The Local Organizing Committee (LOC) for FIFA Women's World Cup China 2007
was set up on Wednesday with China's top sports official Liu Peng designated the
LOC president.
Liu, minister of the State General Administration of Sports, said: "We have
376 days to go before the curtain of the Women's World Cup raises on September
10, 2007. And the organizing work will enter a new and substantial stage after
the establishment of the LOC."
FIFA president Joseph S. Blatter conveyed his congratulations through video
clips at the news conference: "I am very happy that the 2007 competition will be
staged in China for several reasons.
As the inaugural tournament was held there, it is, in effect, returning to
its roots.
"Furthermore, FIFA was obliged to move the 2003 FIFA Women's World Cup from
China on account of the SARS epidemic, but promised to stage the subsequent
competition on Chinese soil.
"After all, China is considered the cradle of football, as its earliest form
- Cuju - saw the light of day there several millennia ago."
A total of 16 teams of the highest level are going to attend next year's
Women's World Cup, which will be held from September 10 to 30. Shanghai,
Tianjin, Wuhan, Hangzhou and Chengdu are the five host cities of the tournament,
and Shanghai will conduct both the opening and closing ceremony.
Chinese women's national team have been one of the leading teams of the world
during the past years. The so-called "steel roses" took the World Cup silver
medal in 1999, but have never clinched title at the World Cup or the Olympic
Games.
China slumped in recent years with sharp contrast to the fast development of
European and American women's football. But the new team rallied a little this
year as veteran coach Ma Liangxing took over the team again. China won the AFC
Women's Asian Cup this July.
"I hope our team can advance to the semi-finals, which means they can play
all six matches," said Xie Yalong, vice chairman of Chinese Football Association
(CFA).
"We are now at a transitional period. The team have many young players, and
reaching last four is not an easy task."