The South Korean port city of Incheon Tuesday won the right to host the 2014 Asian Games, fending... Sport: 2014 Asian Games in

The South Korean port city of Incheon Tuesday won the right to host the 2014 Asian Games, fending off a challenge from New Delhi to hold the lucrative multi-sport event.

Incheon bid leader Shin Yong-Suk was ecstatic as his team burst into raucous celebrations after months of lobbying and pledged the world would see the best ever Games in seven years' time.

The New Delhi delegation was devastated after insisting all week that it was the frontrunner and had a right to win, having been overlooked since it was last selected in 1982.

Indian bid chief Suresh Kalmadi blamed the country's sports minister, Mani Shankar Aiyer, for ruining their chances after he was quoted as saying last week that hosting major sporting events held no relevance to the common man.

The vote swung in Incheon's favour after frantic last-minute canvassing by both sides of the 45 Olympic Council of Asia (OCA) nations that make up the body that controls sport in the region.

"Incheon is a well organised economic city and they have worked hard to market their city. It was very close. They both had weak points and strong points. From a marketing viewpoint Korea had the edge."

The Asiad is expected to have a massive economic impact on Incheon with officials forecasting it will create 270,000 new jobs and attract huge foreign investment.

The city currently has 11 Olympic-standard sports facilities with four more being upgraded and five new stadiums in the planning phase. Another 17 facilities be built before the event, including new aquatics and tennis complexes.

It promised in its presentation, based on the theme "One United Asia," that all the facilities would be built in an environmentally friendly manner, and outlined plans for an international cultural festival to coincide with the Games.

Korea will now organise an inter-ministerial support committee headed by new Prime Minister Han Duck-Soo, appointed last month, to mobilise resources for the Games.

Prior to the final vote, Incheon promised to raise 20 million dollars to support Asian countries that have not yet won medals in the Asian Games.

"Korea's accumulated experience from hosting some of the world's greatest sporting events together with its advanced infrastructure, its surging economy and its passion for sports means Incheon is a safe bet," the presentation said.

Incheon, a commercial and logistics hub for Northeast Asia with a population of 2.4 million, is best known as being the country's key gateway. South Korea's main international airport opened near the city in 2001.

New Delhi had based its "bid of a billion people" on its hospitality and said publicly it would offer free flights and accommodation to all the participants if it won.

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