Etihad Stadium to host 5 Euro 2028 games

They will have to run buses, trams, and trains 24 hours as happens in proper European cities for starters. We can’t afford an Istanbul cock-up. It would be commercially damaging for the city and the UK. London’s image is rock bottom so Manchester must step up,
Why would not running trains buses and trams cause an ‘Istanbul cock-up’?

The Etihad Stadium isn’t situated up on the moors and surrounded with grazing sheep.

I have certainly never been to a ‘proper European City’ with all on the above running 24 hours a day. Besides they are hardly going to spirit this out of the air for a handful of European fixtures.

I would settle for three or four double unit trams banked up outside the stadium after the match.
 
No idea but Villa Park is 40 years out of date. Not enough space inside or outside the stands, very few places to eat or drink. A terrible away trip, even if you go into the city-centre.
Yep, I went to Villa Park recently too. Had to drive and ended parking on a nearby school. Surrounding area wasn't great. No F&B provision in the immediate area other than Villa's on-site fan zone. Not sure what the public transport is like.
The comparison of Villa Park to The Etihad is like chalk and cheese.
 
Yep, I went to Villa Park recently too. Had to drive and ended parking on a nearby school. Surrounding area wasn't great. No F&B provision in the immediate area other than Villa's on-site fan zone. Not sure what the public transport is like.
The comparison of Villa Park to The Etihad is like chalk and cheese.
The area is totally run down. Dark and dingy with a lot of street lights vandalised, boarded up pubs, a crumbling station nearby with no apparent crowd control, an unwelcoming atmosphere. The stadium has overcrowded concourses and cramped seats. I remember Villa Park in its heyday when it was a great stadium. But time seems to have stood still. Birmingham city-centre, at least around New Street, is also shite. People who criticise Manchester should take a trip there. The bin strike hasn't helped. I know the match was a Sunday but there were mountains of rubbish everywhere. There are plenty of worst cities in the UK but Brum is a symbol of decay.
 
Danny Wilson mentions the North stand opening in 2026, the hotel, fanzone, etc.



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The area is totally run down. Dark and dingy with a lot of street lights vandalised, boarded up pubs, a crumbling station nearby with no apparent crowd control, an unwelcoming atmosphere. The stadium has overcrowded concourses and cramped seats. I remember Villa Park in its heyday when it was a great stadium. But time seems to have stood still. Birmingham city-centre, at least around New Street, is also shite. People who criticise Manchester should take a trip there. The bin strike hasn't helped. I know the match was a Sunday but there were mountains of rubbish everywhere. There are plenty of worst cities in the UK but Brum is a symbol of decay.

There are some great pubs a short walk from New Street - The Wellington, Old Joint Stock and The Victoria to name but three. It’s not all bad.
 
There are some great pubs a short walk from New Street - The Wellington, Old Joint Stock and The Victoria to name but three. It’s not all bad.
I have family in Brum so I know there are nice areas but as a city-centre it doesn't compare to Manchester, Newcastle, Leeds, Nottingham, or even Liverpool. That said the Brummies are mostly friendly people with a good sense of humour. I think they deserve better.
 
The area is totally run down. Dark and dingy with a lot of street lights vandalised, boarded up pubs, a crumbling station nearby with no apparent crowd control, an unwelcoming atmosphere. The stadium has overcrowded concourses and cramped seats. I remember Villa Park in its heyday when it was a great stadium. But time seems to have stood still. Birmingham city-centre, at least around New Street, is also shite. People who criticise Manchester should take a trip there. The bin strike hasn't helped. I know the match was a Sunday but there were mountains of rubbish everywhere. There are plenty of worst cities in the UK but Brum is a symbol of decay.

The other week was my last visit to Villa Park unless we have a title decider there or something and I have to go through gritted teeth. What an asbolute shithole the stadium and the surrounding area is.
 
The other week was my last visit to Villa Park unless we have a title decider there or something and I have to go through gritted teeth. What an asbolute shithole the stadium and the surrounding area is.
I have made the same decision. Very difficult to get to as well with the crumbling road and rail network. Just a very negative experience and the football has nothing to do with that.
 
The Euros will be a great boost for Manchester. Huge revenues for hotels, bars, restaurants. Co-op live will open up for food and drink ( it was fantastic last week before the Liverpool game) plus City Square etc. Five extra matches plus all the PL and CL games for City( maybe also United )plus gigs at Co-op and the Manchester arena. Huge work will have to go into transport before this all happens with more buses and trams.
This discussion reminds me of FA Cup Finals when City fans go rightly bananas if the KO goes outside a certain window because of the difficulty of national travel (largely rail). Local transport, which you seem to be referring to isn't a big problem imo, however the national rail network shuts down in the evening. In the 1970s, football was Saturday 3pm, and football fans used to take over other cities by the inter city. Not any more. KO times are all over the place and rail travel is expensive and restricted. On top of that, car travel in cities is becoming awkward. It's more a national problem, but I can't see it being fixed.
 
This discussion reminds me of FA Cup Finals when City fans go rightly bananas if the KO goes outside a certain window because of the difficulty of national travel (largely rail). Local transport, which you seem to be referring to isn't a big problem imo, however the national rail network shuts down in the evening. In the 1970s, football was Saturday 3pm, and football fans used to take over other cities by the inter city. Not any more. KO times are all over the place and rail travel is expensive and restricted. On top of that, car travel in cities is becoming awkward. It's more a national problem, but I can't see it being fixed.
Agreed. But some sort of temporary fix will have to apply for the Euros. The rail system in the UK is a laughing stock. Most of Europe has a 24 hours a day high speed rail network and extensive local public transport in all major cities. It is also cheap to use in most locations. We are 30 to 40 years behind and have crumbling infrastructure everywhere outside London,
 
Why would not running trains buses and trams cause an ‘Istanbul cock-up’?

The Etihad Stadium isn’t situated up on the moors and surrounded with grazing sheep.

I have certainly never been to a ‘proper European City’ with all on the above running 24 hours a day. Besides they are hardly going to spirit this out of the air for a handful of European fixtures.

I would settle for three or four double unit trams banked up outside the stadium after the match.
Yes no comparison. The CL final was similar to being held in Manchester, but the stadium is in Bolton. I don’t see any problems in 2028
 
Agreed. But some sort of temporary fix will have to apply for the Euros. The rail system in the UK is a laughing stock. Most of Europe has a 24 hours a day high speed rail network and extensive local public transport in all major cities. It is also cheap to use in most locations. We are 30 to 40 years behind and have crumbling infrastructure everywhere outside London,
There were loads of extra trains running late at night during Euro '96, to get football fans back to where they were based. Can't remember who was playing now but I caught one from Sheffield back to Manchester at about 2 am after one game at Hillsborough.
 
I'm glad the euros are here.The English influence annoys me. It's a joint bid and it does have the stadiums, but I'd have played the final at Hampden or the millennium stadium as a thank you to those nations and Wembley could have opened it.

Also the farce of the funding for a new UEFA standard stadium in Belfast is an embarrassment to the bid.

I also have concerns about the public transport network. Mainly the railways. Euros 96 my company at the time were only sending two car trains to Manchester when Scotland played at the swamp and could see that kind of fuckkery occuring again.
Hampdens a shit hole.
 
A new Old Trafford stadium is one of several projects to be funded in part by Greater Manchester growth funds sourced from pension funds and borrowing. See the MEN for details.
 
This discussion reminds me of FA Cup Finals when City fans go rightly bananas if the KO goes outside a certain window because of the difficulty of national travel (largely rail). Local transport, which you seem to be referring to isn't a big problem imo, however the national rail network shuts down in the evening. In the 1970s, football was Saturday 3pm, and football fans used to take over other cities by the inter city. Not any more. KO times are all over the place and rail travel is expensive and restricted. On top of that, car travel in cities is becoming awkward. It's more a national problem, but I can't see it being fixed.
Bring back the Persil train vouchers!
 
This discussion reminds me of FA Cup Finals when City fans go rightly bananas if the KO goes outside a certain window because of the difficulty of national travel (largely rail). Local transport, which you seem to be referring to isn't a big problem imo, however the national rail network shuts down in the evening. In the 1970s, football was Saturday 3pm, and football fans used to take over other cities by the inter city. Not any more. KO times are all over the place and rail travel is expensive and restricted. On top of that, car travel in cities is becoming awkward. It's more a national problem, but I can't see it being fixed.


I don't drive never have and never will I am a traveller that uses the public transport system constantly.

I have found the local transport links to be particularly restrictive and shite, travelling hundreds of miles seems to be much easier than the last 5 miles leaving a city for a less built up area.

Last season after an 8 o'clock kick off I didn't get home until nearly 1am the next morning, the train takes about 25 minutes but it didn't help the train didn't turn up and no tannoy announcement was made.

Getting to Newcastle is easier for me than getting to Burnley even though it's infinitely nearer.
 
I'm glad the euros are here.The English influence annoys me. It's a joint bid and it does have the stadiums, but I'd have played the final at Hampden or the millennium stadium as a thank you to those nations and Wembley could have opened it.

Also the farce of the funding for a new UEFA standard stadium in Belfast is an embarrassment to the bid.

I also have concerns about the public transport network. Mainly the railways. Euros 96 my company at the time were only sending two car trains to Manchester when Scotland played at the swamp and could see that kind of fuckkery occuring again.
I think your misremembering that last bit. Scotland played England at Wembley and their other two games at Villa Park.
 
Hampdens a shit hole.
Ive been to Hampden 4 times and I still would struggle to even find it. Hidden away in a bowl in a less than salubrious part of town - the delightfully named Mount florida - its an absolute arse ache to get to/from, and I was travelling with Glaswegian mates who'd been going there for years and knew all the back roads to it. Decent atmosphere as its an old fashioned bowl, but still a relic of a stadium with very few of the Exec Seats/Boxes that the Uefa bigwigs would demand.
 

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