The Sun (Malaysia)

Qatar’s opening impression slips into disaster

- Ű RICHARD JOLLY

RISING out of the desert and out of nothing, the Al-Bayt Stadium provides such an arresting sight that it made for a symbolic choice to host the opening game of the first World Cup ever staged in the Middle East.

For the Al-Bayt, perhaps, read Qatar, propelled to prominence by its vast resources and huge ambitions, showcasing them through football.

On a night that offered an illustrati­on of what Qatar’s US$220 billion (RM1.04t) did and did not buy them, the first impression, of the Al-Bayt coming into view, might have been the most impressive.

A spectacula­r lightshow and a firework display that went off perfectly followed, but Qatar delivered neither the performanc­e the hosts required nor the logistical competence to ensure everything worked smoothly.

The colossal cost of this month is measured in Qatari rials; in another respect it is unknown or, at the least, not disclosed, in terms of the lives lost in the constructi­on of the venues for the most controvers­ial World Cup of all.

This is why most of the objections to Qatar have been moral. The assumption was they would at least succeed at the practical. And, to put it bluntly, they failed.

The opening ceremony was the meaningles­s disguised as the meaningful, but then they often are. Morgan Freeman turned up to talk about unity and respect, scarcely bywords for this tournament, and spent longer on the pitch this World Cup than Karim Benzema will do.

This game was due to be played on Monday until, with three months’ notice, it was shifted forward. There is nothing new in the hosts kicking off a tournament, but Qatar might now wish they had not: without the platform provided by its date on the calendar, it might have been among the lowest-profile games of the World Cup.

Instead, Qatar’s inadequaci­es on the pitch were exposed. They froze. They were overpowere­d by Ecuador. The notion that they might be able to compete lasted all of four minutes and, although Enner Valencia’s goal then was chalked off, it was an indication of his dominance and goalkeeper Saad al-Sheeb’s haplessnes­s. In their differing ways, they were the game’s two defining figures.

Saad and his teammates made Valencia, the ageing Fenerbahce target man, look like Didier Drogba in a first half when he scored twice, had another goal ruled out and won a penalty.

On a historic occasion, Qatar made the wrong sort of history as the first hosts to lose their opening game. There was a contrast with South Africa, who exited in the group stages 12 years ago, but only after beginning with an uplifting draw that contained a special goal. Utterly insipid, Qatar had no such consolatio­n.

A section of their support kept the volume up, but only one. One group of purple-shirted fans bounced, sang and looked suspicious­ly welldrille­d and somehow contrived to have got all of the seats behind the goal while, either side of them, those dressed rather differentl­y sat very quietly. Many left at half-time, looking for a quick getaway from a ground that took too long to reach. – The Independen­t

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