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Ukraine Recap: Germany Ready to Place 4,000 Troops in Lithuania
Ukraine Recap: Germany Ready to Place 4,000 Troops in Lithuania
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1970-01-01 08:00
‘Test plans for Champions League final at Wembley to destruction’ says FA chair
‘Test plans for Champions League final at Wembley to destruction’ says FA chair
The safety plans of every organisation responsible for staging next year’s Champions League final at Wembley must be “tested to destruction”, Football Association chair Debbie Hewitt has said. There is immense pressure on the FA and UEFA for the event to be a success after problems arose at the last two finals. The 2022 match in Paris almost became a “mass fatality catastrophe” according to an independent report commissioned by UEFA. Liverpool fans found themselves penned against stadium perimeter fences ahead of the match against Real Madrid due to organisational failings, and were then tear-gassed by French police. While the problems around this year’s final in Istanbul were less severe, UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin admitted last week that “not everything was perfect”, with supporters reporting problems getting to and from the Ataturk Stadium and in accessing drinking water and toilets. Ceferin assured delegates at the European Football Fans Congress in Manchester that the 2024 final would be “a unique experience” for supporters. That appeared to ratchet up the pressure on Wembley, a venue which itself hosted a chaotic Euro 2020 final two summers ago. An independent review by Baroness Casey identified more than 20 near-miss incidents that could have resulted in serious injury or death at the match between England and Italy on July 11 2021, as ticketless individuals stormed turnstiles to force entry. FA chair Hewitt insisted there was “healthy paranoia” among organisers around what could go wrong at every Wembley event, and pledged everyone involved would aim to work out the pitfalls and how to respond to them. “It isn’t the regular stuff that goes wrong,” Hewitt said. “It is the stuff that hasn’t happened. In that particular tournament (Euro 2020), it was the first time we had 30,000 empty seats (due to Covid-19 capacity restrictions). “It’s really easy for me standing here and saying ‘well, that was obvious, that was the thing that was different’. You have to search for the thing that is different. You don’t make the same mistakes, you make different ones. So what is the thing that is different? “Secondly, it is about making sure every one of the stakeholders completely and utterly understands, and tests to destruction, the plan. “It is no good the police doing their bit in one room and the stewards doing their bit in another and us doing our bit in that room and UEFA doing theirs in that room. It is getting everyone in the same room and testing each other’s plans to destruction. There is pressure on every event we host at Wembley. We have got paranoia, healthy paranoia I would say, but we are paranoid. Yes, there is pressure but there is pressure on everything we do. FA chair Debbie Hewitt “I believe in a process called pre-mortem, not post-mortem. I use it a lot in business, what could go wrong and how do we deal with it? It’s a bit like pretend crisis management in a way but it is much more deep than that. “There is pressure on every event we host at Wembley. We have got paranoia, healthy paranoia I would say, but we are paranoid. Yes, there is pressure but there is pressure on everything we do. “You write about (the pressure) because of the fact there have been two finals where things have gone wrong. But every time we host something at Wembley – (a) Tyson Fury (fight), Harry Styles, Coldplay, no matter what, where you have groups of people together, something that can go wrong will go wrong, and it is times so many multiples because it is the national stadium. “We are paranoid about it and we try to test to destruction. I am sure we will make some mistakes that have yet to be made in other stadiums, but it won’t be because we didn’t try and test. That is important to us. It is very important we learn the lessons from Paris and Istanbul.” Asked if she was confident there would be no repeat of the storming of the turnstiles at Euro 2020, Hewitt said: “You can never be confident with something like that can you? It would be very over-confident for me to say that. Because anything can happen. “It is one of the biggest events in Europe and anything can happen. You just have to be confident you have thought through what you would do if something did happen. Rather than say ‘I am confident that will never happen’, the question is ‘what if it did? What would you do?’ That kind of testing is crucial.” By the time Wembley hosts the Champions League final on June 1 next year, the FA will also know whether or not the stadium will host the Euro 2028 final. The UK and Ireland is bidding to host that tournament in competition with Turkey, with a decision due to be taken by UEFA’s executive committee on October 10 this year. Hewitt is expecting tough questions given the chaos of July 2021 and knows it is important to have the answers. “We are on our feet in October convincing people why we should win,” she said. “One of the things I am absolutely convinced UEFA’s Exco will ask us is ’how can you assure us nobody will storm the turnstiles?’. “Being well rehearsed – and not just having the answers but having worked through what is the answer – that is an important part of the bid. We have to convince every one of those Exco members we have not only thought about it but that we have planned for it – that we know what we would do in what order and who is accountable, and that is why they should vote for us.”
