Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Rain ruins Guwahati’s dream match

DAMP SQUIB Brazil’s lastfour match with England shifted from Guwahati to Kolkata due to poor condition of ground

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GUWAHATI: In soccer-crazy Northeast, tournament­s involving local teams attract a sizable crowd. Tickets to Wednesday’s semi-final were thus almost sold out before the first match of the FIFA U-17 World Cup was played here on October 8. That Brazil would be playing the semi-final against England was more than anyone in the region could have asked for. But nature had other ideas.

Four days of incessant rainfall in Guwahati – 115.9mm in October, 49.2 mm more than normal – made the ground unplayable, forcing FIFA to shift Wednesday’s semi-final to Kolkata. “It is a sad day for football in these parts. We were perhaps not destined to hold the match,” Ankur Dutta, secretary of Assam Football Associatio­n, told HT.

Assam government officials said they had prepared the pitch according to FIFA specificat­ions. But they admitted to not having factored in the possibilit­y of abnormal rainfall. “Clogging of the drainage system under the field complicate­d matters. Getting to the bottom of the problem would have meant digging up the turf,” said an official, seeking anonymity.

FIFA officials said the pitch was satisfacto­ry until the eighth match between Mali and Ghana on October 21. The trigger for FIFA’s concern was Ghana coach Samuel Kwasi Fabin’s observatio­n after the loss to Mali. “The match should have ideally been abandoned,” he said.

It continued to rain after the quarterfin­al. Some 200 volunteers including tournament director Javier Ceppi worked non-stop for 48 hours to try and get the pitch match-ready. The tournament’s pitch consultant­s were flown in from Kolkata while the state government requisitio­ned a Pawan Hans helicopter to dry the field. But these did not help. FIFA let Brazil and England, who arrived during the day, to take a call. Brazil declined to play and England followed suit.

Former footballer Gilbertson Sangma felt for hundreds of fans who were waiting for the “biggest match” in these parts. “It is a letdown for us, but it should be a lesson in hosting internatio­nal tournament­s, where everything has to be factored in,” he said.

 ?? AFP ?? Incessant rainfall since the GhanaMali quarterfin­al match on Saturday left the Indira Gandhi Athletic Stadium pitch unplayable, forcing Fifa to act.
AFP Incessant rainfall since the GhanaMali quarterfin­al match on Saturday left the Indira Gandhi Athletic Stadium pitch unplayable, forcing Fifa to act.

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