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    #61
    Travelling from city to city between matches will be so easy, I think id be really excited to go to this one

    BBC
    The whole of Qatar erupted into a bundle of flag-waving Middle Easterners when the nation performed a football miracle to bring the World Cup to the region for the first time in its history.
    Qatar, the smallest nation bidding for the right to host the 2022 tournaments, is a sports-mad peninsula that juts into the balmy waters of the Persian Gulf.
    But to many in the Western hemisphere, it is still an unknown land in a region that has, until very recently, not been associated with world-class football but rather with terrible conflicts.

    All that will and must now change - and it is to Fifa's credit that the Middle East has finally been given a chance to break those dusty stereotypes.
    As a journalist and writer born and raised in Qatar's capital of Doha, a former fishing and pearl diving town that has become a bustling metropolis uniting people from around the world, I encountered a real sense of euphoria amongst Qataris following the outcome of Thursday's vote in Zurich.
    But now the hard work for Qatar really starts.

    The first issue the country is likely to face concerns security. In a region riddled by conflicts and recent wars, will it be safe to travel to the Middle East for football's biggest competition?

    Qatar is, from experience, one of the safest places in the world.
    Crime rates are very low and visitors to the nation's streets can comfortably walk around Doha at night without feeling threatened.

    Growing up in Qatar means I have witnessed the country's incredible sporting revolution first hand.
    The progression has been breathtaking. But when I first reported on Qatar's intentions to bid for the World Cup early last year, the hopes of a football-crazy nation were still more dreamy than expectant.
    From the likes of Boris Becker, Stefan Edberg and Goran Ivanisevic, who competed in the ExxonMobil Open in 1993, to the impeccably organised Fifa Youth World Cup in 1995 and progressively onwards, Qatar has continually invested in hosting sports events and sports stars of world stature.
    In many ways, Qatar's victory is a story of persistence, fuelled by great investment in sports infrastructure that culminated momentarily in the 2006 Asian Games in Doha.

    But critics who suggest that the 2022 World Cup is solely about money are surely wrong.
    Qatar has a special touch in making the visiting sportsmen - and women - feel the special Arabian charm that the country exudes effortlessly in exhibiting its very best side.
    Qatari people are warm, friendly, hospitable descendents of the Bedouins who first inhabited the desert-covered peninsula and let any visitors feel at home in their tents.

    Nowadays, the city is becoming a modern metropolis of art, culture and education - and one of the most important impacts of the decision to award the 2022 World Cup to Qatar will be to break any negative stereotyping that exists.
    Qatar has a football team that reflects its cosmopolitan composition.
    My good friend Sebastian Soria is the main striker of the team that is currently preparing to launch an attempt to win the 2011 Asian Cup on home soil in January.
    The Qatar Sports Club striker of Uruguayan origins was candid when I asked him this summer about Qatar's chances of hosting a World Cup. "I think we can host a fantastic tournament," he said. "And why not dream?" Now the dream has become a sporting reality.
    Much work remains to be done but it will be confronted with incredible passion and pride.

    As a country with a current population of almost two million, many of whom are foreigners, Qatar 2022 will be the most compact World Cup of all time.
    As a country with a current population of almost two million, many of whom are foreigners, Qatar 2022 will be the most compact World Cup of all time.
    It will be a charming competition, displaying the very best of the Middle Eastern cultures and Arabian traditions.

    It will certainly be a tournament with a great amount of football fever. Qatar is hot in the summer months, as any long-time resident will confirm, but cooled stadiums with magnificent designs are set to rise from the beautiful golden desert sands in the coming years.
    In many ways, the decision to award the 2022 World Cup to Qatar is a sporting miracle.
    The people of Qatar - and by extension those of the Middle East - have finally been given a chance to show their true potential.
    It promises to be a brave new world for the beautiful game.

    Comment


      #62
      Originally posted by Harv View Post
      I'm a masters of architecture student BTW.
      Can you design me a patio?
      Was muß, das muß.

      Comment


        #63
        What about the female latin american supporters? Will they be able to show much for the cameras? At least there won't be any alcohol fuelled violence so it might be the most family friendly WC ever. A great opportunity to take your children!

        My only concern is from that bloody big country next to it.
        Was muß, das muß.

        Comment


          #64
          Originally posted by -V- View Post
          Travelling from city to city between matches will be so easy, I think id be really excited to go to this one

          BBC
          The whole of Qatar erupted into a bundle of flag-waving Middle Easterners when the nation performed a football miracle to bring the World Cup to the region for the first time in its history.
          Qatar, the smallest nation bidding for the right to host the 2022 tournaments, is a sports-mad peninsula that juts into the balmy waters of the Persian Gulf.
          But to many in the Western hemisphere, it is still an unknown land in a region that has, until very recently, not been associated with world-class football but rather with terrible conflicts.

