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FIFA - 2022 WORLD CUP

Infantino praises Qatar 2022 infrastructure progress

The FIFA President described the 2022 FIFA World Cup™ as a unique opportunity for football fans to experience a new culture and region during a whistle-stop tour of the country.

Infantino praises Qatar 2022 infrastructure progress

FIFA President Gianni Infantino  praised Qatar’s infrastructure progress on Tuesday and described the 2022 FIFA World Cup™ as a unique opportunity for football fans to experience a new culture and region during a whistle-stop tour of the country.

The new Doha Metro and Al Wakrah Stadium

Infantino visited the Al Wakrah Stadium before taking a helicopter ride to view the other seven proposed tournament venues, along with several training sites. He arrived in Al Wakrah after becoming one of the first people to travel on the new Doha Metro, which will open to the public by the end of the year, before travelling from the Doha Exhibition and Convention Centre (DECC), in West Bay, to Al Wakrah, a journey south which took approximately 20 minutes.

During an interview at Al Wakrah Stadium, a 40,000 capacity venue proposed to host matches up to the quarter-finals stage in 2022, Infantino said: “The stadium is very impressive. When you enter here you can immediately feel how imposing it is, and you can see the progress which is being made here four years before kick-off.”

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Massive potential

Infantino also said Qatar’s tournament had massive potential to break down cultural stereotypes and bring people together through football. “I think this World Cup is extremely important, not only for Qatar but for the whole region. This World Cup is a unique opportunity – a chance to show the world what this region can offer; for football, but also for anybody in the world to come and visit a beautiful place, learn about a new culture and meet new people”, added the FIFA President before pointing out that the recent World Cup in Russia set a high benchmark.

“There are many lessons we can learn from Russia. The first one is how to welcome so many people – 1.5 million people headed to Russia to enjoy the World Cup and they were all welcomed in a way that was unexpected to many. There were many fears about Russia, but it turned out to be a very safe World Cup, a very welcoming World Cup, in a country that made fans feel good. The whole population contributed to that and I’m sure the same will happen here in Qatar. The Russian World Cup has been the best ever but the World Cup in 2022 in Qatar – I am sure – will be even better.”

Qatar launched its first tournament-ready venue, Khalifa International Stadium, in May 2017. The other venues, including the 80,000-capacity Lusail Stadium, which will host the opening match and final in 2022, are all scheduled to be completed by 2020.