Moscow gets thumbs up from Infantino over 2018 preparations

Published April 20, 2016
MOSCOW: Labourers work at the Luzhniki Stadium, which is under construction for the 2018 World Cup, on Tuesday.—Reuters
MOSCOW: Labourers work at the Luzhniki Stadium, which is under construction for the 2018 World Cup, on Tuesday.—Reuters

MOSCOW: FIFA president Gianni Infantino on Tuesday expressed his satisfaction with Moscow’s preparations for the 2018 World Cup during his first visit to Russia since being elected chief of world football’s governing body.

Infantino began his tour with a visit to the Luzhniki Stadium, which is undergoing a major rebuild to be ready for the World Cup final.

Infantino looked over the construction site of the 81,000-seat stadium with Moscow mayor Sergei Sobyanin and gave a double thumbs-up gesture.

He praised Sobyanin for preserving the historical facade of the stadium, an icon of Soviet architecture which hosted the 1980 Olympics.

“It is truly impressive, so impressive that I’d like to commend and congratulate already now in advance the (Moscow) mayor,” Infantino told reporters.

“Inside you really feel the atmosphere of football, it’s a football stadium,” he said, adding that the Luzhniki was the “right venue” to host the World Cup final.

For the new FIFA president, it is the start of a four-day tour of Russia and Qatar, the host of the 2022 World Cup.

FIFA PRESIDENT Gianni Infantino gives a thumbs up to the press on Tuesday.—AP
FIFA PRESIDENT Gianni Infantino gives a thumbs up to the press on Tuesday.—AP

Russian sports minister Vitaly Mutko, who also serves as the head of the country’s football federation, added that the preparations for the competition were going according to plan.

“We’re satisfied with the course of the preparations,” TASS quoted Mutko as saying at a meeting of the upper house of Russia’s parliament on Tuesday.

“Everyone can see what is under construction and where,” he added. “Of course there are problems too.”

Mutko added that President Vladimir Putin was personally overseeing the preparations for the World Cup.

“Once every three months I send a written report to the President,” he said.

A major part of the preparations for the World Cup in 2018 involves building a string of new stadiums or refurbishing existing ones across the country.

Russia will host the 2018 World Cup at 12 venues in 11 cities including Moscow, Saint Petersburg, Kazan and Sochi.

Published in Dawn, April 20th, 2016

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