1970-01-01 08:00
Luka Modric signs new one-year contract at Real Madrid
Luka Modric signs new one-year contract at Real Madrid
Luka Modric has extended his contract with Real Madrid for another year. The LaLiga club announced on Monday that Croatia playmaker Modric, 37, would remain with the Spanish giants until at least the end of June 2024. Modric – who joined Real from Tottenham in 2012 and has gone on to win the Champions League five times as well as three LaLiga titles – would have been out of contract this summer and so could have left on a free transfer. A statement from Real Madrid read: “Real Madrid and Luka Modric have agreed to extend the player’s contract, which remains linked to the club until June 30 2024.” Modric – who helped Croatia reach the 2018 World Cup final and won the Ballon d’Or that year – had been linked with following former team-mate Karim Benzema in making a big-money move to Saudi Arabia. Following the announcement of his new contract at Real Madrid, Modric wrote on Twitter: “Home Sweet Home. #Modric2024”. Read More Charity boss speaks out over ‘traumatic’ encounter with royal aide Ukraine war’s heaviest fight rages in east - follow live
1970-01-01 08:00
UK Banks to Pass All of Rate Hikes to Some Savers, JPMorgan Says
UK Banks to Pass All of Rate Hikes to Some Savers, JPMorgan Says
British lenders will likely have to pass on all of the Bank of England’s record rate hikes to
1970-01-01 08:00
Canada’s Explosive Wildfires Have Damaged a Forest Carbon Offset Project
Canada’s Explosive Wildfires Have Damaged a Forest Carbon Offset Project
Canada’s explosive wildfire season has already pumped millions of tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. Some of
1970-01-01 08:00
Top Explorer Urges Caution With Boom in Sea and Space Adventures
Top Explorer Urges Caution With Boom in Sea and Space Adventures
The demise of five people aboard a submersible touring the Titanic’s underwater wreckage has even the most prominent
1970-01-01 08:00
German Business Outlook Plummets as Recession Shadow Lingers
German Business Outlook Plummets as Recession Shadow Lingers
Germany’s business outlook deteriorated to the lowest seen this year, evidence that Europe’s biggest economy is struggling to
1970-01-01 08:00
EU Faces Pressure to Revive Its Social Investing Rulebook
EU Faces Pressure to Revive Its Social Investing Rulebook
The European Union is under pressure to revive plans to add a social pillar to its ESG-rulebook, after
1970-01-01 08:00
Xi’s Bet on Putin Looks Even More Risky After Russian Rebellion
Xi’s Bet on Putin Looks Even More Risky After Russian Rebellion
Ever since Russia invaded Ukraine last year, Xi Jinping’s gamble on a “no limits” friendship with Vladimir Putin
1970-01-01 08:00
Casino Says It Needs Equity Boost of at Least €900 Million
Casino Says It Needs Equity Boost of at Least €900 Million
Casino Guichard-Perrachon SA said it will need an equity boost of €900 million ($981 million) or more and
1970-01-01 08:00
Russian Mogul’s Yacht Heads to Homeland After Transoceanic Trip
Russian Mogul’s Yacht Heads to Homeland After Transoceanic Trip
Russian tycoon Alexey Mordashov’s $500 million superyacht is headed for his homeland after more than a year criss-crossing
1970-01-01 08:00
Nike and Pepsi Lead Calls for EU to Roll Out Green Trucks Faster
Nike and Pepsi Lead Calls for EU to Roll Out Green Trucks Faster
Companies including PepsiCo Inc. and Nike Inc. are calling for the European Union to implement stricter emissions targets
1970-01-01 08:00
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