Sports
World Cup kick-off stadium to hold new test
A view is seen of the construction of the Beira-Rio Stadium in Porto Alegre, October 7, 2013. u00e2u20acu201d Reuters pic

SAO PAULO, May 20 —The stadium hosting the World Cup opening match on June 12 will hold a second test event next week after its first major test laid bare a host of problems.

Sao Paulo’s Corinthians Arena, plagued by budget overruns, construction delays and accidents that have killed three workers, will host a Brazilian league match between home team Corinthians and Cruzeiro on May 29, said the Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF).

Organisers are still scrambling to get the stadium finished in time for the World Cup opening ceremony and kick-off match between Brazil and Croatia.

On Sunday it held what was originally scheduled to be its only major test event, when Corinthians lost 1-0 to underdogs Figueirense.

But the local organising committee overseeing Sao Paulo’s preparations for the World Cup said the match had revealed the venue, also known as the Itaquerao, needed another test.

“Given the worldwide attention the opening match of the World Cup will attract, there will be a second test,” the committee told AFP, saying it would focus particularly on “operational and service” issues.

FIFA secretary general Jerome Valcke, the world football governing body’s top task-master for host country preparations, said yesterday the stadium “still needs 100 per cent from everybody” to be ready in time.

The stadium, which Brazil is due to hand over to FIFA tomorrow — repeatedly delayed from an original deadline of December 31 — was Valcke’s first stop on a tour to oversee final preparations in all 12 World Cup host cities.

“A test event does not compare to the scale, needs and global attention of the opening match of the World Cup,” he wrote on Twitter after the visit.

“The opening World Cup match attracts 65,000-plus watching live in the stadium and a billion on TV. Twenty-four days to go.”

About 36,000 fans attended Sunday’s match.

Parts of the stadium’s sprawling glass-panelled roof have not been installed, leaving some of them exposed to drenching rain. Problems with elevators and escalators, cell phone communications and lighting outside the stadium also marred the event.

Two extra seating areas to hold a total of 20,000 fans had still not received safety approval from firefighters.

The security perimeter around the stadium was also smaller than that demanded by FIFA, and the required metal detectors were not yet installed. — AFP

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