Shivering on the steps of a Zurich hotel stood a man whose life and country
had just changed forever.
For Hassan Al-Thawadi, Friday was the first day of the rest of his life. Or
the next 12 years at least. The CEO of Qatar's World Cup bid would be
leaving Switzerland carrying a prize few would have predicted.
"I am determined to enjoy this," he said, gulping in a last few breaths of
winter air before heading to the airport.
"A friend of mine is the son of the old football coach Don Revie. He said
the one thing his father regretted was not taking time out to occasionally
enjoy what he'd achieved. We have to start work right away, we know that.
But we should also be proud of what we've done so far."
The rarefied atmosphere of their mountain hotel could hardly be more in
contrast to the country that's about to undergo the mother of all World Cup
makeovers.
Qatar doesn't do mountains and it certainly doesn't do snow. But the point
about Qatar is that it probably could do if it really set its heart on such
a project.
Two years ago the idea of World Cup heading to the Gulf seemed fanciful.
Changed forever
But an imaginative and exciting bid, backed by a few billion dollars of oil
and gas cash, has just changed footballing geography forever.
Qatar's government has placed sport at the centre of its strategy to raise
their country's profile and influence.
"We have to start work right away, we know that. But we should also be proud
of what we've done so far"
Hassan Al-Thawadi, Qatar 2022 CEO
There are few more elevating stages than the one their nation will now be
performing on.
The morning after that night of nights there was still an underlying sense
of disbelief among the bid team.
Their hearts had momentarily sunk when Russia was named the host for 2018.
That was Fifa's one unpredictable choice of the evening, they thought. They
need not have worried.
When details of the voting process emerged, Qatar's power within that 22
voting panel was evident.
They came within a single vote of winning outright in the first round.
Support base
And while it did take three further rounds of box ticking to eventually give
them a majority, such was Qatar's support base that their win was never
seriously in doubt.
Qatar's victory should also be viewed as a victory for their countryman
Mohammed Bin Hammam, the President of the Asian Football Confederation.
There was never any question as to which way this member of the Fifa
executive committee would be voting.
He very publicly backed Qatar throughout the process.
It was a tactic that may have annoyed other bidding countries from Asia but
it was at least refreshing in its honesty.
That he and Qatar were then backed by so many other voters underlines his
huge sphere of influence. It is not impossible that in future years Qatar
will be home to a Fifa President as well as a World Cup.
Source: Al Jazeera
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