Monday

Brazil's President plans for World Cup Final

BRASILIA, Brazil -- President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva is he's so confident of Brazil's chances in the World Cup that he is already planning to be at the final on July 11.

“I'm so optimistic that when I was in Mexico with President (Felipe) Calderon and he asked me if I was going to the opening game of the World Cup, I said I'm not going to the opener — I'm going to the final,” Silva said in an interview with The Associated Press on Tuesday.
Of course, Silva said he would have to attend the final match in Johannesburg anyway — at least for ceremonial reasons — since Brazil will be the host country for the 2014 World Cup.

The twelve cities to host soccer in Brazil for the World Cup 2014 are:


World Cup 2014 and Brazilian Football

On Oct. 30, 2007 FIFA announced that Brazil had been chosen as the host country for the World Cup 2014, the 20th World Cup in FIFA history. Most tournaments involve eight to ten different cities in the host country, but Brazil petitioned to spread the games among twelve different cities across the country. FIFA World Cup officials gave permission for this change in protocol.

Soccer in Brazil and FIFA

The twelve cities to host soccer in Brazil for the World Cup 2014 are:
  • Belo Horizonte
  • Brasília
  • Cuiabá
  • Curitiba
  • Fortaleza
  • Manaus
  • Natal
  • Porto Alegre
  • Recife
  • Rio de Janeiro
  • Salvador
  • São Paulo

Infrastructure and Planning

Transportation networks between the cities, all of which are the capital cities in their respective states, include air, train, and car travel, with billions of dollars invested in upgrades. Brazil's 67 airports will all receive some form of remodeling and infrastructure update, while Natal will open a new international airport in 2010.
The country plans to unveil a new $9 billion high--speed rail project, called the Rio-São Paulo High Speed rail, connecting Campinas, Guarulhos, São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro. The 322 mile project is expected to move passengers at over 150 miles per hour and complete trips between São Paulo and Rio in under 90 minutes. The infrastructure, viability studies, and groundbreaking for this line have already occurred, and the projected line will be ready for World Cup 2014 and the later 2016 Olympics.


Read more at Suite101: World Cup 2014 - Soccer in Brazil: Brazilian Football, FIFA, Infrastructure and Planning http://brazil.suite101.com/article.cfm/world_cup_2014_soccer_in_brazil#ixzz0iHBPx5ZA

Wednesday

Host Cities for 2014 World Cup Soccer in Brazil

Fifa has selected 12 Brazilian cities to host matches at the 2014 World Cup finals. These are Rio de Janeiro, Sao Paulo, Manaus, Belo Horizonte, Natal, Fortaleza, Curitiba, Salvador, Brasilia, Cuiaba, Recife and Porto Alegre. Fifa, agreed to increase the number of host cities from 10 to 12 because of the size of Brazil providing a good geographical spread to ensure many Brazilians get the opportunity to watch a game and spread the financial and economic benefits around this large country. Florianopolis, Goiania, Campo Grande, Belem and Rio Branco were the cities to missed.