AFP - Sport sticker album company Panini said Thursday it has been beset with a number of embarrassing teething problems with its first-ever edition for the women's World Cup, but insisted it was a success.
The task of assembling photos and data on the 16 teams in the competition, hosted by Germany and held between June 26 and July 17, proved tougher than expected, Panini Germany spokeswoman Christine Froehler said.
Mexico's football federation, for example, mistakenly sent Panini pictures of its men's team, while the album has the same photo for two North Korean players, Jon Myong Hwa and Kim Kyong Hwa, she said.
But the company, headquartered in Italy, said that its gamble on the event had paid off, having already sold 4.5 million packets of stickers to wholesalers. It is even printing one million more to meet strong demand.
"It is a great success," Froehler told AFP.
Unlike for men's competitions, the 40-page official FIFA album, on sale only in Germany for two euros ($2.83), with a pack of five stickers costing 0.60 euros, has no data on how much the players weigh.
Germany is hoping the event will be as successful as the men's competition in 2006, credited with boosting the country's image abroad and helping Germans get over a postwar unease about overt displays of national pride.
Some 670,000 tickets or around 75 percent of those on offer have been sold so far, the head of the organisers' committee, former Germany star Steffi Jones, said in Frankfurt on Thursday.
"I am very happy. The facts show that we are very well prepared," Jones said.
"We are on track to meet our target of selling 80 percent."
Around 10 percent of the tickets were sold in 50 other countries including Tanzania, Bolivia, Fiji and Lebanon, she said.
The opening match of 32 takes place on June 26 in Berlin's Olympic Stadium as hosts Germany, hoping for their third successive title, take on Canada. Some 153,000 tickets have been sold for the July 17 final in Frankfurt.
Source: http://www.france24.com/en/20110616-...aign=DTN+Iran:
The task of assembling photos and data on the 16 teams in the competition, hosted by Germany and held between June 26 and July 17, proved tougher than expected, Panini Germany spokeswoman Christine Froehler said.
Mexico's football federation, for example, mistakenly sent Panini pictures of its men's team, while the album has the same photo for two North Korean players, Jon Myong Hwa and Kim Kyong Hwa, she said.
But the company, headquartered in Italy, said that its gamble on the event had paid off, having already sold 4.5 million packets of stickers to wholesalers. It is even printing one million more to meet strong demand.
"It is a great success," Froehler told AFP.
Unlike for men's competitions, the 40-page official FIFA album, on sale only in Germany for two euros ($2.83), with a pack of five stickers costing 0.60 euros, has no data on how much the players weigh.
Germany is hoping the event will be as successful as the men's competition in 2006, credited with boosting the country's image abroad and helping Germans get over a postwar unease about overt displays of national pride.
Some 670,000 tickets or around 75 percent of those on offer have been sold so far, the head of the organisers' committee, former Germany star Steffi Jones, said in Frankfurt on Thursday.
"I am very happy. The facts show that we are very well prepared," Jones said.
"We are on track to meet our target of selling 80 percent."
Around 10 percent of the tickets were sold in 50 other countries including Tanzania, Bolivia, Fiji and Lebanon, she said.
The opening match of 32 takes place on June 26 in Berlin's Olympic Stadium as hosts Germany, hoping for their third successive title, take on Canada. Some 153,000 tickets have been sold for the July 17 final in Frankfurt.
Source: http://www.france24.com/en/20110616-...aign=DTN+Iran: