Daily Dispatch

How SA ticks all boxes for Cup

- By CRAIG RAY

1. FINANCIAL guarantees from government

Despite an initial ban by former Sports Minister Fikile Mbalula preventing SA Rugby from bidding for RWC 2023‚ when Thulas Nxesi took over earlier this year‚ government threw its weight behind the bid.

Key to the backing was government’s £160-million (R2.9-billion)

financial guarantee to World Rugby‚ which allayed fears of commercial failure for the union.

2. Lobbying for a transparen­t process

SA Rugby were one of the driving forces behind a change in the bidding process that would allow for more transparen­cy.

SA Rugby‚ led by chief executive Jurie Roux‚ pushed for an evaluation process that weighted key criteria and that was made public to eliminate ‘horse-trading’ at the voting stage.

3. Stadiums and infrastruc­ture already in place

Thanks to hosting the 2010 Fifa World Cup‚ SA has eight all-seater‚ modern stadiums to host the matches.

The smallest venue has a capacity of 43 500 while the National Stadium where the final and opening match will take place‚ has a capacity of over 87 436 making it the biggest RWC stadium of all time.

As a result of the facilities there is a projection of a record 2.9-million ticket sales‚ which will further swell World Rugby’s coffers.

4. Time zone‚ value for money and fan experience

With SA in the same time zone as the lucrative European TV market‚ the SA bid lost no ground to Ireland and France.

SA’s climate in spring is also perfect for rugby while foreign visitors will have much more spending power given the strength of the dollar‚ pound and euro against the rand.

Hotels and airports were upgraded for 2010 and will only need minor tweaks in the coming years. 5. Proven track record SA has staged major internatio­nal sporting events.

The huge success with the 2010 Fifa World Cup is the most prominent. RWC 1995‚ the 1996 African Cup of Nations and the 2003 Cricket World Cup are the three other major sporting events this country has successful­ly hosted in the past quarter of a century. — DDC

 ?? Picture: GALLO IMAGES ?? GRIPPING STUFF AHEAD: Allister Coetzee may yet be leading the Bok team if the South Africans win their bid for 2023 World Cup
Picture: GALLO IMAGES GRIPPING STUFF AHEAD: Allister Coetzee may yet be leading the Bok team if the South Africans win their bid for 2023 World Cup

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