          All that will and must now change - and it is to Fifa's credit that the Middle East has finally been given a chance to break those dusty stereotypes.
          As a journalist and writer born and raised in Qatar's capital of Doha, a former fishing and pearl diving town that has become a bustling metropolis uniting people from around the world, I encountered a real sense of euphoria amongst Qataris following the outcome of Thursday's vote in Zurich.
          But now the hard work for Qatar really starts.

          The first issue the country is likely to face concerns security. In a region riddled by conflicts and recent wars, will it be safe to travel to the Middle East for football's biggest competition?

          Qatar is, from experience, one of the safest places in the world.
          Crime rates are very low and visitors to the nation's streets can comfortably walk around Doha at night without feeling threatened.

          Growing up in Qatar means I have witnessed the country's incredible sporting revolution first hand.
          The progression has been breathtaking. But when I first reported on Qatar's intentions to bid for the World Cup early last year, the hopes of a football-crazy nation were still more dreamy than expectant.
          From the likes of Boris Becker, Stefan Edberg and Goran Ivanisevic, who competed in the ExxonMobil Open in 1993, to the impeccably organised Fifa Youth World Cup in 1995 and progressively onwards, Qatar has continually invested in hosting sports events and sports stars of world stature.
          In many ways, Qatar's victory is a story of persistence, fuelled by great investment in sports infrastructure that culminated momentarily in the 2006 Asian Games in Doha.

          But critics who suggest that the 2022 World Cup is solely about money are surely wrong.
          Qatar has a special touch in making the visiting sportsmen - and women - feel the special Arabian charm that the country exudes effortlessly in exhibiting its very best side.
          Qatari people are warm, friendly, hospitable descendents of the Bedouins who first inhabited the desert-covered peninsula and let any visitors feel at home in their tents.

          Nowadays, the city is becoming a modern metropolis of art, culture and education - and one of the most important impacts of the decision to award the 2022 World Cup to Qatar will be to break any negative stereotyping that exists.
          Qatar has a football team that reflects its cosmopolitan composition.
          My good friend Sebastian Soria is the main striker of the team that is currently preparing to launch an attempt to win the 2011 Asian Cup on home soil in January.
          The Qatar Sports Club striker of Uruguayan origins was candid when I asked him this summer about Qatar's chances of hosting a World Cup. "I think we can host a fantastic tournament," he said. "And why not dream?" Now the dream has become a sporting reality.
          Much work remains to be done but it will be confronted with incredible passion and pride.

          As a country with a current population of almost two million, many of whom are foreigners, Qatar 2022 will be the most compact World Cup of all time.
          As a country with a current population of almost two million, many of whom are foreigners, Qatar 2022 will be the most compact World Cup of all time.
          It will be a charming competition, displaying the very best of the Middle Eastern cultures and Arabian traditions.

          It will certainly be a tournament with a great amount of football fever. Qatar is hot in the summer months, as any long-time resident will confirm, but cooled stadiums with magnificent designs are set to rise from the beautiful golden desert sands in the coming years.
          In many ways, the decision to award the 2022 World Cup to Qatar is a sporting miracle.
          The people of Qatar - and by extension those of the Middle East - have finally been given a chance to show their true potential.
          It promises to be a brave new world for the beautiful game.
          F*cking hell, I don't mind a bit of enthusiasm and it's fine for the writer to put forward their point of view and argue against the critics but that's ridiculously one-sided.
          .
          Suppose you have a physicist and a sociologist standing at the side of a field, observing a set of events unfolding on the field. The physicist does [describes] it using the terminology of mass and velocity and frequency of radiation and the rest. And the sociologist does it by describing it as a rugby match.



          May the Lord bless this post.

          Comment


            #65
            Originally posted by -V- View Post
            Qatar...is a sports-mad peninsula
            Much the same can be said about quite a few on here.
            .
            Suppose you have a physicist and a sociologist standing at the side of a field, observing a set of events unfolding on the field. The physicist does [describes] it using the terminology of mass and velocity and frequency of radiation and the rest. And the sociologist does it by describing it as a rugby match.



            May the Lord bless this post.

            Comment


              #66
              They need to improve the airport before they do anything, the arrivals part is fooking tiny.

