midfielder
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Interesting article from the Adelaide Advertiser / Sunday mail
Dario has stadium plan
VAL MIGLIACCIO
April 24, 2008 12:30am
http://www.news.com.au/common/imaged...6003029,00.jpg
http://www.news.com.au/adelaidenow/story/0,22606,23590424-5006373,00.html
Determined ... Adelaide United chairman Dario Fontanarosa with his model of a new inner city stadium. Picture: NEON MARTIN
ADELAIDE United chairman Dario Fontanarosa says building a new inner city stadium is not only about boosting Adelaide's chances of hosting proposed World Cup matches in 2018.
Fontanarosa's master plan to construct a purpose built all-seater undercover rectangular stadium is starting to take shape with overseas investors prepared to partly fund the project.
"I feel obligated as chairman of Adelaide United to deliver a worthwhile facility so people in this state don't continually miss out on the best soccer games available in the nation," Fontanarosa said.
Fontanarosa said Football Federation Australia chief executive Ben Buckley had in principle endorsed the master plan.
Fontanarosa said the proposed stadium should be built just for soccer and in five years.
"I don't want Adelaide United to play on a round oval or a running track around it," he said.
"It has to be a purpose-built soccer stadium. They're talking about billions (to build one) which is not true. A FIFA-approved world-class stadium is $10,500 a seat."
Fontanarosa's stadium project has been costed at $475 million for a 45,000 all-seater stadium.
He believes that the continual growth of the game will force Adelaide into moving to a bigger home - away from Hindmarsh Stadium.
"We're aiming at 25,000 to 30,000 crowds for Adelaide United matches," he said.
"Regardless of the World Cup we need a bigger stadium. The fact that we've got the World Cup (bid) now is just a bonus."
Fontanarosa said Adelaide's crowd pulling power when it staged a 25,039 sell-out clash at Adelaide Oval last year was no fluke.
"People love city stadiums," he said. "The ideal location I think is the Thebarton police barracks."
Fontanarosa revealed that United would always lose the rights to hosting A-League Grand Finals purely because of Hindmarsh Stadium.
A Department of Tourism report also revealed that the 2018 World Cup could bring billions of dollars in economic benefits to Australia.
The 2002 FIFA World Cup which was hosted in Japan and Korea generated a staggering $27 billion.
Dario has stadium plan
VAL MIGLIACCIO
April 24, 2008 12:30am
http://www.news.com.au/common/imaged...6003029,00.jpg
http://www.news.com.au/adelaidenow/story/0,22606,23590424-5006373,00.html
Determined ... Adelaide United chairman Dario Fontanarosa with his model of a new inner city stadium. Picture: NEON MARTIN
ADELAIDE United chairman Dario Fontanarosa says building a new inner city stadium is not only about boosting Adelaide's chances of hosting proposed World Cup matches in 2018.
Fontanarosa's master plan to construct a purpose built all-seater undercover rectangular stadium is starting to take shape with overseas investors prepared to partly fund the project.
"I feel obligated as chairman of Adelaide United to deliver a worthwhile facility so people in this state don't continually miss out on the best soccer games available in the nation," Fontanarosa said.
Fontanarosa said Football Federation Australia chief executive Ben Buckley had in principle endorsed the master plan.
Fontanarosa said the proposed stadium should be built just for soccer and in five years.
"I don't want Adelaide United to play on a round oval or a running track around it," he said.
"It has to be a purpose-built soccer stadium. They're talking about billions (to build one) which is not true. A FIFA-approved world-class stadium is $10,500 a seat."
Fontanarosa's stadium project has been costed at $475 million for a 45,000 all-seater stadium.
He believes that the continual growth of the game will force Adelaide into moving to a bigger home - away from Hindmarsh Stadium.
"We're aiming at 25,000 to 30,000 crowds for Adelaide United matches," he said.
"Regardless of the World Cup we need a bigger stadium. The fact that we've got the World Cup (bid) now is just a bonus."
Fontanarosa said Adelaide's crowd pulling power when it staged a 25,039 sell-out clash at Adelaide Oval last year was no fluke.
"People love city stadiums," he said. "The ideal location I think is the Thebarton police barracks."
Fontanarosa revealed that United would always lose the rights to hosting A-League Grand Finals purely because of Hindmarsh Stadium.
A Department of Tourism report also revealed that the 2018 World Cup could bring billions of dollars in economic benefits to Australia.
The 2002 FIFA World Cup which was hosted in Japan and Korea generated a staggering $27 billion.