World Cup: Final lure for 1999 'carnival' (15 May 1998)
WOULD-BE spectators at next year's 42 World Cup matches will need to be quick off the mark if they are to get seats at the games they want to see
15-May-1998
15 May 1998
World Cup: Final lure for 1999 'carnival'
Christopher Martin-Jenkins
WOULD-BE spectators at next year's 42 World Cup matches will need
to be quick off the mark if they are to get seats at the games
they want to see. Tickets for the final at Lord's on June 20 will
be reserved, initially at least, for those who apply for
attendance at seven or more matches at a cost ranging from £160
to £465.
Prices range from as little as £14 for a group match in the early
stages to £100 for the most expensive seats at the final. The
World Cup organisers have arrived at a fair compromise between
the need to make a handsome profit from an event which is
unlikely to return to Britain for at least another 20 years and
the desire, in the words of the tournament director, Terry Blake,
to "take the game to the people".
Blake said: "Tickets are attractively priced, particularly in the
early stages of the tournament. We want as many people as
possible to attend the matches and enjoy the carnival experience
of the 1999 World Cup." As a taster yesterday at Worcester 1,000
coloured ballons were released, 365 of them containing a World
Cup ticket.
Half a million tickets went on sale to the public yesterday
following a period of priority bookings for members of county
clubs. Application forms are available from first-class grounds,
branches of NatWest Bank and the Irish, Scottish and Dutch
Cricket Unions. They can also be ordered by phoning 0870 606
1999. There is a limit of four tickets per match.
Three teams go through to a second round of nine 'Super Six'
matches from each of the two groups of six. Of the 30,000 final
tickets, about 4,000 will be available to spectators from
overseas through travel agents. MCC will take 8,500 and
commercial interests 5,000.
The final 'package' involves choosing three of the first-round
matches, two Super Six games, a semi-final and the final. It
sounds complicated but the application form is a breeze by
comparison with the Inland Revenue's tax return form.
Each of the 18 counties will stage at least one match in a
five-week tournament which starts with England's match against
the holders, Sri Lanka, at Lord's on May 14.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)