Scandal spotlight on Jordaan

With South Africa implicated in the Fifa corruption scandal, the spotlight also falls on Safa president Danny Jordaan.

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With South Africa implicated in the Fifa corruption scandal, the spotlight also falls on SA Football Association (Safa) president Danny Jordaan, who was due to be endorsed as mayor of the Nelson Mandela Bay Metro today.

Jordaan was the chief executive of the local organising committee for the 2010 World Cup. Last week the ANC announced that Jordaan was going to be the new mayor of the Nelson Mandela Bay metro.

The US’s FBI yesterday arrested nine high-ranking Fifa officials. Among them was a former Fifa vice-president, Jack Warner.

The officials allegedly received bribes of about $150 million (R1.8 billion).

They are charged with racketeering, fraud and money laundering, among other offences.

Fifa president Sepp Blatter has not been charged.

According to the FBI’s indictment, the South African government and the bid committee, including a “co-conspirator 16”, were prepared to arrange for the government of South Africa to pay $10m to the Caribbean Football Union to “support the African diaspora”.

Jordaan said yesterday he welcomed the investigation, although he refused to comment further.

ANC spokesperson Keith Khoza said because no South African names had been released by the FBI, Jordaan’s endorsement as mayor would continue today.

“We will not draw (Jordaan) into the speculation. It would only be fair to comment once the investigation has been concluded,” Khoza said.

The indictment says: “In the months before the selection of the host nation for the 2010 World Cup, which was scheduled to take place in May 2004, the defendant, Jack Warner and co-conspirator one travelled to Morocco, as they had done in 1992 in advance of the voting for the 1998 World Cup.

“While in Morocco during the 2004 trip, a representative of the Moroccan bid committee offered to pay $1m to Warner in exchange for his agreement to cast his secret ballot on the Fifa executive committee for Morocco to host the 2010 World Cup.

“Co-conspirator one understood the offer to be in exchange for the agreement of Warner, co-conspirator one and co-conspirator 17 to all vote for South Africa, rather than Morocco, to host the 2010 World Cup. At the time, co-conspirator 17, like Warner and co-conspirator one, was a Fifa executive member.

“Warner indicated that he accepted the offer and told co-conspirator one that he would give $1m portion of the $10m payment to co-conspirator one.”

Sport and Recreation Minister Fikile Mbalula said he noted statements by the US Department of Justice which alleged that bribes were paid to Fifa officials for South Africa to be selected as the 2010 World Cup host. Mbalula’s spokesperson, Esethu Hasane, said the minister had been made aware of these allegations and would respond today.

Safa Western Cape president Norman Arendse said he would be “gobsmacked” if any South Africans were implicated. He said the organising committee consisted of people with integrity. “I can’t imagine that anyone, including Danny Jordaan, would get involved.”

Former media manager for the 2010 Fifa World Cup Organising Committee SA, Jermaine Craig, said the arrests of senior Fifa officials came as a shock.

“The 2010 Fifa World Cup Organising Committee SA’s focus was on the delivery of the event within budget and on schedule, which was achieved. We had no involvement with Fifa’s internal processes and can’t comment,” Craig said.

Safa spokesperson Dominic Chimhavi dismissed insinuations that the association had offered bribes to win the bid. “We are very disappointed to hear these allegations and we are asking anyone with proof of any wrongdoing in the 2010 World Cup bid to bring that proof forward,” Chimhavi said.

He said iconic figures such as Nelson Mandela and Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu were involved in the bid. “These are people of honour,” he said. He would not comment on Jordaan’s possible involvement, saying to do so would be “presumptuous”.

Meanwhile, Reuters reports that European soccer’s governing body Uefa has called for tomorrow’s Fifa presidential election to be postponed. “We strongly believe the Fifa congress should be postponed, with new Fifa presidential elections to be organised within the next six months,” general secretary Gianni Infantino said.

francesca.villette@inl.co.za

lisa.isaacs@inl.co.za - Cape Times



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World soccer rocked by Fifa arrests

Fifa was dealt an unprecedented blow with the arrests of several senior figures amid graft allegations.

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Zurich/New York - The world's most popular sport was plunged into turmoil on Wednesday as seven senior soccer officials were arrested on US corruption charges and faced extradition from Switzerland, whose authorities also announced a criminal investigation into the awarding of the next two World Cups.

The arrests in a dawn raid at a five-star Zurich hotel mark an unprecedented blow against soccer's governing body Fifa, which for years has been dogged by allegations of corruption but always escaped major criminal cases.

US prosecutors said they aimed to make more arrests but would not be drawn on whether Fifa President Sepp Blatter, for long the most powerful man in the sport, was a target of the probe. Blatter, 79, is standing for re-election to a fifth term at the Fifa Congress in Zurich on Friday, and Fifa said the vote would go ahead as planned.

