The contrast with the last World Cup in 2007 where the final venue Bridgetown in Barbados was festooned with banners and posters months before the big game could not be more stark.
The event, which starts on Saturday, has been seen as a chance for India to show the world it has matured into a modern, rapidly developing nation and growing economic powerhouse, comfortably capable of hosting a global sporting tournament.
For many observers, last October's Commonwealth Games in New Delhi was an opportunity lost, the build-up dominated by horror stories of flooded, inhabitable athletes' accommodation, unfinished infrastructure and other organisational mess-ups.
The Cricket World Cup, we were told, would be different. This is home territory for India, and its fellow hosts Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, for whom the sport is almost a religion and its top performers are treated like Bollywood stars.
So far, however, the omens for a successful tournament have not been particularly encouraging.
Construction improvements to Eden Gardens, Kolkata's famous old ground which was built in the heyday of the British Raj in the 1860s, were not completed in time to be deemed fit for use for India's much awaited clash with England on Feb. 27.
Now Mumbai's Wankhede ground, which will stage the final on April 2, and Eden Gardens have been given a clean bill of health for the rest of the tournament, the main concern was more the lack of a 'World Cup atmosphere' or that indefinable 'buzz'.
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