FIFA World Cup 2018: Info, Host Cities, Stadiums, Posters, Preliminary Draw Date for Russia Tournament

World Cup 2018 will be hosted by Russia.
FIFA World Cup 2018: Info, Host Cities, Stadiums, Posters, Preliminary Draw Date for Russia Tournament
FIFA president Sepp Blatter (R) shakes hands with Russian Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko (L) after their news conference in Moscow on September 30, 2012. Russia and FIFA on Saturday unveiled the 11 cities from the Baltic to the Urals that will host the 2018 World Cup in the most ambitious project the country has organised since the fall of the USSR. (YURI KADOBNOV/AFP/GettyImages)
7/13/2014
Updated:
7/13/2014

World Cup 2018 will be hosted by Russia.

The Preliminary Draw date for the different zones of qualification is planned for 24 or 25 July 2015, and will be held in Saint Petersburg.

Here are the host cities for the 2018 World Cup, and their stadiums:

Moscow: Luzhniki Stadium, Otkritie Arena

Saint Petersburg: Zenit Arena

Kaliningrad: Arena Beltika

Sochi: Fisht Olympic Stadium

Volgograd: Central Stadium

Saransk: Yubileyniy Stadium

Nizhny Novgorod: Strelka Stadium

Kazan: Kazan Arena

Samara: Samara Stadium

Rostov-on-Don: Levberdon Arena

Ekaterinburg: Central Stadium

Check out the host city posters from FIFA.com:

 

 

See an AP article below.

Mutko: 2018 World Cup Unaffected by Ukraine

RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — The conflict in Ukraine will not affect the 2018 World Cup, Russian sports minister Vitaly Mutko said Saturday.

Mutko, the local organizing committee chairman and a FIFA board member, said he did not foresee “any major issues” for the tournament in Russia.

“It’s a different subject and it will not influence preparations for the World Cup at all,” Mutko said at a briefing designed to explain Russia’s $20 billion project to host the next World Cup.

Russian President Vladimir Putin is scheduled to attend Sunday’s World Cup final in Rio de Janeiro, and take part in a handover ceremony between host nations with Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff and FIFA President Sepp Blatter.

Brazil’s Foreign Ministry later said Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko has confirmed he will watch the match between Argentina and Germany at Maracana Stadium along with Putin and other world leaders.

Mutko said Putin would express Russia’s “immense gratitude” to Brazil for a successful tournament.

Brazil and Russia, which hosted the Winter Olympics in Sochi in February, have defied widespread doubt about their ability to host safe and well organized events.

“Sometimes you have to suffer some criticism,” Mutko said through a translator. “Criticism is important. It’s stimulating, it’s constructive.”

Still, the World Cup in Russia is expected to be ready quicker and with less drama than FIFA saw in Brazil.

Incidents of racism and fan disorder are a concern, however. FIFA vice president Jeffrey Webb said this month his discrimination task force viewed Russia as a bigger challenge than Brazil.

Mutko said the problems with fan groups in Russian club matches were not worse than other countries.

“It is a whole sub-culture and you just have to deal with it,” he said. “The World Cup is something different. We should not mix the two things up.”

Mutko also said he expects Russia to be cleared of any wrong-doing when a FIFA investigation of the 2018 and 2022 bid campaigns is resolved, likely in September.

Tensions between Russia and Ukraine could persist for much longer, even if a ceasefire is soon reached.

If Ukraine qualifies for the next World Cup, it could be drawn in a group with Russia, which is automatically seeded as host.

Russia has faced international criticism since annexing the Crimea and allegedly supporting pro-Russian insurgents in eastern Ukraine.

World Cup host city Rostov-on-Don is about 160 kilometers (100 miles) from current conflict in Donetsk. Sochi also faces the Crimea across the Black Sea.

They are among 11 host cities which Putin’s government is seeking to modernize with new stadiums and other infrastructure projects.

One of the biggest challenges is providing accommodation outside the main cities of Moscow, St. Petersburg, Sochi and Kazan.

“In some cities we will need to do a lot more with the help of investors,” Mutko said, adding that Russia hopes to welcome 1 million international visitors for the month-long tournament.

After regular spats between FIFA and Brazilian politicians, Mutko predicted only minor and private disagreements over the next four years.

“In some questions we would like to see more investment from FIFA into the organization of the World Cup,” the minister said, adding that Russia had been happy to apply for hosting rights. “Whatever you have agreed to do, you should just do it.”

Larry Ong is a New York-based journalist with Epoch Times. He writes about China and Hong Kong. He is also a graduate of the National University of Singapore, where he read history.