The European soccer body Uefa called for the election to be postponed, saying “the European associations will have to consider carefully if they should even attend this Congress”.

In a scathing indictment of corruption in soccer, US authorities said nine officials and five sports media and promotions executives were charged in cases involving more than $150-million in bribes over a period of 24 years. They said their investigation exposed complex money laundering schemes, millions of dollars in untaxed incomes and tens of millions in offshore accounts held by Fifa officials.

Swiss police arrested the seven, all from the Latin American and Caribbean region, and detained them pending extradition proceedings to the United States, which could take years if they contest the process. The Federal Office of Justice in Switzerland said that six would contest extradition, but that one person agreed to be extradited.

“As charged in the indictment, the defendants fostered a culture of corruption and greed that created an uneven playing field for the biggest sport in the world,” said Federal Bureau of Investigation Director James Comey. “Undisclosed and illegal payments, kickbacks, and bribes became a way of doing business at Fifa.”

Blatter, who has denied and survived allegations of his involvement in corruption, said in a statement: “Let me be clear: such misconduct has no place in football and we will ensure that those who engage in it are put out of the game.”

The statement also said that Fifa welcomed the actions and the investigations “and believe that it will help to reinforce measures that FIFA has already taken to root out any wrongdoing in football.”

Separate from the US investigation, Swiss prosecutors said they had opened their own criminal proceedings against unidentified people on suspicion of mismanagement and money laundering related to the awarding of rights to host the 2018 World Cup in Russia and the 2022 event in Qatar.

US Attorney General Loretta Lynch told reporters at a news conference in New York her office did not want to impede the 2018 and 2022 World Cups but looked forward to working with Swiss authorities investigating the award of the tournaments.

“Fifa has a lot of soul searching to do,” she said.

The indictment accused the officials of using a variety of schemes to take kickbacks and bribes from sports marketing firms connected to major tournaments, and also alleged corruption in the selection of the 2010 World Cup host and the 2011 Fifa presidential election.

One of those indicted, former Fifa Vice-President Jack Warner of Trinidad, solicited $10-million in bribes from the South African government to host the 2010 World Cup, the Justice Department said.

Warner directed a number of co-conspirators to arrange the payment, which was eventually sent from a Fifa account in Switzerland to a Bank of America account in New York that Warner controlled, the indictment said. The South African Football Association called the bribe allegations “baseless and untested”.

Warner, former Fifa vice-president and executive committee member of CONCACAF (Confederation of North, Central America, Caribbean Association Football), said in a statement that he was innocent of any charges. Warner surrendered to the police mid-afternoon in Port of Spain, made an initial court appearance on 12 charges of corruption, money laundering and racketeering and was granted TT$2.5 million ($400 000) bail.

The United States took jurisdiction of the case in part because the Internal Revenue Service and the FBI secured the cooperation of U.S. citizen Chuck Blazer, a former top Fifa official, who US officials said had not paid taxes for years.

Blazer's lawyer, Eric Corngold, declined to comment.

Kelly Currie, the acting US attorney in Brooklyn said Wednesday's charges brought in the New York City borough represent “the beginning of our effort, not the end”.

Early on Wednesday, FBI agents carrying bags and boxes to execute a search warrant went into the group's office in Miami Beach. Agents also used a search warrant at the offices of Traffic Sports in Miami.

CONCACAF said in a statement it was “deeply concerned by today's developments” and that “the Confederation will continue to co-operate with the authorities to its fullest capacity”.

In addition to Blazer, 70, others who pleaded guilty were José Hawilla, 71, owner of the Traffic Group, a sports marketing firm founded in Brazil, and two of his companies; Daryan Warner, 46, and Daryll Warner, 40, sons of Jack Warner.

Their lawyers declined comment or were not available to comment.

“It is clear that the case is based in large part on some co-operating insiders who have already plead guilty,” said Miami lawyer David Weinstein, former prosecutor.

The Fifa officials appeared to have walked into a trap set by US and Swiss authorities. The arrests were made at dawn at a plush Zurich hotel, the Baur au Lac, where officials are staying before the vote. Suites at the hotel cost up to $4 000 a night.

The arrests could have implications for sponsorship.

The indictment said that in 1996, an unidentified global sports company agreed to pay $160-million over 10 years to become Brazil's exclusive footwear, apparel, accessories, and equipment supplier. That was an apparent reference to Nike, which sponsored the Brazil national team.

Nike said that it was cooperating with authorities. “Nike believes in ethical and fair play in both business and sport,” a company statement said.

The indictment said that the company agreed to additional financial terms not in the initial contract. This included paying an additional $40-million to “a Traffic affiliate with a Swiss bank account” and referred to as “marketing fees”.

