Al Wakrah (Qatar): Qatar inaugurated its first purpose-built stadium for the 2022 World Cup, staging a prestigious domestic cup final in the $575 million, 40,000-capacity Al-Wakrah venue here.
The ground, designed by late British-Iraqi architect Zaha Hadid and located in a coastal town south of Doha, erupted into cheers as Emir Cup finalists Al-Sadd and Al-Duhail ran onto the pitch, Thursday night.
There were some traffic jams and tight security checks as the ground, which was nearly full for the prestigious fixture, began to fill ahead of kick-off.
“I’ve travelled the world and I’ve been to stadiums in different cities including the UK,” said Yousef al-Jaber, a 35-year-old oil company research director from Doha. “Finally I was able to go to one in Qatar that is world-class,” added the Chelsea fan who watched the game with his wife and two sons.
Qatar’s emir, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani tweeted on his verified account ahead of kick-off that the ground’s name would be changed to ‘Al Janoub Stadium’ meaning ‘stadium of the south’.
The venue’s distinctive retractable roof – meant to resemble the sails of a traditional dhow fishing boat – is made of 1,400 pieces and was shipped to Qatar from Italy.
It was plunged into darkness for the pre-match show and performers assembled around a giant illuminated inflatable pearl on the centre of the manicured pitch.
A video describing the Gulf nation’s history as a pearling station played on the ground’s two big screens. The pearl then slowly transformed into a representation of the ‘Emir Cup’ trophy before a 150-strong marching band serenaded the stadium.
Former Dutch international Ruud Gullit, who attended the ground’s maiden game, called it ‘a beautiful stadium’”. “”You go on the pitch and you want to play,” said the former captain of the Netherlands side that won the European Championship in 1988. “The design is fantastic, and of course there’s the air conditioning.”
Asked about the stadium’s USD 575 million price tag spectator Sunil Moorkanat, 52, said ‘it is worth it’. “It’s the whole infrastructure you have to look at. The ambience is fantastic and all the amenities,” added the engineer from India who has been living in Qatar for six years.
Of the eight stadiums Qatar is building or refurbishing for 2022, Khalifa International is already open and will host this year’s World Athletics Championships.
The venue here will be used in the World Cup for fixtures up to and including quarterfinals. Its capacity will be reduced to 20,000 after the global soccer spectacle.
AFP