Posted in News on May 14, 2004.
If pre-vote rumours are correct, the 24 members of Fifa's Executive Committee will be paying most attention to the half-hour presentation of Morocco, who appear to have closed the gap dramatically on favourites South Africa.
The five-nation race, which will be decided by a vote on Saturday, also includes outsiders Egypt while Tunisia and Libya are making up the numbers.
South Africa controversially lost out to Germany by a single vote in the ballot for the 2006 finals and is desperately hoping it will win this time as it celebrates a decade of democracy following the end of apartheid.
"There could be few better gifts for us in this year of our celebration than to be awarded the 2010 soccer World Cup," former president Nelson Mandela said this week before leading the delegation to Zurich.
The Dempsey debacle
The stakes are enormous - hosting soccer's showpiece event is worth $5bn at a rough estimate and billions more in prestige.
South Africa were favourites to host the 2006 World Cup before Germany won a vote mired in soccer's murky politics which infuriated South Africa and many neutrals.
The Oceania representative, Charles Dempsey, abstained in the last round of voting in the knowledge that Germany were leading 12-11.
Had he voted for South Africa, tying the scores, the casting vote would have gone to Fifa President Sepp Blatter, who was likely to have chosen South Africa.
Blatter fears the vote may be so close that he will have to make that casting decision this time.
"I hope I will not be in that position," Blatter said.
In the wake of the 2006 vote, Blatter introduced of a system under which the hosting of the tournament would be rotated around continents - and he promised the World Cup would be played on African soil for the first time in 2010.
'Morocco has the edge'
South Africa have long been the front-runners, trumpeting their success in hosting the 1995 Rugby World Cup and the Cricket World Cup last year.
Morocco however has attracted heavyweight support, including from France and Spain, and the Moroccan press has this week been carrying what it claims are leaked confidential Fifa documents which give it the edge over South Africa.
That is despite Fifa inspectors rating the South African bid as excellent.
South African bid chief Danny Jordaan was also behind the 2006 attempt and knows nothing can be taken for granted.
"The lesson we learned from last time is that it's not over until the final whistle," Jordaan said.