German sportswear company Adidas, long associated with Fifa, said the soccer body should do more to establish transparent compliance standards. Anheuser-Busch InBev, whose Budweiser brand is a sponsor of the 2018 World Cup, said it was closely monitoring developments at Fifa.

Coca-Cola Co, another Fifa sponsor, said the charges had “tarnished the mission and ideals of the Fifa World Cup and we have repeatedly expressed our concerns about these serious allegations”.

Officials said that following the arrests, accounts at several banks in Switzerland had been blocked.

The officials arrested in Zurich are: Jeffrey Webb, vice-president of world body Fifa president of North and Central American body CONCACAF and head of soccer in the Cayman Islands; Eduardo Li, who runs Costa Rica's soccer federation; Julio Rocha, who headed Nicaragua's federation; Eugenio Figueredo, another Fifa vice-president who used to run Uruguayan soccer; Rafael Esquivel who is the sport's boss in Venezuela; Jose Maria Marin, who used to be the head of Brazil's federation; and Costas Takkas, another CONCACAF official.

Those detained or their representatives were not available to comment.

Lynch said in a statement that the charges span “at least two generations of soccer officials who, as alleged, have abused their positions of trust to acquire millions of dollars in bribes and kickbacks”.

The international governing body of football collects billions of dollars in revenue, mostly from sponsorship and television rights for World Cups. It has been dogged by reports of corruption which it says it investigates itself.

“The chickens are finally coming home to roost and this sounds like a hugely significant development for Fifa,” said Damian Collins, a British member of parliament who founded the reform group New Fifa Now.

Fifa’s decision to award the World Cup to Qatar, a tiny desert country with no domestic tradition of soccer, was heavily criticised by soccer officials in Western countries. Fifa was forced to acknowledge that it is too hot to play soccer there in the summer when the tournament is traditionally held, forcing schedules around the globe to be rewritten to move the event.

Qatar's stock market fell sharply as news of the Swiss investigation emerged.

Reuters



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Factbox: Fifa figures arrested in Switzerland

Biographies of the nine current and former Fifa officials indicted for racketeering, conspiracy and corruption.

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Washington - Brief biographies of the nine current and former Fifa officials indicted on Wednesday for racketeering, conspiracy and corruption.

JEFFREY WEBB (Cayman Islands)

Age: 50

Fifa Vice-President

President of Confederation of North, Central America and Caribbean Association Football (CONCACAF) (since 2012)

Chairman of the Fifa Anti-Racism and Discrimination Task Force

President of Cayman Islands Football Association

EUGENIO FIGUEREDO (Uruguay)

Age: 83

Fifa Vice-President

Former president of South American Football Confederation (CONMEBOL) (2013-14)

Former president of Uruguayan Football Association (1997-2006)

JACK WARNER (Trinidad and Tobago)

Age: 72

Minister of National Security, Trinidad and Tobago

Former president of CONCACAF (1990-2011)

Former Fifa vice-president (to 2011)

Former president of the Caribbean Football Union (1990-2011)

* Resigned from all football posts on June 11, 2011, bringing an end to Fifa Ethics Committee procedures against him.

RAFAEL ESQUIVEL (Venezuela)

Age: 68

President of Venezuelan Football Federation (Since 1987)

Member of Fifa’s Disciplinary Committee

JOSE MARIA MARIN

Age: 83

Former president of the Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF) (2012-2015)

President of Local Organising Committee for 2014 World Cup

Former governor of Sao Paulo State (1982-1983)

NICOLAS LEOZ (Paraguay)

Age: 86

Former president of CONMEBOL (1986-2013)

Former member of Fifa’s executive committee (1998-2013)

Twice former president of Paraguayan Football Association

* Retired from all football posts for “health and personal reasons” in April 2013.

EDUARDO LI (Costa Rica)

President of Costa Rican Football Federation

Special advisor to the Organising Committee for the Fifa U-20 and U-17 Women's World Cups

JULIO ROCHA (Nicaragua)

Former president of Nicaraguan Football Federation (1990-2014)

Elected to CONCACAF Hall of Fame in 2009

Fifa Development Officer

COSTAS TAKKAS (Cayman Islands)

Former general secretary the Cayman Islands Football Association

Reuters



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Factbox: US charges against Fifa officials

The US Justice Department has charged five executives and nine officials of soccer's global governing body with racketeering.

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Washington - The US Justice Department has charged five executives and nine officials of soccer's global governing body, Fifa, with racketeering.

US code defines racketeering as any criminal activity performed to benefit an organisation, including extortion, money laundering and bribery. In a 166-page indictment, the Justice Department accused the defendants of engaging in such activities.

