Thu, Jun 22, 2006 - Page 18 News List

World Cup: Scalpers make sure fans get their tickets

AP , BERLIN

A soccer fan tries to buy a ticket in front of the stadium in Cologne on Tuesday before the soccer match between Sweden and England.

PHOTO: EPA

German organizers promised before the World Cup they would stamp out scalping, but no one outside the stadiums looking for a ticket is leaving empty handed -- unless steep prices are a hurdle.

The plans were ambitious. Tickets contain a microchip and were registered to individuals so that fans who went through the turnstiles would have to match with their ticket.

"We will know who everybody is in the stadium," promised Christian Sachs, spokesman for Germany's interior ministry, which is responsible for World Cup security.

Word has spread quickly among the 3 million visitors in Germany -- tens of thousands of them traveling from game to game looking for tickets -- that Germany backed off the strict controls once the month-long tournament began.

Only between 500 and 1,000 checks are done at stadiums that seat no less than 41,000 fans and tickets can be signed over for a small fee up to game time, no questions asked.

An hour before Germany's 3-0 win on Tuesday against Ecuador, US$55 seats were readily available, first for US$700 and then far less as kickoff loomed. Police ignored a German man scribbling down the personal information needed to transfer two tickets to a pair of Ecuadoreans.

Scalpers seem to be flush with tickets, whether from sponsors or national soccer federations or elsewhere. Even the head of Botswana's federation was disciplined for scalping.

"I've gone to two Mexico games with friends, but man, did I pay a lot," said Eduardo Sanchez, a Mexican studying in Spain. Each ticket cost him US$750.

Leaders of soccer's governing body never liked the Germans' plans, which were intended to limit stadium access for hooligans and other troublemakers but threatened to cause greater problems with long lines. General secretary Urs Linsi told the Germans to "relax" and last October president Sepp Blatter called the controls too elaborate and strict.

Now that the World Cup is underway, FIFA officials have praised the handling of tickets. And the Germans are applauding as well.

"You can't stamp out the black market completely, it's like a rock concert, but we have curbed it," said Gerd Graus, spokesman for Germany's World Cup committee. "Tickets are a success story."

Some tickets have landed in strange hands.

A man in Gelsenkirchen, site of one of the 12 World Cup stadiums, sold hundreds of tickets that came from the Ecuadorean soccer federation out of his hardware store, police said. People were lined up for blocks before FIFA stopped him.

Reports have surfaced in the German media that officials from poorer soccer federations are selling their tickets on the black market.

On Saturday, the president of the Botswana association was caught selling US$127 tickets for England's match against Trinidad and Tobago for US$380.

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