Dramatic, I grant you, but all you need do is pause for a
moment to consider who the subsequent hosts are and you can quickly write them
off as events that any fan who is also a human being should want to participate
in.
For Russia ,
see Sochi 2014 – $51 billion siphoned to corrupt officials, homes bulldozed,
roads of caviar to glorify a repressive conservative regime, not to mention the
ever so slight racist tendencies of the nation’s club supporters.
My only consideration is if Brazil can provide a glorious end
to international football competition, the most successful nation with the most
exciting style of play and attitude must surely deliver a 5 week party that I
can reflect on in the football empty summers of 2018 and 2022.
Sadly this is not straightforward. 5 people have died
building the stadia required, and the new Maracana has been developed over
precious public facilities (including a school) to the anger of local
residents. As Roy Hodgson and the right wing press like to repeat, ‘Brazil is a
nation that loves football’ – which, if true, gives even more weight to the
protesters angry with the high government spending on the tournament at the
cost of spending on healthcare, transport and education. The only hope from
Hodgson et al is that the police keep every one in line so as we do not spoil
the party.
For a few seconds, I want to agree. I want to be dancing a
carnival through the streets of Rio , drinking
and singing with fans of teams from all over the world, enjoying Brazilian
hospitality as we forget our problems and celebrate the wonderful and beautiful
game we love. The reality will be sanitised fan zones, rank and file of fat
corporate clients and little if any representation from the poorer nations.
Brazil and its public, will like every country before them, make a net loss on
the tournament, as the money flows out of the country to Budweiser or into the
pockets of the corrupt. When I stop indulging selfish fantasy, and put my
political head on, I hope the tournament is disrupted by protests, I hope the
people’s frustrations are heard, and we can start seriously looking at FIFA and
how they allocate tournaments. There is no reason why it should be a corrupt
corporate fairground, which excludes almost all fans from its half empty
stadiums and increasingly half hearted games.
Perhaps Brazil ’s
legacy to the tournament could go beyond one final party, and instead start us
on a path to bring the game back towards something we can all enjoy, without
playing in deserts or people dying in the attempt to legitimise repressive
politicians. Sorry Bill Shankley, but there are more important things than
football, lets hope one day it will be peoples lives rather than money and
power.