. The same happens with local sports in Australia - the governing bodies (FFA, AFL, NRL, ARU, CA, etc.) pocket all the TV money, sponsorship money ... & then distribute the money across their membership base, as they see fit. FiFA should generate around US$4 billion from WC2014. The usual "rule of thumb" for most customer-facing businesses is Net Profit = 1/3 of gross revenue. If this is true, FIFA's net profit will be $1.3 billion. They will distribute $400 million - nearly 33% of this to the 32 competing countries. Plus Brasil, as the host nation, gets an additional distribution. I don't hear any of the 209 Members complaining about FIFA's distribution of WC funds. Seems to be only irrelevant minds from outside FIFA who want to create some fiction on this issue.

2014-07-13T12:23:13+00:00

AR

Guest


Sadly, any revenue that is generated from this World Cup goes almost exclusively into the pockets of FIFA, not Brazil. This is a terrible article. Has this been an enjoyable tournament for spectators? Certainly. But the tournament could prove to be far worse for the host nation off the pitch, than on - which is pretty frightening.

2014-07-13T05:50:19+00:00

Martyn50

Guest


The true value of the success will not be known for 10 years when the nation is still paying of the debt. Ala South Africa

2014-07-13T02:47:58+00:00

Anthony Ferguson

Guest


I think in terms of expectation, this is the worst performance by a host nation since Spain in 1982.

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