Sunday, August 1, 2010

The winner is ...

The future world cup awarded by FIFA

In the bid for the 2022 World Cup, Japan promises high technology in order to be the favorite ones to host the event. People from all 208 FIFA member nations would be able to watch the World Cup in real time, in real stadiums, watching holograms of the real match from Japan. That's quite a promise.

The groundbreaking technology FIFA utilised in the 2010 event was merely 3D, an agreement with one of the official sponsors, Sony. "3D viewers around the world will feel as they are inside the stadiums in South Africa, watching the games in person," according to Howard Stringer, president of Sony Corporation. They forgot that not everyone owns 3D TVs. Looking at this aspect, Japan is already a winner.

What about using technology simply to achieve more 'sustainable' results, such as goal-line technology? It's a method invented by Dr Paul Hawkins that is successfully being used in tennis and cricket. Football supporters, players, journalists, agree the world cup organisers would be better off using the technology than any hologram or 3D effects.

Few examples are England's lost goal against Germany, and Carlos Tevez's goal in the match Mexico battled Argentina, and lost the game.

The future could reserve a holographic world cup, with goal-line technology. That's an improvement.