The fan recovers football in a Euro Cup that will surpass the record of tickets and attendance at the stadiums | Euro Cup Germany 2024

The fan recovers football in a Euro Cup that will surpass the record of tickets and attendance at the stadiums | Euro Cup Germany 2024
The fan recovers football in a Euro Cup that will surpass the record of tickets and attendance at the stadiums | Euro Cup Germany 2024

On Düsseldorf’s Karplatz, an Italian man shows off his figure juggling a foam ball, challenging any fan wearing a shirt other than blue. A few metres away, waiters are also balancing their trays between the high wooden tables where mugs of beer, sausages and prominent German meatballs reveal a large and playful international competition that is played out amid drinks and cheering chants of identity.

Based on demand and ticket sales,…

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On the Karplatz in Düsseldorf, an Italian looks like he is juggling a foam ball with which he challenges any fan who wears a shirt that is not blue. A few meters further away, the waiters also balance their trays between the high wooden tables where the mugs of beer, the sausages and the prominent German meatballs reveal a numerous and playful international competition that is settled between drinks and songs of identity animation.

Based on demand and ticket sales, UEFA proclaims that this Euro Cup is on track to break the record of 2,427,303 fans who attended the stadiums in France in the 2016 edition. Just before the completion of the draw of 24 participants, the demand for tickets amounted to 50 million. UEFA sold 2.3 million seats before the tournament began. Subsequently, it put on sale a first wave of 93,147 that will increase with the passage of the qualifiers that begin today with Italy-Switzerland (6:00 p.m., TVE) and Germany-Denmark (9:00 p.m., TVE).

After the 2021 multi-venue Euro Cup that expanded the tournament to the four cardinal points of the continent, with pandemic restrictions still prevailing in most of the organizing countries. After the imposture that populated many of the stands of the luxurious World Cup stadiums in Qatar with fake fans, football fans revive in this Euro Cup the traditional purism of their modus vivendi. In some way, and despite the inflationary problems that increase the costs of accommodation and maintenance, it can be said that the fan has recovered football in a great competition.

In Germany, in the heart of old Europe stressed by the war in Ukraine, the Israeli destruction of Gaza, Islamic terrorism and the rise of the extreme right, the social dimension of football has generated the particular recreational oasis that has always emerged for fans. in major national team competitions. The fans fill the stadiums without needing to be subsidized by the organizing committee, the central train stations are hives of football nomads who jump from city to city following their teams and the old town centers of the host cities become melting pots of nationalities that chrome the terraces and sidewalks of Berlin, Munich, Stuttgart, Hamburg, Dortmund, Cologne, Leipzig and Frankfurt.

The proliferation of kilts is one of the most distinctive and picturesque features of the landscapes of this Euro Cup. On the outskirts of Dortmund’s Wesfalenstadion, Tommy, a forty-something Scot, seems to have had the sun rosy on his cheeks and calves. “We come from Edinburgh, we are a group of eight who have chosen Dortmund because there are other venues nearby. We go to Scotland matches and buy tickets for others here and around the area. We will be there until the quarterfinals, it is our vacation,” he says while soothing his throat with a can of beer taken from a country refrigerator.

Supermarkets are another very popular meeting point for the purchase of food and drinks for less well-off fans. A third of the first beer consumed in any of the crowded supermarkets is sold. fanzone or in kiosks under stadiums, the price can rise to nine euros because three euros are charged for a glass and are refundable upon return. Hotels are recording high occupancy despite the fact that prices have doubled and tripled in many establishments. Campsites set up in the forests on the outskirts of the host cities have also seen a considerable increase in users.

Without the distance and high cost of travelling to Qatar and without the need to travel across the continent from end to end as in Euro 2021, fans can enjoy the gastro-party and cultural tourism, for those who like, that occurs at a Euro or a World Cup. “We have come to celebrate the 50th anniversary of our fifth and we are delighted. People seem to want to enjoy themselves, we go out almost every night and we have not seen a fight. Let’s hope the ultras don’t spoil it,” says David, a journalist from Burgos. So far, security, with a high number of undercover police officers among the fans, has avoided scenes of violence beyond some fights that have been immediately put down. In this respect, for the moment, fans have also returned to football.

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