THE CHARGES

The indictment accused the defendants and co-conspirators of engaging in fraud, bribery and money laundering since 1991 to solicit and receive $150-million in bribes and kickbacks.

* The indictment claimed that South Africa paid $10-million to Jack Warner, former Fifa vice-president and executive committee member of CONCACAF (Confederation of North, Central America, Caribbean Association Football), to obtain his and two other Fifa executive committee member votes for its successful bid to host the World Cup in 2010.

* In 2011 an unnamed co-conspirator who wanted to declare himself a candidate for Fifa president plotted with Warner to get Caribbean Football Union member support. After a meeting with the members on his candidacy at a hotel in Trinidad and Tobago, Warner told officials from the Caribbean Football Union member associations to pick up a “gift” afterwards in another conference room, where each member found an envelope stuffed with $40 000, the indictment claimed. Warner facilitated the payment on behalf of the unnamed co-conspirator, according to the indictment.

* The indictment claimed that a sports marketing company called Datisa, jointly owned by Traffic Sports, Torneos and Full Play, paid $100-million in bribes to Fifa officials in exchange for the 2013 Copa America contract. An executive from each company has been indicted and the founder of Traffic Group Jose Hawilla has pleaded guilty to racketeering and other charges. Traffic Sports USA and Traffic Sports International have also pleaded guilty to wire fraud conspiracy, the Justice Department said.

POSSIBLE SENTENCES

* US code states that racketeering violations should carry no more than 20 years of imprisonment unless the activity carries a life sentence, such as murder.

* The Justice Department said the defendants face maximum terms of 20 years.

* One defendant, Eugenio Figueredo, could face an additional 10 years if found guilty of providing false evidence to US immigration authorities when he stated he was working in the United States as a “decorative rock” salesman.

* In the past, members of criminal organisations such as the mafia and street gangs have been convicted on racketeering charges.

* In 2006, several tobacco companies including Philip Morris and Lorillard were found guilty under the racketeering statute of covering up health risks of smoking.

* In other types of cases, racketeering charges were brought against oil producer Chesapeake Energy over land leasing practices and 11 former Atlanta public school educators who were found guilty in a test cheating scandal.

CASE ONGOING

* US Attorney General Loretta Lynch declined to comment on whether Fifa president Sepp Blatter was a target in the investigation.

* Several US banks including Bank of America and Citibank were named in the indictment as having been used to clear currency Fifa officials transferred from overseas banks.

* Acting US Attorney for the Eastern District of New York Kelly Currie said at a press conference, “Part of our investigation will look at the conduct of the financial institutions to see whether they were cognisant of the fact they were helping launder these bribe payments. It's too early to say if there is any problematic behaviour, but it will be part of our investigation.”

Reuters



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Fifa scandal: SA slams ‘baseless’ claims

South Africa rejects allegations that Jack Warner was promised $10m to help the country win its World Cup bid.

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Johannesburg - Allegations that South Africa promised a $10-million bribe to a former Fifa vice-president to win its 2010 World Cup bid were unfounded, a South African Football Association spokesman said on Wednesday.

“We are disappointed at the allegations... They are baseless and untested and we request proof from anyone who has evidence to the contrary to come forward,” said Safa director of communications Dominic Chimhavi.

“Our bid campaign was run, by among others, late president Nelson Mandela and former president Thabo Mbeki and several government ministers, who are men of integrity,” Chimhavi said.

A statement from the South African government was expected later on Wednesday.

At a press conference in New York on Wednesday, US Attorney General Loretta Lynch said the former Fifa vice-president, Jack Warner, solicited $10-million in bribes from the South African government to host the 2010 World Cup. Warner issued a statement saying he is innocent of any charges.

Warner, formerly an influential official at world football's governing body, is among nine officials and five sports media and promotions executives facing corruption charges involving more than $150-million in bribes.

Reuters



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Bacca’s double helps Sevilla take title

Sevilla have lifted the Europa League trophy for a record fourth time with a 3-2 victory over Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk.

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Warsaw - Sevilla retained their Europa League title and lifted the trophy for a record fourth time amid a cascade of tears and ticker tape after securing a 3-2 victory over Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk in Wednesday's final.

Carlos Bacca claimed the plaudits with a superb double strike, including a late winner to decide a pulsating clash that began at a hair-raising pace with four goals in the first half.

It was an energetic end-to-end battle for most of the match.

Dnipro had grabbed an early lead from Nikola Kalinic before Sevilla hit back with goals by Grzegorz Krychowiak and Bacca.

A free kick from Dnipro captain Ruslan Rotan made it 2-2 just before the break and it looked like the Ukrainians, playing in their first European final, might cause a stunning upset.

But Bacca settled the game for Sevilla and secured the trophy and a precious Champions League place handed to the winners for the first time as they go into the group stage.

