FIFA, Russia sign declaration on 2018 World Cup
The Associated Press | Sun, 01/23/2011 7:55 PM
FIFA President Sepp Blatter said he
was certain the 2018 World Cup would be in good hands after he and
Russian officials signed a formal declaration Sunday awarding the
football tournament to Russia.
Russia has never before organized a World Cup and has an enormous
amount of work to do to get ready. In addition to building stadiums
and hotels, Russia will need to upgrade airports and roads to
transport 32 football teams and millions of visitors to 13 cities
spread across much of its vast territory.
Blatter was less focused on the organizational challenges than on
his greater vision of bringing football to largely uncharted
territory such as Russia and Qatar, which will hold the World Cup in
2022.
"Football is more than just kicking the ball," he said at a
news conference after the signing ceremony. "It is also important
to connect different nations, and our philosophy this time was to
give the World Cup to territories that had never hosted it."
Russian Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko picked up on the theme in
thanking FIFA for choosing Russia over countries that already have
much of the necessary infrastructure in place.
"FIFA is not just a football organization," he said. "It
develops the world and it goes to new countries."
Blatter met Saturday with Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, who has
promised that Russia would follow through on its commitments to
spend tens of billions of dollars on new stadiums and
infrastructure.