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ZUMA OPENS SOCCER CITYSouth Africa re-opened its showpiece Soccer City stadium to a glittering fan fare on Saturday, marking the last of the 10 World Cup venues to display its readiness ahead of upcoming tournament. South African president Jacob Zuma cut a ribbon on the pitch and declared the venue open ahead of the kick off of the South African FA Cup final. A fly past of five fighter jets marked a spectacular start, although the noise of the aircraft dipping low over the venue was almost drowned out by the cacophony of vuvuzelas, the plastic trumpets blown incessantly by the crowd. But the ceremony, an hour before kick off, was only watched by a half empty stadium as thousands battled traffic congestion to get to the game on time. It meant the start of the final had to be delayed by 30 minutes. Some 80,000 tickets were sold for the final, one of two matches scheduled at the venue before the opening game of the World Cup between hosts South Africa and Mexico on June 11. The stadium will have another dress rehearsal on Thursday when South Africa meet Colombia in a World Cup warm-up match. Soccer City was originally opened in 1989 as the home of South African football but underwent an almost complete overhaul for the World Cup, three years of construction turning the stadium into a 94,700-seater venue built in the form of an African calabash, or cooking pot. The renovation cost R3,3-billion (R8=approx US$1), excessively over the original budget of R2,2-billion, which was blamed on a sudden escalation of building costs. The new arena has three seating tiers, 230 private boxes, 184 suites, 32 turnstile entrances and parking for approximately 19,000 cars within the perimeter of the stadium. It will also host the final of the World Cup on July 11. --
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