World Cup 2014 Tickets: Fake Tickets Being Circulated for Brazil vs Croatia Match

World Cup 2014 ticket buyers beware.
World Cup 2014 Tickets: Fake Tickets Being Circulated for Brazil vs Croatia Match
6/13/2014
Updated:
6/13/2014

World Cup 2014 ticket buyers beware.

FIFA found and rejected about 50 fake tickets for the World Cup opening match between Brazil and Croatia on Thursday.

The tickets were “an example of real professional fakes,” according to FIFA marketing director Thierry Weil.

Although those tickets looked identical to a real ticket, they were detected because the fake either did not have an electronic chip, or had one but it failed to get the bearer pass the scanners.

Weil said that some matches might be targeted more than other by counterfeit tickets, and that the 50 detected on Thursday could be only the tip of the iceberg.

There “must be far more,” said Weil.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

World Cup Tickets Still Available to Some Games

SAO PAULO (AP) — Tickets remain available for more than 15 World Cup matches just a day before the tournament opener, including some involving Germany, Italy and France.

FIFA said it already sold more than 2.9 million tickets, but some were still on sale Wednesday.

There were plenty of tickets for matches between less prominent nations, including Bosnia-Iran and Greece-Ivory Coast, but it was also still possible to attend games with some of the more traditional teams. Fans could still get tickets on FIFA’s website for matches such as Germany-Ghana, Switzerland-France and Italy-Uruguay.

Only tickets for the highest-priced categories remained available for the better matches.

FIFA said a total of about 3.1 million tickets will be sold for the first World Cup in Brazil since 1950.

Thursday’s opener between Brazil and Croatia at the troubled Itaquerao stadium in Sao Paulo sold out fast. Of the 61,600 tickets available, only about 25,600 were sold to the general public. Nearly 10,000 additional tickets went to fans through promotional activities, but sponsors and local organizers got most of them.

Tickets for the July 13 final at the Maracana Stadium also were hard to get. A crowd of nearly 80,000 is expected at the decisive match.

The game with the most tickets available by Wednesday morning was Bosnia-Iran in the northeastern city of Salvador on June 25, followed by Greece-Ivory Coast a day earlier in nearby Fortaleza. The Nigeria-Bosnia game on June 21 in the western city of Cuiaba also remained available.

Other matches with tickets on sale included Honduras-Switzerland in the jungle city of Manaus on June 24, Russia-South Korea in Cuiaba on Tuesday, and Uruguay-Costa Rica in Fortaleza on Saturday.

Tickets would remain on sale until the day of the matches.

FIFA said it received an “unprecedented number” of nearly 11 million ticket requests for the tournament in Brazil. It sold a total of about 2.2 million tickets directly via FIFA.com to the general public, and the rest went mostly to hospitality programs. About 60 percent of the tickets went to Brazilians, and Americans were the second-biggest buyers with almost 197,000.

FIFA said last week that nearly 1,400 people were told to change their tickets because they were handed out before work in some of the stadiums was completed. It said seating configurations changed after technical teams established exactly where the media tribunes and broadcast equipment had to be placed in each of the 12 venues.

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.