Friday, 16 July 2010

Chivas’ big day nears and new stadium still has no permit

Zapopan City Hall has yet to grant a license for the new 45,000-seat Chivas stadium that will enable the July 30 inaugural game against English football giants Manchester United to go ahead as scheduled.

Several conditions stipulated by Zapopan Mayor Hector Vielma and agreed by Chivas owner Jorge Vergara on October 20 are still to be met.

Primarily, 40 million pesos (3.1 million dollars) that Vergara promised as a down payment for his part in the funding of the stadium’s access roads has not been deposited in municipal coffers, according to Vielma. Work on the main access road has yet to begin.

Despite his hard-line stance over the past few months, Vielma this week provided some hope that the July 30 game could go ahead by suggesting a temporary license might be granted.

“We can grant a provisional license, but the principal requisite is that (Vergara) comes up with the 40 million pesos,” said the mayor. (Vergara, a business magnate who owns the multi-level Omnilife nutritional supplements empire, told the Guadalajara press this week that he was ready to pay but didn’t know which bank account to deposit the money.)

Even if the ancillary road work around the stadium is incomplete, the game could still be played as long as municipal inspectors deem the site safe, Vielma said.

And while the stadium itself may be finished on time, the limited access and parking, and inevitable traffic and transport chaos on the day, could transform the opening game from a showpiece into a media disaster.

Located at the corner of the Periferico (city beltway) and Avenida Vallarta, the stadium has taken more than five years to complete. As well as hosting all the games of the Guadalajara Chivas – Mexico’s most popular soccer team – it will also be used for concerts and other large-scale public events.

Fans of Manchester United – who habitually travel around the world to see their team perform – have been complaining on fan websites about the disorganized nature of the planning of the game. Even Manchester United officials are telling fans hoping to travel to Guadalajara that they “don’t know” how to go about getting tickets.

Wrote one fan from Manchester on www.manutd.com: “I hope we get news sooner rather than later. I’m all paid up for both flights and hotel and would really rather not be traveling out there just to see a mariachi band - as much as I loved ‘Desperado.’”
Chivas’ website says tickets will be on sale “soon,” but the reality is that they can’t be put on sale until a license is granted.

Thursday, 15 July 2010

Chivas release new shirt

Chivas have released the first images of the shirt that they will play in starting against Manchester United on July 30.



Not bad. It also has a little note on the back of the neck saying "100% Mexicano" on the back of the collar. No non-Mexican has ever played for the famous rojiblancos.

Chicharito tops World Cup poll but he doesn't have Twitter

Mexico's top goalscorer in South Africa, Javier 'Chicharito' Hernandez has topped a Mitofsky poll which asked Mexicans to rate each player's performance.

New Manchester United player Chicharito scored two goals in the tournament and received an evaluation of 8.8 out of 10.

Barcelona player Rafael Marquez got 8.7 marks, the same as Tottenham Hotspur's Giovani Dos Santos. Ironically both players are unsure as to where they will be playing in a matter of weeks.

Rumours suggest Marquez could be moving to Galatasaray while the latest club to express an interest in Dos Santos is Blackburn Rovers.

At the bottom of the table, the much maligned Guillermo Franco scored a 7.1 out of 10 with Mexican fans, just below Paul Aguilar (7.4) and Ricardo Osorio (7.5) who made that grave mistake against Argentina. The average score was 7.7.

Seventy-two percent of Mexicans said they watched the game against South Africa 64% the one against France, 62 % against Uruguay and 68 percent the game against Argentina.

Mexico officially finished in 14th place in FIFA's assessment of the World Cup, but have slipped seven places down the rankings from 17th to 24th spot. The United States is in 13th and Paraguay in 16th.

In this blog's poll, a massive 68 percent of voters thought Chicharito was Mexico's best player, followed by Carlos Salcido (11%), Giovani dos Santos (6%) and Rafa Marquez (5%).

And, in case you were wondering, Chicharito doesn't have Twitter, as this photo seems to suggest: