Fans rock as World Cup rolls on
SYDNEY: Forget leather, willow and lazy afternoons, the World Cup’s storyline is legions of passionate Indian fans, ‘light-up’ cricket stumps, officials keeping tabs on bookies...and even the back catalogue of Gary Glitter.In New Zealand, where most of the seven venues are compact and informal, officials have been quick to praise
By our correspondents
February 26, 2015
SYDNEY: Forget leather, willow and lazy afternoons, the World Cup’s storyline is legions of passionate Indian fans, ‘light-up’ cricket stumps, officials keeping tabs on bookies...and even the back catalogue of Gary Glitter.
In New Zealand, where most of the seven venues are compact and informal, officials have been quick to praise the party atmosphere, helped by a brewery offering NZL $1 million ($745,000) to be shared among fans who take a clean one-handed catch while wearing the sponsor’s T-shirt.
Christchurch’s scheduled three games have now been and gone, but the city relished hosting a global sports festival for the first time since being devastated by an earthquake.
Canterbury Cricket chief executive Lee Germon, the driving force behind the purpose-built Hagley Oval which replaced the destroyed former home of cricket in Christchurch, Lancaster Park, said it was a significant time for the city.
At sleepy, picturesque Nelson, students of 1960s and 1970s pop music were being catered for.
On the playlist for the West Indies’ defeat by Ireland and Zimbabwe’s victory against the United Arab Emirates were Pink Floyd’s Us and Them, The Monkees’ ‘I’m a Believer’ and, oddly, disgraced British glam-rocker Gary Glitter’s ‘Rock and Roll (Part 1 and 2).
Those music bombs which punctuate intervals between overs are a deliberate eclectic mix, according to the International Cricket Council.
“Sportainment has a generic playlist for the tournament and then depending on who is playing, this is then complemented with songs that are popular from those countries,” an ICC spokesman told AFP.
“Of course, we share this complete list of songs with the respective teams to ensure that they are happy with them.”
Sometimes instructions issued from the ICC don’t always filter down to the smaller host venues.
In Nelson, a juice stall operator was given permission to sell drinks at the Ireland-West Indies game only to turn up on the day to be told her drinks were banned because Pepsi was an official sponsor.
The ICC crackdown on illegal betting has also been evident from the opening game when police, many in plain clothes, patrolled Hagley Oval in search of spectators making excessive use of lap-tops or cellphones.
They said “several” people caught court-siding — feeding match information so associates overseas could take advantage of broadcasting delays and lay bets — were evicted from the ground.
In New Zealand, where most of the seven venues are compact and informal, officials have been quick to praise the party atmosphere, helped by a brewery offering NZL $1 million ($745,000) to be shared among fans who take a clean one-handed catch while wearing the sponsor’s T-shirt.
Christchurch’s scheduled three games have now been and gone, but the city relished hosting a global sports festival for the first time since being devastated by an earthquake.
Canterbury Cricket chief executive Lee Germon, the driving force behind the purpose-built Hagley Oval which replaced the destroyed former home of cricket in Christchurch, Lancaster Park, said it was a significant time for the city.
At sleepy, picturesque Nelson, students of 1960s and 1970s pop music were being catered for.
On the playlist for the West Indies’ defeat by Ireland and Zimbabwe’s victory against the United Arab Emirates were Pink Floyd’s Us and Them, The Monkees’ ‘I’m a Believer’ and, oddly, disgraced British glam-rocker Gary Glitter’s ‘Rock and Roll (Part 1 and 2).
Those music bombs which punctuate intervals between overs are a deliberate eclectic mix, according to the International Cricket Council.
“Sportainment has a generic playlist for the tournament and then depending on who is playing, this is then complemented with songs that are popular from those countries,” an ICC spokesman told AFP.
“Of course, we share this complete list of songs with the respective teams to ensure that they are happy with them.”
Sometimes instructions issued from the ICC don’t always filter down to the smaller host venues.
In Nelson, a juice stall operator was given permission to sell drinks at the Ireland-West Indies game only to turn up on the day to be told her drinks were banned because Pepsi was an official sponsor.
The ICC crackdown on illegal betting has also been evident from the opening game when police, many in plain clothes, patrolled Hagley Oval in search of spectators making excessive use of lap-tops or cellphones.
They said “several” people caught court-siding — feeding match information so associates overseas could take advantage of broadcasting delays and lay bets — were evicted from the ground.
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