Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - Live

32 teams face Qatar heat in fight for top trophy

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DOHA: One residentia­l complex of squat three-storey buildings near Al Janoub Stadium coming to life over the past two days cannot be the most definitive statement of the world converging for football on a tiny west Asian peninsula famous for falconry. But increasing frequency of vehicles swooshing through the streets of a place that has 10,000 rooms, the chatter of wheels on cobbled pathways as people drag bags into lodgings, footfalls in its supermarke­ts and shuttles, often full, to and from the Al Wakrah metro station and airports do convey a sense of the

World Cup starting here on Sunday.

Thirty-two teams, an expected visitors’ count of 1.2 million, eight stadiums where the maximum distance between two venues is 55km holding 64 games in 29 days — instead of the usual 32 over five weekends--make this a neverbefor­e kind of World Cup. As do the conversati­on of compensati­on for migrant workers who died transformi­ng Doha into a theatre of dreams — the numbers swirl between three and thousands depending on whom you speak to — discrimina­tion of people based on sexual preference­s, and since Friday, the prospect of a largely dry World Cup.

Well, a lot of top football countries do that at their stadiums too, said FIFA president Gianni Infantino, referring to the absence of beer sales. His monologue on introspect­ion and inclusion notwithsta­nding, this is a never-before World Cup in terms of protests as well.

They will be made by Denmark’s men in black, their shirts’ makers name deliberate­ly faded as a mark of respect for migrant workers who died in the 12 years this was in the making. And they will be made by teams wearing armbands against discrimina­tion. “When we are on the world stage and we are in a venue like Qatar, it’s important to already bring awareness to these issues,” USA coach Gregg Berhalter has said.

Iran coach Carlos Quieroz has permitted players to show solidarity with the public outcry against moral policing back home so long as they don’t breach rules.

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