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Empty triumph for rush to finish Delhi arenas

BanglaBhoot

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After much uncertainty New Delhi may have finally succeeded in its efforts to make ready 17 stadiums for the Commonwealth Games. It now appears that the herculean task was in vain.

Athletes are competing in almost empty arenas, while organisers are trying belatedly to whip up public interest and potential spectators struggle with dysfunctional ticketing systems and onerous security procedures.

Of the 1.7m tickets for the 11-day competition, including the opening and closing ceremonies, Indian organisers say just half have been sold. Sales have been focused on a few popular matches, such as the sell-out India-Pakistan hockey game, leaving most athletes to compete before family and friends and rows of empty chairs.

“It’s not cricket,” said Neha Pandey, a young volunteer who was using a megaphone outside the main Jawaharlal Nehru stadium to urge passers-by to buy the many leftover athletics tickets. “Attendance is a real problem, especially with the less well-known sports where India doesn’t have a presence.”

Sunil Kumar, the manager of the 60,000-seat stadium’s ticket booth, said: “For popular sports like hockey, we have sold more than 50 per cent of the tickets for any given match, but less than 20 per cent for sports such as netball.”

Ticket sales were sluggish in the run-up to the games, as New Delhi’s difficulty completing stadiums and athletes’ accommodation on schedule raised doubts over whether the tournament would go ahead.

With organisers focused on ensuring the readiness of the venues, publicity and marketing fell through the cracks. After the government decided to close schools and universities – part of a plan to ease traffic during the competition – many Delhi families decided to go out of town.

Sunday’s dazzling opening ceremony, including a procession of enthusiastic athletes, lifted the gloom and triggered something of a last-minute ticket rush. However, would-be spectators have been stymied by ticketing systems unable to cope with demand because of staff shortages, time-consuming verification procedures and computer crashes, resulting in ticket queues that take hours to clear.

“The online system for buying tickets has been a complete joke,” said Samir Chawla, who was trying to buy hockey match tickets. “There were so many malfunctions.”

High ticket prices, at as much as Rs750 ($17), are also thought to have kept people away, especially for more obscure sports. “The prices should have been as low as possible to fill up the stadiums and build up interest,” said Vishal Jaison, associate director with Total Sports Asia, the sports marketing company.

Suresh Kalmadi, chief of India’s games organising committee, has made light of the empty stadiums, saying sales were “surging” day by day. But he also suggested that unsold tickets could be given away to children and those from the “lower levels of society”.

The organising committee has given 1,000 tickets to Smile Foundation, a New Delhi-based charity, so that children from poor families could watch the games.

Even those who have managed to get tickets may have been deterred by security measures, involving frisking, body scans and confiscation of 42 prohibited items including electronic equipment, motor*cycle helmets, umbrellas, “torn paper” and coins.

Foreign visitors have complained that official games drivers, who were hired from out of town, are unfamiliar with Delhi streets and get lost en route to venues.

It is not just the fans who are struggling to digest the complexities of the event. Several British and Australian swimmers have been felled by illness that some teams fear may be linked to pool water contaminated by the droppings of pigeons nesting in the rafters of the swimming arena.

FT.com / Asia-Pacific / India - Empty triumph for rush to finish Delhi arenas
 
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I am really surprised that whats the reason of such a low public turn out in games .. may b affordability or other reason could be that games other than cricket are not popular in india so may b thats the reason of empty stadiums
 
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in india its basically cricket and then a few other sports, there is no tradition whatsoever for things like swimming and athletics.
 
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CWG: Tickets sold out but spirits still high

New Delhi: It's India shining at the Commonwealth Games and the box office is raking in the glory.

As the country goes from strength to strength, interest in the Games is soaring. Gone are the days when empty stands had the organizers worried. In the last three days alone, more than three lakh tickets have been sold for the Games.

People from all walks of life are swarming the ticket stands. All want to do their bit for the country.

Meet Manoj and Ramesh, both are farmers from Bhiwani who have been camping in the capital for the past five days, hoping to get tickets to watch wrestler Sushil Kumar. But sadly, most tickets in the affordable range were sold out.

But not losing heart, they aimed at buying the tickets of a slightly higher range. In order to raise Rs. 5000 for the tickets, they found an idea. The duo is painting the tricolour on the faces of the spectators and making money to watch their favourite wrestler.

"Till now I have spent 1000 rupees, I may earn something today...we have come from Bhiwani especially to watch Sushil Kumar's kushti, we will try and buy the ticket somehow, " said an enthusiastic Manoj Kumar

So, for Rs. 20, the two offer spectators the chance to sport the tricolour.

"We feel that painting the tricolour will also encourage the players," added Ramesh.

Well, where there is a will there is a way. And this has proved right not just for Ramesh and Manoj but also for the Organising Committee.

Despite suffering enough criticism, the Games fever has now caught on. Though, tickets for the more popular sports are almost sold out, it has not prevented people from still trying to get an entry and cheer for their teams.