Colombia striker Bacca, substituted before the end, broke down on the bench with the emotion of it all as the final whistle sounded and the celebrations began.

Sevilla are now the undisputed kings of the competition, having also won it twice in its former guise as the Uefa Cup in 2006 and 2007, and have moved ahead of Juventus, Liverpool and Inter Milan to stand alone with most wins on the honours board.

Predictions that this would be a cagey affair were swiftly confounded as the teams tore into each from the start.

Within minutes of the kickoff Dnipro landed the first blow.

A chip forward found Kalinic and he nodded the ball deftly into the path of Brazilian winger Matheus, whose precise cross was met by the Croatia target man to head low into the net past the sprawling dive of Sevilla keeper Sergio Rico.

That seemed to spark some life into the wounded Spaniards and Krychowiak levelled after 28 minutes.

The Poland international raised the roof off the stadium in his home country when he received Bacca's knockdown, took a touch to get the ball out of his feet and drove his finish through several Dnipro bodies into the net.

Within three minutes Sevilla were ahead as Reyes set Bacca clear with a perfectly weighted through ball and the Colombian rounded keeper Denys Boyko before calmly slotting home.

That could have proved a devastating psychological blow to Dnipro, but the rugged Ukrainians are made of stern stuff and they equalised before the break through Rotan's superb curling freekick that looped delicately over the wall and into the net.

The second half was a much nervier affair, before Sevilla struck the decisive blow. Vitolo's flicked pass found Bacca who stayed onside to turn in the area and drill the ball home.

Reuters



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Blatter pledges to root out wrongdoing

Fifa chief Sepp Blatter determined to “root out any wrongdoing in football” after seven leading soccer officials arrested

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Zurich - Fifa chief Sepp Blatter said he was determined to “root out any wrongdoing in football” after seven leading soccer officials were arrested on corruption charges by US and Swiss authorities on Wednesday.

Blatter, who is standing for re-election as Fifa president on Friday, added that the investigations will help to reinforce measures world soccer's governing body has already taken.

“Let me be clear: such misconduct has no place in football and we will ensure that those who engage in it are put out of the game,” he added in a statement on Fifa's website (www.fifa.com).

Fifa has provisionally banned the seven officials arrested on Wednesday from any football-related activities.

“This is a difficult time for football, the fans and for Fifa as an organisation,” said Blatter, who is expected to be re-elected on Friday when Prince Ali bin Al Hussein of Jordan will be his only rival.

“We understand the disappointment that many have expressed and I know that the events of today will impact the way in which many people view us,” said Blatter, who is standing for a fifth term in office.

“As unfortunate as these events are, it should be clear that we welcome the actions and the investigations by the U.S. and Swiss authorities and believe that it will help to reinforce measures that Fifa has already taken to root out any wrongdoing in football.

“While there will be many who are frustrated with the pace of change, I would like to stress the actions that we have taken and will continue to take.

“In fact, today's action by the Swiss Office of the Attorney General was set in motion when we submitted a dossier to the Swiss authorities late last year.”

He added: “We will continue to work with the relevant authorities and we will work vigorously within Fifa in order to root out any misconduct, to regain your trust and ensure that football worldwide is free from wrongdoing.”

The world's most popular sport was plunged into turmoil after the U.S. and Swiss authorities announced separate inquiries into the activities of soccer's ruling body.

The seven powerful figures in global soccer face extradition to the United States on corruption charges after their arrest in Switzerland on Wednesday.

The Swiss authorities have also announced a criminal investigation into the awarding of the next two World Cups being hosted in Russia in 2018 and Qatar in 2022.

US authorities said nine soccer officials and five sports media and promotions executives faced corruption charges involving more than $150 million in bribes.

Reuters



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Postpone Fifa elections: Uefa

European soccer's governing body Uefa has called for this week’s presidential election to be postponed after the arrest of top Fifa officials.

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Warsaw - European soccer's governing body Uefa has called for Friday's Fifa presidential election to be postponed, secretary general Gianni Infantino told reporters on Wednesday.

“We strongly believe the Fifa Congress should be postponed with new Fifa presidential elections to be organised within the next six months,” he told reporters at the Sheraton Hotel.

The world's most popular sport was plunged into turmoil on Wednesday after U.S. and Swiss authorities announced separate inquiries into the activities of soccer's ruling body.

Incumbent Sepp Blatter is standing for re-election to the Fifa presidency against Jordan's Prince Ali bin Al Hussein.

Earlier on Wednesday, seven of the most powerful figures in global soccer faced extradition to the United States on corruption charges after their arrest in Switzerland.

The Swiss authorities also announced a criminal investigation into the awarding of the next two World Cups being hosted in Russia in 2018 and Qatar in 2022.

