Das sie wegen Inkompetenz erst 2 Jahre hinterm Plan angefangen haben, kannst Du aber bitte nicht mir anlasten...
# 11 September 2000: Australian company Multiplex signs a deal to build the new stadium for a maximum cost of £326.5m. Plans to open the new ground for the 2003 FA Cup final are scrapped.
# 7 October 2000: The last competitive fixture is played at the stadium, with Germany beating England 1-0 in a World Cup 2002 qualifier.
# 1 May 2001: The Football Association warns the project will fail unless the Government bails it out.
# 3 May 2001: Home Secretary Jack Straw chairs the first meeting of a group of ministers responsible for looking at plans for the Stadium.
# 31 May 2002 The FA announces the signing of a loan agreement with German bank WestLB which means work on the new stadium can start within three months.
# 30 September 2002: Work finally starts on the new stadium.
# July 2003: A 200ft footbridge providing improved access to the new stadium is put in place.
# January 2004: Scaffolding collapses on the building site, killing one worker and leaving another seriously injured.
The new Wembley Stadium
Wembley was scheduled to host the FA Cup final on 13 May
# 23 August 2004: Builders on the site strike after 200 men are sacked in a dispute over working hours and breaks.
# 14 August 2005: The FA confirms that it has booked Cardiff's Millennium Stadium as a back-up venue for the 2006 FA Cup final in case Wembley is not ready.
# 18 August 2005: Multiplex posts "very disappointing" profit figures, with the construction division of the company showing full-year losses of £26.1m, compared to £30.8m profits in 2004.
The Australian company says new risk control measures have been introduced and its only loss-making project is Wembley.
# 19 August 2005: The Guardian reports that under the terms of its contract, Multiplex must pay a penalty of £120,000 for every day the project is delayed beyond its handover date, with a maximum payment of £14m.
# 14 October 2005: Wembley Stadium reveals 9,000 seats for the new stadium - £300m-worth over the next 10 years - have already been sold.
# 8 December 2005: Football League chairman Brian Mawhinney predicts that the league play-offs finals, which are due to take place at Wembley after the FA Cup final, will instead by played in Cardiff.
# 19 December 2005: Multiplex warns there is a "material risk" the stadium will not be finished for the 2006 FA Cup final, and that it is facing losses of up to £70m on the project.
# 21 December 2005: London mayor Ken Livingstone expresses doubts the stadium will be ready in time for the FA Cup final.
# 3 January 2006: After a dispute, work starts on the main pedestrian walkway to the stadium. It is due to take 13 weeks.
# 13 January 2006: Multiplex says the wrong type of concrete has been used in the foundations, delaying construction.
# 30 January 2006: Multiplex's UK managing director admits there is only a 70% chance that the stadium will be ready for the FA Cup final in May.
The firm is committed to handing over the stadium on 31 March, but there are still risks which could affect finishing on time.
# 20 February 2006: Multiplex tells the Australian stock exchange that the FA is about to confirm that Cardiff's Millennium Stadium, not Wembley, will host the 2006 FA Cup final.