marinermick
Well-Known Member
northernspirit said:i think from memory casey wehrman had a shocker
they all did
blanco was coach wasn't he?
enough said
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northernspirit said:i think from memory casey wehrman had a shocker
marinermick said:I was lucky, that in my volunteer capacity at the games, I was the press tribune supervisor for the football at the SFS and Olympic Stadium.
I got the best seats in the house and watched all the football games from the press area as the press didn't have any needs during matches.
The women's final was also a cracker.
serious14 said:marinermick said:I was lucky, that in my volunteer capacity at the games, I was the press tribune supervisor for the football at the SFS and Olympic Stadium.
I got the best seats in the house and watched all the football games from the press area as the press didn't have any needs during matches.
The women's final was also a cracker.
No, in that respect, you were a c*nt.
You know how hot it was that day of the final?? Of course not, you were no doubt inside _roasting_ under some air conditioning......
northernspirit said:did u take any marshmallows for the cauldron serious?
haha yeah same hereserious14 said:northernspirit said:did u take any marshmallows for the cauldron serious?
Om nom nom nom.......
I think I got sunburnt from the flame, let alone the sun.
northernspirit said:haha yeah same hereserious14 said:northernspirit said:did u take any marshmallows for the cauldron serious?
Om nom nom nom.......
I think I got sunburnt from the flame, let alone the sun.
remember how much coke cost? was like $5 a bottle but it was so farkn hot u had no choice
Regional arm wrestle not the sideshow World Cup bid needs
Michael Cockerill
February 6, 2009
Other related coverage
* New bid headache as Asia boss backflips
* Cup candidates jostle for position
SO MUCH for one Asian bid. Yet it's not the multiple bids, but the growing tension surrounding the future of Asian Football Confederation president Mohammed Bin Hammam, which threatens to overshadow Australia's lobbying efforts for the 2018 World Cup.
When acceptances closed at FIFA headquarters in Zurich early this week, Australia was joined by Japan, South Korea, Qatar and Indonesia as Asian bidders for the 2018, and perhaps 2022, World Cups. China's decision not to enter the race was an unexpected consolation. But if getting FIFA to agree to a third successive southern hemisphere tournament isn't hard enough, having five bids from one confederation only complicates matters, on the surface at least. Whether these bids progress from the expression of interest stage remains to be seen, but Bin Hammam - predictably - has preferred to accentuate the positives, saying: "It's good to see so many countries from Asia coming forward these expressions of interest underscore the confidence of Asian nations and their love for the game. Ideally, AFC would have liked one bid with support from the others, but we can live with multiple bids."
There is, of course, the chance some nations will drop out of the race between now and December, when the bid process becomes binding. South Korea and Japan are both fantastic candidates, but they co-hosted Asia's only previous World Cup. Indonesia, with its decaying stadiums and straining infrastructure, has to be a long shot, at least for 2018. And Qatar may, ironically, suffer as much from its affinity with Bin Hammam than the fact the country, in effect, comprises one metropolis of downtown Doha and a few satellite towns. That's not to forget that every stadium will need to be air-conditioned, or built underground, if the players are to survive the 50 degree-plus heat.
Which leaves Australia very much in contention. Some bookmakers have installed Australia as second favourites for 2018 behind England in what, at the moment, is an 11-horse race. But it's how the geopolitics of Asia play out in coming months that could ultimately determine Australia's hopes. FIFA won't make the final decision until December next year, but the festering issue of whether Bin Hammam will still be on the 24-man FIFA executive by then could be crucial.
It is Bin Hammam who overcame huge opposition - particularly in the Middle East - to pave the way for Australia's surprise switch from Oceania to Asia in 2006. Since then the Qatari has been a strong and consistent ally, and his relationship with Frank Lowy is genuine and warm. Australia would much rather get through the bid process with Bin Hammam at the helm, rather than deal with a shifting political landscape. Ben Buckley and his team might not get the chance.
Simmering tension between Bin Hammam and South Korea's Chung Mong-joon, who is also a FIFA vice-president, erupted into open warfare this week in the form of a challenge for Bin Hammam's place on the FIFA executive - the first time he has been challenged since 1996. Chung has prodded Bahraini Shaikh Salman Ebrahim Al Khalifa to contest Bin Hammam's seat at the big table in Zurich, and the AFC president has responded by foreshadowing constitutional changes designed to scuttle a challenge before it gains momentum.
A lightning rod for dissent has been Bin Hammam's push to shift the AFC headquarters from its traditional home in Kuala Lumpur closer to his own home, in Dubai. Disaffected former AFC general secretary Peter Velappan, clearly with Chung's backing, has become the spokesman for the putsch, telling Malaysia's New Straits Times this week: "Both the [constitutional] changes are designed to keep him [Bin Hammam] in power. It is an attempt to consolidate his position as a dictator West Asia except Qatar opposes Bin Hammam. The Arabs reject him. China, South Korea and Malaysia are totally against the Qatari. Members are fed up with his behaviour."
If Bin Hammam is defeated at the AFC Congress in May, it could be a potentially fatal blow to his ambitions, even though he will remain as AFC president until 2011. Australia, sensibly, is staying out of the firing line, desperate to avoid any collateral damage. As the World Cup bid gears up, this is a complication the FFA could do without.
There's nothing wrong with being optimistic but I think you're being really,really reeeeeeally optimistic there!Jorome Alexander Bennett said:Australia, England, Indonesia, Japan, Spain/Portugal, Mexico, Russia, Netherlands/Belgium, and the United States. These are the nations that are bidding for 2018. Qatar and South Korea are bidding for 2022 only.
Japan hosted so recently that I can't see them being considered at all. For the same reason but to lesser extent US and Mexico. Indonesia has had terrorism spoils its public image. I thought I read that FIFA don't want to go for co-hosted bids.
So I see it as Australia vs England, Russia and maybe the co hosters.
We have a real chance to impress with the Asian Cup. If attendance, general safety and, most importantly perhaps, viewing figures are impressive than I think we are a certainty for 2018 or 2022.
I had been thinking that the confidence that Buckley has been showing recently was false bravado. Now though, I am feeling just as confident as him. I'm booking my tickets!