U.S. authorities said nine soccer officials and five sports media and promotions executives faced corruption charges involving more than $150 million in bribes.

Infantino, reading from a prepared statement, added: “Uefa shows this Fifa the red card. Today's events are a disaster for Fifa and tarnish the image of football as whole. Uefa is deeply shocked and saddened by them.

“These events show that once again corruption is deeply rooted in Fifa's culture. There is a need for the whole of Fifa to be rebooted and for a real reform to be carried out.

“The upcoming Fifa Congress risks turning into a farce and therefore the European associations will have to consider carefully even if they should attend this Congress...

“The Uefa member associations are meeting tomorrow (Thursday) ahead of the Fifa Congress. At that point, the European associations will decide on what further steps need to be taken to protect the game of football.

“The members of the European executive committee are convinced that there is a strong need for a change through the leadership of this Fifa and we strongly believe that the Fifa Congress should be postponed.”

Uefa president Michel Platini declined to comment when asked by Reuters about Wednesday's developments.

Reuters



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Van Gaal needs a proven goal scorer

Manchester United manager Louis van Gaal will conduct his search for a big-name goalscorer this summer against the backdrop of two statistics that highlight his squad’s startling lack of firepower.

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Manchester United manager Louis van Gaal will conduct his search for a big-name goalscorer this summer against the backdrop of two statistics that highlight his squad’s startling lack of firepower.

With United safe in fourth place in the Barclays Premier League and one qualifying tie away from a return to the Champions League next season, there has been an air of satisfaction around Old Trafford as Van Gaal’s debut campaign drew to a close. In the end, United made it over the line with something to spare.

However, the scale of the task ahead of United’s veteran Dutch coach as he tries to make up ground between his squad and that of champions Chelsea is placed in stark context by analysis of his team’s struggles in front of goal.

United’s tally of 62 league goals — two fewer than under David Moyes — is the club’s second lowest total in the 23 years of the Premier League. Only 2004-05’s tally of 58 has been worse.

Meanwhile, Wayne Rooney’s record of 14 goals in all competitions this season places him as United’s top scorer. Records indicate, however, that the last time United’s top scorer returned such a modest total was a staggering 33 years ago in 1982 when Frank Stapleton scored just 13.

Though some statistics can be misleading, these are remarkable and will shock United supporters.

A look across the Premier League, for example, reveals that Rooney’s total of 12 Premier League goals was matched by the likes of Graziano Pelle at Southampton and beaten by Christian Benteke at Aston Villa, QPR’s Charlie Austin and West Brom’s Saido Berahino as well as the familiar big-name strikers at Manchester City, Chelsea and Arsenal.

Nobody can blame Rooney, of course. The United captain was not even deployed as a centre forward for the whole of the season and endured a dreadful spell playing in midfield after Christmas when he didn’t manage a shot on goal for a number of weeks.

Rather, the numbers merely indicate the clear lack of incisiveness and forward thrust from a United squad that included such feted attacking players as Robin van Persie, Radamel Falcao, Juan Mata, Angel di Maria and Ander Herrera.

Van Gaal began his time at Old Trafford talking about his desire to play with two centre forwards and a No 10. His challenge this summer is to recruit the players he feels he needs to make his team more creative, especially given that the Champions League will increase the number of games his key players are required to play.

As Sportsmail has reported previously, United have considered moves for Danny Ings at Burnley and Tottenham’s Harry Kane. Neither move has really got off the ground, however, while interest in Raheem Sterling at Liverpool will simply never harden given the history between the two clubs.

Van Gaal is determined to challenge for the title but reiterated on MUTV that he needs to spend money to achieve that.

‘I’m afraid that the board shall say, “Now we have to battle for the championship”. I think it is a fantastic challenge but that is dependable on how we can purchase very good players and how we can improve the balance in our selection. In every position you need two players who can play.

‘The board has purchased me to win title and my curriculum vitae says that. Of course I want to win titles. We shall fight to the end and I shall give everything in me to build a new championship winning team.’

In terms of the players he already has, Van Gaal is all but certain to retain Van Persie. The 31-year-old earns £240,000 a week and is not keen to uproot his children from school in Cheshire.

There has, meanwhile, been talk inside Old Trafford of turning Adnan Januzaj into a central player. This, however, is more likely to be a No 10 ‘second striker’ rather than a through-the-middle target man.

And what about the man many expect to leave Old Trafford? Well, Van Gaal admits David De Gea has played a key role this season, though that surprised him.

‘He has saved us at different times in different matches. In the beginning I was not so sure of him. But now he is fantastic.’

