/ 4 December 2009

SA to play Mexico in World Cup opener

South Africa will play Mexico in the opening game of the Soccer World Cup.

The match will be played at Soccer City in Johannesburg at 4pm on June 11.

South Africa is placed at 86th, according to Fifa’s world rankings, while Mexico is ranked 15th.

The country staged a slick and glitzy ceremony on Friday for the World Cup draw and Nelson Mandela said his country was humbled to host the soccer spectacular for the first time on the continent.

Africa’s biggest economy has shrugged off persistent scepticism about its ability to stage the world’s most watched sporting event and it pulled out all the stops for the draw, which will decide the first round matches among the 32 teams.

Organisers fielded three Nobel Prize winners including Mandela, Africa’s most respected statesman, while Oscar winner Charlize Theron hosted the draw.

International soccer greats, including England’s David Beckham and former players Eusebio of Portugal, Roger Milla of Cameroon, Germany’s Franz Beckenbauer and France’s Michel Platini, who is the UEFA president, were also present.

As promised, the ceremony, watched by an estimated world television audience of 250-million from 200 countries, had a distinctly continental flavour with African dance troupes and singers fronted by Angelique Kidjo from Benin.

Singular honour
The programme included a video apparently showing lions, elephants and other wild animals playing soccer in the bush.

Theron, dressed in a bright red ball gown, said she was proud to come home from America where she lives most of the time.

Mandela, now a frail 91-year-old and who spent 18 years on the bleak Robben Island prison offshore from Cape Town under white rule, sent a video message from his home in Johannesburg.

”We feel privileged and humbled that South Africa has been given the singular honour” of holding Africa’s first World Cup, he said.

”We must strive for excellence … to ensure the event leaves a lasting legacy for all our people,” added Mandela, who became South Africa’s first post-apartheid president in 1994.

President Jacob Zuma, who also took part in the ceremony, said ”We are very proud as South Africans and Africans” to host the World Cup, adding that everything was ready and on schedule for the tournament.

Zuma was sure the trophy would remain in Africa at the end of the month-long tournament, starting on June 11 next year. African teams are tipped to make their strongest challenge at the 2010 finals, with Ivory Coast and Ghana leading the charge. – Sapa, Reuters