Jan 10, 2014 03:51 PM EST
World Cup Fixtures 2014 Group Schedule: Brazil Matches Start June 12 For Tournament In São Paulo

The World Cup has been getting its fair share of controversy this year as the Brazil event in 2014 gets closer to starting and despite the fact that many stadiums and sites are not ready, things will go forward as planned and the fixtures and group schedule matches will start on June 12 and the first match has Brazil taking on Croatia in the Group A set that will kick off the tournament.

The schedule has a number of great opening matches to start the tournament, including the United States taking on Ghana in the group of death and some other matches includes the Mexican team taking on Cameroon, Chile playing Australia as well as England and Italy, Colombia against Greece, Spain against the Netherlands and Germany against Portugal. The travel schedule is expected to be tough for teams and fans and the US has the most to deal with.

Check here for the full schedule for the World Cup and more on the event.

Here is more from Reuters.com about the ticket prices and more from the World Cup, including the schedule of flights and travel events. Soccer fans daunted by rising airfares in Brazil during this year's World Cup would be smart to steel their nerves just a little longer. Relief may be around the corner.

Next week Brazil is expected to authorize some 1,500 new domestic flights, expanding travel options between cities hosting games in June and July. Tourists should see a wave of new routes open up - and a bit of reprieve from soaring prices.

That could also ease tensions between Brazil's government and local airlines, who have faced repeated threats of intervention if price increases get out of hand.

Brazil's domestic aviation industry, the third-largest in the world, has come under intense scrutiny as one of the biggest potential embarrassments of the tournament. With a dozen host cities scattered around the vast country, millions of fans are expected to stream from one overcrowded airport to the next during the month-long event.

Prices have spiked as demand overwhelmed domestic networks since world soccer body FIFA determined in December where the 32 teams will play their first round of matches. Fans trying to follow neighboring Argentina from their Rio de Janeiro opener to their second game in Belo Horizonte, for instance, have seen the cheapest tickets as much as double in price.

With Brazil's reputation as a rising global power on the line, President Dilma Rousseff is anxious to pull off a smooth World Cup, the first held in South America's soccer powerhouse since 1950. Success in what she has called "the Cup of all Cups" is also likely to help her chances of winning a second term in October elections.

FIFA chief Sepp Blatter said on Monday no host nation had been so far behind in World Cup preparations as Brazil, where workers are rushing to finish new stadiums and airport terminals for the tournament just five months away.

The extra flights requested by airlines would further tax the country's most overloaded airports. In Cuiabá, a city of half a million in Brazil's sweltering soy belt, proposed routes would boost air traffic by 48 percent during the tournament.

Rousseff's chief of staff, Gleisi Hoffmann, acknowledged this week that Cuiabá may need a temporary canvas terminal if construction at the airport is not finished by May. In an effort to prevent price gouging, Hoffmann has also warned the government could open domestic routes to foreign carriers, but experts say that may prove to be an idle threat.

The practice, known as cabotage, is highly uncommon outside the European Union. Australia and Chile are among the few nations that allow foreign-owned airlines to operate domestic flights without a reciprocal relationship from another country.

Five months would be a tight timeline for the regulatory somersault involved in a temporary cabotage scheme, said Carlos Ebner, the head of global airline association IATA in Brazil.

"From the operational point of view, it would be very difficult," he said. "It's not impossible, but logistically and economically it is very hard to see how you would bring a great volume of extra flights from foreign carriers."

Airlines often book their planes half a year in advance, and European or U.S. carriers are unlikely to have spare aircraft during their summer holidays, according to Ebner.

Setting up check-in, maintenance and other support crews at far-flung Brazilian airports would be costly. So would staffing flights: foreign crews are required to rest for a day or more after the long international routes that bring them to Brazil. Under normal circumstances, flying in Brazil is expensive, and not just because of its size. There is no low cost airline to drive prices down and two major carriers - Gol Linhas Aereas and TAM, the local unit of Latam Airlines Group - control over 70 percent of the market.

Those carriers have been cutting routes, trimming fleets and firing flight staff over the past two years in an attempt to restore profits wiped out by high fuel prices and a tough exchange rate. The World Cup has loomed as a chance to restore their suffering profit margins.

The third biggest airline, Azul, pledged this week to cap airfares during the tournament at 999 reais ($420), adding to pressure on rivals. But smaller planes and limited access to key airports hinder its ability to compete on many routes.

With few major hubs, travelers also have little choice but to fly through the country's two biggest cities, Rio and nearby Sao Paulo, adding hours to many itineraries.

A fan attending England's first three games will likely connect through a southeast hub for a flight to Manaus on the Amazon river for the faceoff with Italy. The next game is back south in Sao Paulo against Uruguay, followed by a match in Belo Horizonte with Costa Rica - 4,000 miles in the air, all told.

Flight options between many host cities are also scarce right now. There are just a handful of direct flights from Rio to Manaus, which cost up to 1,800 reais for a four-hour trip.

The extra flights expected next week should cover demand and keep prices from taking off, said Paul Irvine, the director of Dehouche, a travel agency based in Rio de Janeiro that specializes in luxury travel to South America.

But visiting fans may also have to adjust expectations.

"The prices may seem astronomical compared to flying on EasyJet or Ryanair, but not compared to Brazilian airlines normally," he said.

(Reuters)

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