History of United’s hitmen

Not since Stapleton in 1981-82 has United’s top scorer netted as few as the 14 hit by Rooney this season — 30 fewer than Ruud Van Nistelrooy (bottom) in 2002-03

(All competitions)

2014-15 W Rooney 14

2013-14 W Rooney 19

2012-13 R van Persie 30

2011-12 W Rooney 34

2010-11 D Berbatov 21

2009-10 W Rooney 34

2008-09 C Ronaldo 26

2007-08 C Ronaldo 42

2006-07 Ronaldo/Rooney 23

2005-06 R van Nistelrooy 24

2004-05 W Rooney 17

2003-04 R van Nistelrooy 30

2002-03 R van Nistelrooy 44

2001-02 R van Nistelrooy 36

2000-01 T Sheringham 21

1999-00 A Cole/D Yorke 22

1998-99 D Yorke 29

1997-98 A Cole 25

1996-97 O Solskjaer 19

1995-96 E Cantona 19

1994-95 A Kanchelskis 15

1993-94 E Cantona 25

1992-93 M Hughes 16

1991-92 B McClair 24

1990-91 Hughes/McClair 21

1989-90 M Hughes 15

1988-89 Hughes/McClair 16

1987-88 B McClair 31

1986-87 P Davenport 16

1985-86 M Hughes 18

1984-85 M Hughes 24

1983-84 F Stapleton 19

1982-83 F Stapleton 19

1981-82 F Stapleton 13 – Daily Mail



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Fifa dogged by scandal

Football's governing body has been dogged by allegations and rumours of institutionalised corruption for decades.

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Cape Town - World football’s governing body is no stranger to scandal. The organisation has been dogged by allegations, accusations and rumours of institutionalised corruption.

Accusations of deep-seated corruption at FIFA first received widespread public attention in 2006, when British journalist Andrew Jennings published “Foul! The Secret World of FIFA: Bribes, Vote-Rigging and Ticket Scandals”. In it, Jennings detailed an alleged cash-for-contracts scandal, how some administrators were urged to pay back bribes in secret, and vote-rigging in Sepp Blatter’s bid to remain at the helm of the association.

1974 - João Havelange, is appointed president, promising to grow the reach of the sport by securing lucrative sponsorship and broadcasting deals. Later, Havelange would draw the ire of football administrators for th make-up of his executive committee and backing Sepp Blatter as his preferred candidate in the 1998 election.

1998 - Sepp Blatter is elected as successor to Havelange.

1999 - Dutch newspaper De Telegraaf reports that Havelange had accepted bribes in connection with the Netherlands’ failed bid to secure the 1992 Olympic Games. The Guardian reports that at least 20 top football officials accepted “a million dollars in bribes” in order to back Blatter in the 1998 election.

2002 - CAF vice-president Farra Ado claims he had been offered US$100 000 to vote for Blatter. 66 of FIFA’s 207 members nominate Blatter for a second term in office.

October 2010 - Two members of FIFA’s executive committee, Reynald Temarii and Amos Adamu, are suspended for reportedly offering to sell their votes in the 2018 and 2022 hosting campaign.

November 2010 - Temarii, Adamu and four others are banned from all football after an investigation by FIFA’s ethics committee finds them guilty of vote-selling. The men are also fined.

December 2010 - Russia is awarded hosting rights for 2018, with the 2022 World Cup being awarded to Qatar. This despite FIFA’s technical committee advising against Qatar as a host, saying the high temperatures would pose a threat to spectators, players and officials.

May 2011 - The United Kingdom orders a parliamentary inquiry into why England failed to secure the 2018 World Cup. The inquiry is told that four more senior FIFA members, including vice-president Jack Warner had solicited bribes in exchange for their votes. Allegations of bribery are levelled against another executive member, Charles “Chuck” Blazer during a Caribbean Football Union meeting. In response, Blazer orders an investigation of Warner and presidential hopeful, Asian Football Confederation (AFC) president Mohamed bin Hammam. Bin Hammam withdraws his candidacy hours before an ethics committee hearing. He is later suspended.

June 2011 - Anti-corruption watchdog Transparency International and the English Football Association call for a postponement of FIFA’s presidential elections. FIFA goes ahead with its elective congress and Blatter is elected for a fourth term as FIFA president.

July 2011 - Bin Hammam is banned for life from all football activities. The ban was later overturned (in 2012), but was later handed a second life ban by FIFA due to “conflicts of interest” relating to his role as AFC president.

August 2011 - British newspaper, The Independent, reports that the US Federal Bureau of Investigations (F.B.I.) is investigating claims of corruption involving several senior FIFA executives.

April 2013 - The Confederation of North Central American and Caribbean Football (CONCACAF) publishes its integrity report, fingering Warner as the culprit in massive fraud against CONCACAF and FIFA.

May 2013 - Blazer is suspended for 90 days.

