Some of your questions are very specific, so I will not have answers for them. But let me start off with the role of the SA Soccer Legends, as well as that of soccer teams such as Orlando Pirates and Kaizer Chiefs, as you said, in managing the stadiums. My information in this regard is that a company was established for managing these stadiums and it doesn't include or involve the SA Soccer Legends or the soccer teams you mentioned. It's a private company. I'm not sure of the exact relationship between this company and the local authorities, as well as with Safa. I do know that even at the headquarters of Safa, this is a matter that still needs to be resolved because Soccer City was constructed on land belonging to the Johannesburg Metro. The exact ownership is still being contested between the Johannesburg Metro, Safa and FNB, which originally constructed Soccer City.
The SA Soccer Legends, as I understand, consists of former professional footballers who have been organised into a body that now conducts soccer clinics in schools. I'm aware that in some Soweto schools, a soccer legend has been attached to each school. A similar programme is running in townships outside Pretoria.
In my view, the costs incurred by private citizens in anticipation of opportunities during the Fifa World Cup can only be offset through tourism - if we get tourists to go to those areas. Actually, I know that the Department of Tourism as well as SA Tourism are more than keen to make the data available and to advertise such venues to tourists so that they will use such facilities whenever they are in those areas, cities or townships.