In a dusty workshop on the outskirts of Hanoi, workers busily mold, set and spray hundreds of replica World Cup trophies as orders flood in ahead of next week’s tournament.
Demand in soccer-mad Vietnam is soaring for the handmade plaster models of the real 18-carat gold trophy that will go to the winners of the month-long World Cup hosted by Russia that starts on Thursday.
Craftsman Vuong Hong Nhat has been making the replicas since the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, perfecting his hand-carved design over several months to give as gifts.
Photo: AFP
“Initially, I didn’t want to sell the trophies, I was just trying to feed my passion for football and give them to friends and family,” the 57-year-old Manchester United fan said.
However, they proved so popular he now sells them and expects to receive 3,000 orders this year — triple the number he made in 2014.
With just three assistants in his small workshop, he is struggling to keep up with demand.
“I work all day to fill the orders, but it’s not enough. I have to work until midnight,” Nhat said, exhausted, as workers poured plaster nearby.
His spray-painted gold versions of the coveted trophy sell for just US$3.50 — a steal compared to the estimated US$150,000 price tag on the real version designed by the late Italian sculptor Silvio Gazzaniga.
The FIFA World Cup Trophy has been in play since 1974, when it replaced the original Jules Rimet Trophy given to Brazil in 1970 after it clinched its third World Cup win. The original Jules Rimet Trophy was stolen in Brazil, when the back wall of its case was removed by thieves in 1983 and has never been recovered.
For Nhat’s customers, the replicas add a sprinkling of glory before the World Cup.
“Holding the trophy I feel like [Zinedine] Zidane [when he] won the World Cup in 1998,” France national team supporter Dang Viet Duy said.
It is a small consolation for fans like Nhat who have little hope of seeing Vietnam — a lowly 102nd in FIFA’s official ranking — compete in the World Cup any time soon.
“If they do, I’ll give my trophies away for free,” Nhat said.
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