"The sale of tickets has crossed nine lakh, we have generated 32 crores from ticketing. We had good crowd in gymnastics, hockey and swimming," said Lalit Bhanot, Secretary General of the CWG Organising Committee.

India's gold rush too has pushed up the ticket sales. In order to keep the stands buzzing with spectators, the Organising Committee has also started giving out complementary tickets to school children and NGOs for those venues with little attendance.

"If we don't go who else will go and cheer for them? Bharat Mein hain Dum... Vande Mataram," said Shweta Chaturvedi a spectator.
 
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games where India is not competing or has lesser chance of winning a medal are being skipped by the spectators. Games like tennis, badminton, archery, shooting, wrestling and weight lifting has had high to decent attendance.
 
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World media slams 'blunder-prone' Commonwealth Games


NEW DELHI: The Incredible India mood, briefly generated by the spectacular opening ceremony, has evaporated as far as the world media is concerned.

AFP's put out a report that's been picked by many big newspapers that begins by saying, "From 'toxic' pools to empty stadiums to faulty boxing scales, the first week of the Delhi Games has served up daily blunders that have deepened India's embarrassment. The event is the most expensive in the history of the competition, but could set records for another reason: being the most accident and gaffe-prone."

The Australian newspaper has carried a scathing article, headlined, "Games are running on empty: A poorly run event may spell the end of the contest".

Meanwhile, The Daily Telegraph, London, is running a mocking series, "What's wrong in Delhi today?" The strapline says, "Empty stands, blocked lavatories, collapsing scoreboards, vomiting swimmers and striking officials, it's been a shocking few days for CWG organizers".


The Australian says, "In science, it's known as the observer effect: the act of observing will influence the phenomenon being observed. But, as the Commonwealth Games could soon discover, the same might also hold true for a phenomenon not being observed. The Delhi Games are barely being watched."

Canada's highest circulation newspaper, Toronto Star, has a report saying, "Commonwealth Games' latest bug: Concerns pool making swimmers sick".

Two comments published in Canada's Globe and Mail newspaper's website best sum up the mood abroad. One of them says, "We should leave this toilet bowl and come home!" Another one goes, "Yikes...And these clowns have nukes!."

The Australian report adds, "The Delhi Games are barely being watched. So empty are the grandstands at most venues that the Indian government has written to the organising committee ordering it to throw the event open, free, to schoolchildren. Even those few Delhites willing to pay for tickets are being thwarted. If it's not the lack of transport or overly zealous security deterring them from going to the Games (even house keys are being confiscated), it's the fact that when they queue for tickets, the venue box offices aren't working. This lack of enthusiasm is seeping through to every corner of the Commonwealth," the report says.

It adds, "Fiascos occur at every Games. But the unrelenting torrent of them in Delhi is wearing down even the hardiest and most enthusiastic of Games athletes and officials - and, dare it be said, journalists - all of whom are asking themselves whether this is still fun any more."

South Africa's Mail and Guardian report quotes Australia's chef de mission Steve Moneghetti complaining about the opening ceremony. "We were treated like cattle. It was disgraceful," he said adding that his athletes were forced to wait in searing heat before they appeared.

As for the comments, just sample these from Globe and Mail. One reader writes, "If you hold the Games in a cesspool, what do you expect?" One reader suggests that the entire Games should have been cancelled on lack of cleanliness. The Australian has also published a speculative story wondering if pigeons should be blamed for Delhi belly in the pool. It says, "The England team has also sought reassurances on the water quality, amid speculation that pigeon droppings may have contaminated the water. Pigeons are roosting in the rafters of the building and their droppings are visible in the grandstands. :P

"Insiders estimate that 40 of the 66 British swimmers competing in Delhi (representing, England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland) have had stomach upsets, with varying degrees of severity."

World media slams 'blunder-prone' Commonwealth Games - The Times of India
 
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^^^ Why do we have to please these idiots anyways? All the other countries seems to happy with the arrangements other than Australia, Canada and England.

Where is the next CWG going to be held? I am pretty sure the Indian media would be raring to have a go at these guys.
 
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^^^ Why do we have to please these idiots anyways? All the other countries seems to happy with the arrangements other than Australia, Canada and England.

Where is the next CWG going to be held? I am pretty sure the Indian media would be raring to have a go at these guys.

You had your chance during the 2010 winter olympics but that was a great success.
 
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I am really surprised that whats the reason of such a low public turn out in games .. may b affordability or other reason could be that games other than cricket are not popular in india so may b thats the reason of empty stadiums

I think with the heavy security and traffic because of the games, the people dont want to take the headache. And yes, a great great majority of Indians know only one game and that is cricket. Look at the way we have neglected the great legacy of Indian field hockey
 
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"Insiders estimate that 40 of the 66 British swimmers competing in Delhi (representing, England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland) have had stomach upsets, with varying degrees of severity."

I am intirgued, why only British, maybe its some colonial era bugs who are taking their revenge.
 
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