E-mail:     Password:    Forget password?
logotipo
SEARCH ADVANCED SEARCH
Bandeira English
 
ADVERTISE Good Morning, sunday, 27 of may of 2012 Clients

• Home
• About Us
• Services
• Mechanism
• Clubs/Agents
• Plans
• Register
• News
• Bank's News
• Poll
• Future Stars
• FAQ
• Contact
 
NEWSLETTER
name: E-mail: birthday:
 
POLL


NEWS FROM THE WORLD OF FOOTBALL!
World Cup 2010 / World Cup 2010
 

Latest News


MORE HEADLINES


18.05.2010
S.Africa expects 300,000 World Cup visitors



South Africa expects 300,000 visitors for the World Cup next month, down from an initial forecast of 450,000, but the country remains confident of full stadiums, the tourism minister said Tuesday.

"We will probably see around 300,000 international arrivals for the World Cup -- just under or just more than that," tourism minister Marthinus van Schalkwyk told lawmakers in a World Cup readiness briefing.

"It may be a little bit less than what we expected... but four years ago nobody expected the global recession," he said, quickly adding: "But it is still a lot of people. Our stadiums are going to be full, it is going to an exceptionally good World Cup."

Of the 230,000 foreign fans who have bought tickets, Van Schalkwyk said just 11,300 are African -- 76 percent less than originally forecast for the first World Cup on African soil.

"Only two percent of those tickets are to Africans. Originally we expected around 48,000," he said.

"There are two reasons. It is the distribution channels. People in Africa don't buy tickets on the internet. It was a huge mistake that I think FIFA-MATCH made and also I believe the unaffordable pricing."

Van Schalkwyk offered FIFA advice for hosting the tournament in developing countries where internet availability is low. The next World Cup will be hosted by Brazil in 2014.

"Look at the way that you sell tickets. It does not work in developing countries and on continents such as Africa. People don't buy tickets through the internet, (not) large numbers of people," Van Schalkwyk said.

South Africa has invested 33 billion rand (4.4 billion dollars, 3.5 billion euros) in the first World Cup on the African continent, with FIFA having sold more than 2.5 million of some three million tickets just over three weeks from the June 11 kick-off.

The cheapest World Cup tickets of 140 rands were reserved for South Africans or legal residents in the country.

Source: © 2010 AFP - Gianluigi Guercia

CLUBS/AGENTS
ATHLETE / COACH
Category

 
RESULTS
Liga de España
3
Sevilla
2
Villarreal
4
Athletic de Madrid
1
Levante
1
Racing Santander
2
Málaga
All results
Bundesliga
0
Nuremberg
0
Mainz
4
Wolfsburg
1
Colônia
1
Borussia M´gladbach
0
Borussia Dortmund
All results
Champions League
2
Schalke 04
1
Internazionale
0
Tottenham Hotspurs
1
Real Madrid
2
Manchester United
1
Chelsea
All results
     
     
| Privacy Policy | Site Map | Error Report |
Copyright © 2009 BankofAthletes. All rights reserved.

     
"All publishing, modification, distribution and representation rights belong to Agence France-Presse. Information reproduced on this page (news, photos, logos) is protect by AFP Intellectual Property Rights. None of these material can be reproduced, changed, stored, translated, republished and exploited commercially or reutilized without AFP previous and written permission."