England humiliated with first round defeat
Reuters - Thursday 02 December 2010, 19:18
ZURICH - England's bid to stage the World
Cup for the first time in more than half a century ended in a
humiliating first-round defeat when they collected just two
votes from the 22-man FIFA executive committee on Thursday.
One of those votes was from their own representative Geoff
Thompson meaning England's 15.0 million-pound,
two-year campaign to stage the 2018 tournament, 52 years after
they last staged it in 1966, gained just one additional vote.
That vote was likely to have been cast by declared supporter
Junji Ogura of Japan, while other votes promised to England
clearly went elsewhere with Russia emerging triumphant.
Thompson, trying to explain the huge snub, struggled to
contain his shock when he told Reuters: "I cannot believe what
has happened, and I am naturally very, very disappointed.
"The votes that were promised clearly didn't materialise. I
never imagined we would go out in the first round."
David Dein, the bid's international president, who has flown
around the world several times seeking support from executive
committee members, told Reuters: "I am utterly stunned.
"I knew we had obstacles to overcome, and it was always
going to be a tough task - we knew that. But we did not expect
to lose like this - never in our wildest dreams.
"I thought we would go two or three rounds at the very
least, but it was not to be. As in football, on the pitch,
sometimes the best team does not win.
"We will have to see what went wrong, but certain elements
did not help us."
TECHNICAL REPORT
The bid was rated as the strongest by FIFA's technical
inspection team and also finished ahead of competitors Russia,
Spain/Portugal and Netherlands/Belgium in an independent
economic report on projected revenue.
But those points were ignored by FIFA's top table which
means the motherland of the game cannot hope to stage the finals
again until 2026 at the earliest.
The wounds from this setback may just have healed by then.
After FIFA president Sepp Blatter announced Russia would
stage the finals, and the full story of England's defeat began
to emerge, there was little doubt about what undermined it.
An investigation by the Sunday Times that led to two FIFA
executive committee members being suspended after allegations
they offered to sell their votes for cash was compounded by a
BBC documentary which made further allegations of corruption.
As if those were not big enough obstacles for the bid to
overcome, crowd trouble at a League Cup tie in Birmingham on
Wednesday night between local rivals Birmingham City and Aston
Villa further damaged the bid's credibility.
David Beckham, who gave a polished performance in England's
final bid presentation, looked completely stunned by the result.
Asked if the corruption allegations had harmed the bid, the
former England captain replied: "I don't know, perhaps you
should ask the delegates that.
"The odd member mentioned the allegations, and what had been
said, but it had been smoothed out and everything was looking
positive."
The bid endured something of a roller-coaster ride but
looked to be gaining in momentum until the Sunday Times
published its allegations about corruption within FIFA.
So despite promising FIFA record profits, and having the
stadiums and infrastructure to host a dazzling finals, England's
bid was left in tatters.
The national team have struggled to make an impact on the
World Cup since they lifted the trophy on home soil.
The country's administrators have now suffered a similar
unpalatable setback confirming England's place among the
also-rans in the game it gave to the world.