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The FNB Stadium, also known as Soccer City
The FNB Stadium, also known as Soccer City

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Two Joburg stadiums on Fifa World Cup list
As expected, Soccer City and Ellis Park are on Fifa's list of approved stadiums to host matches during the 2010 Soccer World Cup. And the City plans to upgrade its showcase venues for the event.
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Officials observe Germany's World Cup experiences
An exhibition to be hosted in Germany after this year's Soccer World Cup will give South African host cities a prime opportunity to prepare themselves for 2010.
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Jozi gets ready for soccer cup
THE City is preparing for the 2010 Soccer World Cup, and all its departments have been given a list of their tasks and responsibilities.
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Fifa group inspects venues
A FIFA delegation arrived in Johannesburg today to inspect venues to be used during the 2010 Soccer World Cup for matches and training.
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R350m add-on for Soccer City
ABOUT R350-million has been set aside to upgrade Soccer City stadium at Nasrec for the 2010 Soccer World Cup.
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Exciting community precincts planned around Ellis Park
Wide-ranging plans are in place to upgrade the Greater Ellis Park precinct, turning it into a vibrant community node.
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Orlando Stadium gets R200m facelift
As a training venue for the Fifa 2010 Soccer World Cup, Orlando Stadium is getting a massive upgrade that will benefit Joburg long after the football tournament has come and gone.
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Nasrec framework gets the nod
THE City has given its stamp of approval to the Nasrec Development Urban Design Framework, which looks at aligning the sports and tourism destinations in the area into one hub.
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Ellis Park precinct
Exciting developments are planned for the Ellis Park precinct

South Africa shifts
into 2010 gear

The official logo has been unveiled, the host cities and stadiums have been announced, the sponsors are on board ... as the curtain came down on the 2006 Fifa World Cup on the weekend, eyes are already on the 2010 event in South Africa.

July 10, 2006

By SouthAfrica.info reporter

THE official logo has been unveiled, the host cities and stadiums have been announced, the sponsors are on board ... as the curtain came down on the 2006 Fifa World Cup on the weekend, South Africa made its intentions plain: to make 2010 the most successful World Cup ever.

Nine cities - Johannesburg, Pretoria, Cape Town, Durban, Port Elizabeth, Bloemfontein, Nelspruit, Polokwane and Rustenburg - will host World Cup games in South Africa, with 10 stadiums already identified and approved by Fifa.

Johannesburg is home to two of the stadiums selected for official matches: the FNB Stadium in Nasrec and Ellis Park in downtown Joburg.

From Germany to South Africa
The four-year journey to the 2010 Fifa World Cup kicked off with "the biggest football party ever" at Berlin's Brandenburg Gate on Friday.

As the responsibility for hosting the world's biggest sporting event was officially handed over to South Africa, a free concert featuring some of Africa's brightest musical stars kept football fans dancing long into the night in the German capital.

Addressing the show audience - and millions of television viewers watching the broadcast in over 120 countries - President Thabo Mbeki said the 2010 World Cup would "stand out as a unique event that celebrates Africa in all its magnificent splendour, its vibrancy, its uniqueness and its diversity."

To those who doubted South Africa's ability to pull of such a massive event, Mbeki said: "We said we would rid the world of apartheid, and we kept that promise. I've said ... we would host the most successful World Cup ever in South Africa, and we will keep that promise."

Fifa president Sepp Blatter said the world trusted South Africa to deliver a world-class event in 2010, adding that this was South Africa's chance to show the world "the beauty of your country and its hospitality, the depth and differentiation of all your cultures, and the expertise you have."

Ahead of schedule
With the unveiling of the official 2010 World Cup emblem on Friday, and the announcement of the country's nine World Cup host cities - a full 17 months ahead of deadline - South Africa hit the ground running in its preparations for the event.

With 75 percent of Fifa contracts for the tournament signed and sealed, South Africa 2010 has already outperformed every other World Cup in terms of revenue.

"The money is in the bank as we speak," Danny Jordaan, chief executive of South Africa's 2010 local organising committee, said last month.

Speaking at a Johannesburg conference on local government and the 2010 World Cup, Jordaan said the European broadcasting rights had already been signed, securing Fifa US$1.2-billion (about R7.8-billion). This exceeded the amount obtained during the 2002 World Cup in Korea/Japan, and was also expected to exceed Germany 2006.

"There will be additional revenues, in that people will be able to watch the full World Cup match from their mobile phones," Jordaan added.

"We want this World Cup to be world class, and it has already outperformed the other World Cups in terms of revenue."

Jordaan expressed confidence that the stadiums would be ready by 2009, as five of them would be needed when the country hosted the African Confederation Cup.

The City of Johannesburg is doing its utmost to ensure that the local venues are up to World Cup standard by 2010. The FNB stadium will have its capacity increased and will get a roof, while Joburg has planned exciting developments for the entire greater Ellis Park precinct.

It is hoped that smaller stadiums, like the Orlando Stadium, will be used for friendly warm-up matches or for training purposes.

Source: The official South African portal: southafrica.info



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