Bristol's 2018 World Cup bid submitted

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Friday, November 27, 2009
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This is Bristol

The dream is a step closer to becoming a reality. Bristol's bid to bring World Cup football to the West Country has been lodged at Wembley and now begins the nervous wait until December 16.

The 16-strong Bristol 2018 team came, saw and shook a lot of hands at the showpiece home of English football yesterday, confident that the largest city in the South outside London has everything it takes, and more, to become a valued addition to England's bid.

Wallace and Gromit and former Bristol Rovers, Tottenham Hotspur and England defender Gary Mabbutt MBE turned heads as the team walked the lobby. And the giant football which has toured the South West collecting more than 10,000 signatures was seen by all on Wembley Way.

The stadium was awash with mascots, flags, fliers, suits and celebrities as all 15 cities hoping to be part of England's bid presented their case in a well-oiled whirlwind of World Cup fever.

Chairman of the Football Association and the England 2018 bid team Lord Triesman was on hand along with selection panel chairman Lord Mawhinney to greet each bid team and reiterate the significance of a geographical spread of host venues in the bid.

"It is important," Lord Mawhinney told the Evening Post. "FIFA say it is important. And therefore for us it is important. It would be important anyway.

"But we will pick what we judge to be the best bids. And that's in the best interests of the overall bid. We want the highest quality cities and stadia to be at the heart of what we're trying to sell to FIFA.

"This is a very exciting day for English football and the culmination of a lot of hard work by local authorities across the country. As you look around you see the cream of the country's cities. We're in very good shape and this is the first visible demonstration that (the England bid) is on track, that we've a good bid."

The Bristol contingent travelled to London along the M4 in a bio-diesel minibus to emphasise the city's green credentials and live up to its title as Britain's most sustainable city as voted by the EU's Forum for the Future.

And Bristol bid director Stephen Wray was excited to be finally submitting the bid and enjoying the latest opportunity to spread the word of what the West has to offer the England 2018 team.

He told the Evening Post: "It's been a long day. It's been an exciting day, meeting people, John Barnes, Paul Elliott, Paul Ince, these fantastic footballers from my era.

"We've done a lot of what you would call glad-handing I guess, formal and official photographs and quite a lot of interviews reinforcing the importance of the bid to Bristol. We want to be a successful city. And bringing the World Cup to Bristol would show the level of ambition that we have now as a major international city.

"It's been a long nine months of preparation and in our view it is a very solid bid and one we are very proud of. I think what we have in Bristol, apart from a fantastic city, is creativity in spades and hopefully that would be valuable to England's bid."

Bristol's delegation included deputy leader of Bristol City Council Simon Cook, Bristol City FC chief executive Colin Sexstone and four schoolchildren who won a city-wide World Cup quiz to attend the event.

The team were also accompanied by Amy Kington, county development manager for the Somerset FA and Fola Kudehinbu, chair of the African and Caribbean chamber of commerce and enterprise to emphasise the diversity and reach of Bristol's bid.

The bid may now be with the FA but there is work still to do. The Bristol bid team have one last presentation to the England 2018 board on December 16, fielding any outstanding technical questions hours before the final decision is made on venues later that day.

Yesterday was a taste of the media interest and subsequent opportunities to come if Bristol is selected, and the city wants more come December 16.

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8 Comments

  • Profile image for This is Bristol

    by Rob, Hanham

    Friday, November 27 2009, 3:13PM

    “that should read

    this may play in to PLYMOUTHS hands”

  • Profile image for This is Bristol

    by Rob, Hanham

    Friday, November 27 2009, 3:10PM

    “By right Bristol and Plymouth should both be picked now that Portsmouth have pulled out due to the geographical location of both cities. Bristol should get the vote as we clearly hit all four of the major technical criteria¿s and have the infrastructure in place to meet everything else. Bristol also has the Heritage and Profile for such an event.

    Plymouths bid seems to totally hinge on their geographical location, this may help them but it could equally hinder them, as they are simple too far out of the way without the necessary travel infrastructure in place, have you even driven from Bristol to Plymouth? It seems to take an age.

    As has been mentioned their Airport is very small, ok there¿s Exeter airport but Exeter isn¿t exactly close to Plymouth. The roads aren¿t too bad but there¿s only one way in and out so any road issues down there and everything comes to a halt.

    However IMO Portsmouth pulling out gives the FA a headache, I firmly believe they would have chosen Bristol and Portsmouth to present the South & South West. Now with just Bristol it leaves a huge part of the country with only one venue and I don¿t think FIFA will like that, this may play in to Portsmouth¿s hands.”

  • Profile image for This is Bristol

    by Mitch, Ashton Vale

    Friday, November 27 2009, 2:35PM

    “Why are posts being deleted BEP, please explain?”

  • Profile image for This is Bristol

    by James, South West

    Friday, November 27 2009, 12:07PM

    “If it's a straight fight between Plymouth and Bristol the Devon city's most valuable asset is its location. The FA says it wants a geographical spread of grounds around the country and you can't get further southwest in League Football terms than Plymouth.

    Bristol probably carries the better cards in most areas: much more populous city and immediate hinterland; much easier to reach by road, rail or air (Bristol is situated at both national motorway and national rail crossroads, and its airport is much, much bigger than Plymouth's tiny field and considerably bigger than Plymouth's closest airport of any size at Exeter); larger and more developed all-round infrastructure.

    Both cities and surrounding areas are delights to visit and in this probably can't be separated.

    It will be a close call and I just hope that one of them is chosen.”

  • Profile image for This is Bristol

    by david, Planet Earth

    Friday, November 27 2009, 11:26AM

    “The backing of the council for the new stadium and world cup has been excellent, unlike some other bids such as Portsmouth, Liverpool and Nottingham (Rushcliffe Borough and the County Council have pulled out).

    We are now in a very good position to be chosen as a host city, and I hope Plymouth get chosen as well - but I doubt it.

    The biggest down side is the England bid which is a shambles. Hopefully there is enough time to pull it round, but time is getting short..”

  • Profile image for This is Bristol

    by Gerry, Bristol

    Friday, November 27 2009, 10:00AM

    “Moan.”

  • Profile image for This is Bristol

    by Roversteve, Clevedon

    Friday, November 27 2009, 9:55AM

    “Come on Bristol,come on England !! Mitch, the moaners are probably still in bed after a late-night book reading session...........bless'em.”

  • Profile image for This is Bristol

    by Mitch, Ashton Vale

    Friday, November 27 2009, 9:06AM

    “Eh, gone 9am and no one moaning?”

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