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Uruguayan family takes long road to South Africa

Around the World - Matias and Mario keeping their car in good shape
Around the World - Matias and Mario keeping their car in good shape

A Uruguayan family has driven more than 100,000km across 41 countries in a round-the-world trip which has ended in South Africa ahead of the World Cup.

56-year-old Mario Sabah and his sons, 28-year-old Ismael and 25-year-old Matias, turned up in a tiny Citroen Mehari outside their national team's hotel in Kimberley this week and say that they did so to keep a pledge made to captain Diego Lugano in Turkey one year ago.

The family set off from their home in Montevideo in February 2007 to drive round the world.

As part of their globetrotting, the Sabahs travelled through the Americas and Europe before reaching Turkey, where they looked up Mr Lugano, who plays for Fenerbahce.

'Lugano said that if Uruguay qualify for the World Cup, we must be there,' said Matias. 'We made a promise.'

The Sabahs were in Australia when Uruguay beat Costa Rica in a playoff to reach the finals in South Africa.

'We changed all our journey,' Matias said.

Matias showing the interior of the car

During the trip, the family drove through Iran, Pakistan, Australia, East Timor and Indonesia before loading their 600 cc, 28 horsepower car, with all their worldly goods in a trailer behind,
onto a ship and sailing to the South African port of Durban in time for the World Cup.

They were there to hug Mr Lugano and his team mates when they boarded the bus to go training.

'We sold all that we had to make this dream possible,' said Mario, who used to run a lighting and electrical business. 'The journey really started when the money ran out. Before then it was easy.'

One Dream

On the road they have raised funds from ad hoc sponsorship and Uruguayans they have met along the way.

Their little blue car is emblazoned with stickers ranging from Ecuadorean supermarkets to local Citroen dealers, almost obscuring the slogan 'One family, One Car, One World, One Dream.'

The sponsorship stickers the family has accumulated on their journey

It is cramped inside, which has led to occasional disagreements along the way.

'We fight, but then after each time we grow up,' Matias said.

Ismael said they had too many adventures to single out one, but he mentioned the freezing cold of Canada and the searing heat of Pakistan as his abiding memories.

The Sabahs will attend all of Uruguay's games, starting in Cape Town against France on Friday followed by clashes with hosts South Africa in Pretoria and Mexico in Rustenburg.

'La Celeste', as the Uruguayan team is known, has a proud record in the World Cup and were winners in 1930 and 1950 although they have struggled in more recent decades.

Now though, with in-form strikers allied to traditional tenacity, they have set their sights on reaching the second round and restoring some of their former glory.

'We are not crazy fans but we love our country. This team is part of our country and we are here for them,' Matias said. 'If we can make it this far in this car, then Uruguay can be world champions.'