France wins right to host football Euro in 2016

GENEVA: After a personal appeal by president, Mr Nicolas Sarkozy, France defeated Turkey and Italy on Friday for the right to host football’s European Championship in 2016.

UEFA’s ruling executive voted 7-6 for the French bid over Turkey after Italy was eliminated in a first-round points ballot. France will be the first country to host the championship three times.
The result was announced by UEFA’s French president, Mr Michel Platini, who captained his country to the European title in 1984 on home soil. Mr Platini did not vote. The close-fought victory came after Mr Sarkozy and former France star Zinedine Zidane supported their country’s case in the final presentations.
“We are very happy, very honoured,” Mr Sarkozy said. “We will make our best efforts so that the 24 countries are received wonderfully in France.” Mr Sarkozy said the French government would help guarantee the projected $ 2.1 billion cost of building and renovating stadiums.
“The French state is here to support and guarantee that everything we have said, we will live up to,” Mr Sarkozy said.
The head of the French Football Federation, Mr Jean-Pierre Escalettes, thanked UEFA for its confidence. “This is a beautiful day for us,” he said. “I can assure you that this trust will not be betrayed.”
France’s star appeal appeared decisive against a Turkey bid team which has now lost three straight Euro bidding contests.
Turkey brought its own head of state, president, Mr Abdullah Gul, as it sought to secure its first major football tournament.
“We all did our best,” Mr Gul said. “We are saddened that it was lost by one point.” Mr Gul had called on UEFA to take a “historic decision” and help bring Turkey, which has a Muslim majority, closer to the heart of Europe.
Italy, which hosted the Euros in 1968 and ’80, lost for a second consecutive vote. It was the outsider this time, after going in as the favorite and losing to the joint bid from Poland and Ukraine for
Euro 2012.
Mr Platini praised the three “exceptional” candidates. “I’m very friendly with the Turks, my name is Italian, and I made my whole career in France. So it’s complicated,” Mr Platini said. “The UEFA executive committee showed it was a real democracy. If it wasn’t, the result would have been completely different.”
The 2016 championship will be the biggest yet, adding eight more countries for a 24-team field playing 51 matches over one month.
The final will be played in Paris’ Stade de France, which hosted the 1998 World Cup final won by the Zidane-inspired host nation.
France staged the inaugural four-team European finals in 1960, and the eight-nation finals in ’84.
Mr Sarkozy said he wanted the Euros to help French football be “free of the cancer of violence, a football with a human face and a football that is a festival and a party.”