FIFA president Gianni Infantino took centre stage on Saturday during an extraordinary hour-long monologue in a pre-tournament press conference in Doha.
Qatar coach Felix Sanchez was hoping for the best as the Gulf nation get set for their World Cup debut on Sunday, while England and Walescontinued their preparations ahead of the opening Group B fixtures on Monday.
Here, the PA news agency looks back on Saturday’s events at the 2022 World Cup.
FIFA president Infantino did not hold back when he addressed a pre-tournament media conference in Doha.
During an extraordinary hour-long monologue, Infantino took aim at European critics of Qatar – and then found himself attracting wide-spread condemnation for a series of bizarre comments.
Infantino declared “today I feel gay” and “I feel (like) a migrant worker” early on in his speech, referencing the discrimination his family faced as Italian migrants in Switzerland and how he was bullied owing to his red hair and freckles.
The FIFA president also claimed Europeans “should be apologising for next 3,000 years before starting to give moral lessons to people”, in reference to the controversies over Qatar’s human rights record.
After his length speech eventually came to a close, Infantino was keen to stress “everyone is welcome” at the World Cup despite concerns over whether members of the LGBTQ+ community will be safe in Qatar given the country’s laws which criminalise same-sex relationships.
Qatar coach hoping for the best
With all of the pre-tournament headlines surrounding off-field issues, Qatar coach Felix Sanchez is determined his side will produce a performance in the Group A opener against Ecuador in Al Khor.
Qatar will be making their World Cup debut on Sunday, and Spaniard Sanchez said: “All the players come here with the highest motivation for tomorrow.
“We will try to give a good performance and be competitive. We have to be realistic around possibilities, but we have to do well.”
Players try to stay focused on football
England defender Eric Dier says it would be wrong to ignore off-field matters in Qatar, but admits constant questions about the cloud hanging over this World Cup is dampening players’ excitement.
“It’s extremely difficult every day for all of us as players,” the Tottenham defender said.
“We come here and we know these topics are going to be addressed and it is a difficult situation for us.
“Not just us, every team, every player is going to experience it throughout the whole tournament. It is disappointing.”