Your comparisons don't work.
Re Russia, Putin bought the tournament (literally), so when he said temporay seating to bring Ekaterinburg to 35k capacity was good enough for him, then it was good enough for FIFA, no argument.
Re. Portugal, there simply was no viable 9th location for a 30k stadium anywhere in the country, whereas Porto is a top footballing city, with two professional clubs, meaning the exception was made.
Whereas if Belfast/Windsor/Casement cannot meet the required criteria, then there are several extra English cities already with adequate stadia who could step up today, if necessary.
And specifically regarding Windsor, if there was any possibility of that being expanded to achieve even 25k capacity, don't you think the IFA would be pushing that, instead of throwing their lot in with Casement?
I can tell you now that it physically could not be done without demolishing and rebuilding at a minimum the Kop and South stands. And to replace the former would mean demolishing the Council's leisure centre next door and taking up/purchasing adjacent public land, which BCC would never countenance. While the latter would mean cmpulsorily purchasing the entire south side of Olympia Drive, which must have at least 50 houses on it.
And even if, by some (Putinesque) miracle those could be achieved, there is no way you could justify the £50m+ which that process would require.
And after all that, consider this from this morning:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-60865557
I would be genuinely astonished if your government ever undertook to provide an adequate venue outside of Dublin.
I would urge you again to consider the hoops Cardiff had to jump through, with associated costs, to stage the 2018 Champions League Final:
https://www.walesonline.co.uk/sport/...pions-12928557
And that was for one game, on one day, with two sets of supporters flying in, in a modern 73k stadium which was already pretty much UEFA compliant, and in a city which (no offence) is rather more "big-time" than either Cork or Galway, whilst also having much greater experience of staging international events in several different sports.
If the only way Dublin can be a host city is if Croke is added to the AVIVA, then that is what will likely happen. This is because ROI has to stage games, and those are the only two stadia in the country which are remotely feasible.
But if the Dublin government (expense) and FAI (rivalry) can get away without including Croke, then they will.
In theory, yes,, but it will not be in ROI or Wales, since neither of those has an alternative soccer stadium in a city other than Dublin or Cardiff.
It could conceivably be given to Scotland, since notwithstanding that Murrayfield is a rugby stadium, it could easily meet UEFA standards, while also being in a large, capital city with all the infrastructure, experience and resources that that entails.
But since this is effectively an "English" bid, I still think that that is where NI's slot will go. After all, if England were required to provide, say, 12 venues instead of 11, then they coiuld do that right now, and still have another half a dozen in reserve.
And never forget, it is Westminster who will be stumping up the vast bulk of the funding for this bid, so they/the FA will have the final say, with the other four associations basically taking whatever they're given.
There are a million issues with Casement, which is why I'm very doubtful it will ever stage Euro2028 games.
But if NI is to be a host venue, that is the only hope. And IF (emphasise) it can be rebuilt in time, it at least has the benefit of being supported by all the key players:
The IFA - for abvious reasons;
The GAA - for financial reasons;
Stormont - for tourism/visitor/image reasons;
Westminster - to make it a proper "UK-wide" tournament;
UEFA - To spread the tournament to another member association beyond the usual big boys (Germany/Spain/Italy/France etc).
The sturcuture is NOT there (PuC), or anything like it.
For one thing, there is no way UEFA would countenance uncovered stands with temporary, bolted-on seating. And I strongly doubt that the existing foundations for the other 3 stands are strong enough to support the weight of a roof. meaning you'd have to knock them down and start again.
And all that's before you factor in the media/corporate/sponsors/VIP add-ons which UEFA routinely require.
Above all, if there were simply no other option, they might ease their requrements, but when England alone could stage the tournament tomorrow, with stadia to spare, that simply isnt the case.
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