              I saw the designs in a Qatar Airways flight magazine. They look really impressive but the anti-green issue is a tad contentious. Qatar in June/July will be unbearably hot so the stadia are being air-conned down to 28 degrees. How much ****ing AC is that going to take!!

              Comment


                #67
                Sorry but that picture of a stadium over qatar is funny as ****

                Comment


                  #68
                  I'm not sure this has been thought out very well. By all accounts I hear, the only hotels in Qatar are 4 star and alcohol is only available in EUropean compounds, for which a licence is required (i.e. for you to buy it, as well as for them to serve it), or in those hotel lobbies. Drinking on the street strictly forbidden. Moreover a licence only permits you to buy a certain amount of alcohol, not limitless. Only what I've heard like, and I hate to sound like an alcoholic camper, but I can't see the average European footie fan enjoying this one much.

                  Not to mention the temperatures which I gather can reach 50 celcius during the day. ****ing madness holding a footie tournament there. Doubtless the Russians had a lot to do with it...
                  Really?

                  Comment


                    #69
                    So the Stadiums are going to be flat pack from ikea?

                    Comment


                      #70
                      Originally posted by Tatterdemalion View Post
                      I'm not sure this has been thought out very well. By all accounts I hear, the only hotels in Qatar are 4 star and alcohol is only available in EUropean compounds, for which a licence is required (i.e. for you to buy it, as well as for them to serve it), or in those hotel lobbies. Drinking on the street strictly forbidden. Moreover a licence only permits you to buy a certain amount of alcohol, not limitless. Only what I've heard like, and I hate to sound like an alcoholic camper, but I can't see the average European footie fan enjoying this one much.

                      Not to mention the temperatures which I gather can reach 50 celcius during the day. ****ing madness holding a footie tournament there. Doubtless the Russians had a lot to do with it...
                      Not true mate i live near qatar and 3/4 of the hotels their are 5 stars, and many people are stupid because they still think we live as bedouins in tents and ride camels. And about drinking trust me mate there isnt a place in the GCC were you cannot drink suadis apart. **** the CNN and BBC for giving you a bad image about us. But the only negative thing i see about qatar is that they have the largest percent in traffic violations due to speeding and doing basiclly stupid stuff in the road.

                      Comment


                        #71
                        Originally posted by Robbie-fowler999 View Post
                        Not true mate i live near qatar and 3/4 of the hotels their are 5 stars, and many people are stupid because they still think we live as bedouins in tents and ride camels. And about drinking trust me mate there isnt a place in the GCC were you cannot drink suadis apart. **** the CNN and BBC for giving you a bad image about us. But the only negative thing i see about qatar is that they have the largest percent in traffic violations due to speeding and doing basiclly stupid stuff in the road.
                        is the right answer.

                        i have spent a bit of time in doha and whilst its not perfect, many people will be very positively surprised by the 2022 world cup that they lay on

                        safe, clean, small will mean the whole place will be like one giant football campus. it'll be pretty cool

                        Comment


                          #72
                          Originally posted by barnes10 View Post
                          is the right answer.

                          i have spent a bit of time in doha and whilst its not perfect, many people will be very positively surprised by the 2022 world cup that they lay on

                          safe, clean, small will mean the whole place will be like one giant football campus. it'll be pretty cool
                          One thing that does concern me is that if the travelling fans disrespect the culture in qatar. You see in Qatar there are alot of families of bedouin descent and they are very powerful there. Their principles are based on well manners and basically being Gentlemen and well rounded people there. If anyone disrespects the way they live or basically or insults them or even pulls some stupid stunt that offends them they will **** them. And stay away from Qatari women too.

                          Comment


                            #73
                            Originally posted by Robbie-fowler999 View Post
                            One thing that does concern me is that if the travelling fans disrespect the culture in qatar...
                            Especially if England qualify...

                            Comment


                              #74
                              Originally posted by Icon View Post
                              Especially if England qualify...
                              Yes you see if anything happens England fans will probably get assaulted and get in trouble while the qataris will go to some freinds and talk about what they did today and how one of them ran over an english man with his land cruiser.

                              Comment


                                #75
                                Originally posted by Norbert Dentressangle View Post
                                They need to improve the airport before they do anything, the arrivals part is fooking tiny.

                                I saw the designs in a Qatar Airways flight magazine. They look really impressive but the anti-green issue is a tad contentious. Qatar in June/July will be unbearably hot so the stadia are being air-conned down to 28 degrees. How much ****ing AC is that going to take!!
                                They have actually developed a whole new technique to cool a stadium without it being roofted, and it's all powered by solar panels, so it's apparently clean tech.

                                Comment

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