May 2015 - Warner is among several high-ranking FIFA officials arrested days before the association’s 65th congress in Zurich, Switzerland. President Sepp Blatter and General Secretary Jerome Valcke are not among those arrested. Blatter has said the congress will go ahead, and is standing for a fifth consecutive term as president.

lance.witten@inl.co.za

Cape Argus



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‘A sad day for football’

Prince Ali bin al Hussein, a Fifa vice president from Jordan, called the arrests of Fifa members as "a sad day for football."

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The dawn detention of several Fifa leaders and a corruption raid on its headquarters on Wednesday rocked world football's governing body two days before its leader Sepp Blatter seeks a new term.

A Fifa vice-president was among seven people arrested at the luxury Zurich hotel where they were preparing for a congress starting Thursday. All now face deportation to the United States on charges of accepting more than $100 million in bribes.

US authoities said nine football officials are among 14 people facing charges over the longstanding corruption.

Separately, Swiss police seized files and emails at the Fifa headquarters as part of an investigation into the awarding of the 2018 World Cup to Russia and the 2022 tournament to Qatar.

The 2010 vote by Fifa that attributed the events has been surrounded by widespread allegations of fraud. A spokesman said Wednesday though that there was no question of changing the venues.

Fifa spokesman Walter de Gregorio said Blatter is not involved in the investigations and that the presidential vote would be held as planned on Friday.

“The timing is not great,” de Gregorio told reporters. But he added that “Fifa welcomes actions that can help contribute to rooting out any wrongdoing in football.”

Blatter has been overwhelming favourite to win a fifth term at the head of the multi-billion dollar body. But the events could swing many votes.

His only challenger, Prince Ali bin al Hussein, a Fifa vice president from Jordan, called the arrests “a sad day for football.”

Prince Ali and European federation chiefs say a change of leadership is now urgently needed to save Fifa's tainted image.

The Fifa spokesman said Blatter was “relaxed” about the future fallout from the investigation.

“He isn't dancing in his office,” de Gregoria told reporters. “He is very, very calm, he sees what happens. He is fully cooperative with everybody.”

Swiss police gave a surprise 6:00am wake up call to Fifa vice-president Jeffrey Webb, from the Cayman Islands, and other six officials at the luxury Baur au Lac hotel. A US Department of Justice statement said seven people were detained.

US Attorney general Loretta Lynch said the investigations “spans at least two generations of soccer officials who, as alleged, have abused their positions of trust to acquire millions of dollars in bribes and kickbacks.”

Webb is head of the Concacaf North and Central American confederation and a longstanding ally of Blatter. US police also raided the Concacaf headquarters in Miami.

Eduardo Li, a Fifa executive committee member from Costa Rica, and Eugenio Figueredo, president of South American football governing body Conmebol from Uruguay, were also among those detained.

Police in plain clothes took the room keys from the reception and went to the rooms of the six, the New York Times said. The operation was carried out peacefully, it added.

The Swiss justice ministry said those detained were suspected of accepting “bribes and kick-backs between the early 1990s and the present day.”

A ministry statement said that representatives of sports media and sports marketing companies allegedly paid bribes “in exchange for the media rights and the marketing rights for competitions in the United States and South America.”

The seven could agree to be extradited immediately or challenge the move in court. The US Justice Department said the detained officials could face up to 20 years in jail.

The Swiss raid on Fifa's headquarters formally opened an investigation into the 2018 and 2022 World Cups that FIFA itself asked for in November.

Police are to question 10 members of the executive committee who took part in the 2010 vote while they are in Zurich for the Congress, officials said.

Qatar has strongly denied any wrongdoing linked to its bid. A former Fifa vice president from the Gulf state, Mohammed bin Hammam, was banned for life from Fifa because of corruption.

A former US attorney, Michael Garcia, investigated the World Cup bids. He left Fifa because it refused to fully publish his report.

In May, Blatter denied he was a target of an FBI corruption investigation and that he had no fear of going to the United States.

He said he would probably go in 2016 for a football tournament there and to Canada next month for the Women's World Cup.

The denial came after an ESPN television documentary said the Swiss official was afraid to go to the United States because of the FBI investigation. – AFP



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Blatter not implicated in probe

Fifa president Sepp Blatter and general secretary Jerome Valcke are not implicated in a corruption probe, the organisation's spokesman said.

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Fifa president Sepp Blatter and its general secretary Jerome Valcke are not implicated in a corruption probe underway into the vote for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups, the organisation's spokesman said.

"The general secretary and the president are not involved in this," spokesman Walter De Gregoria told a hastily-arranged press conference.

He also said that the Fifa Congress to vote for who would be its president for the next four years would go ahead as planned in Zurich on Friday.

The announcements followed the dawn arrests of several top football officials in a Zurich hotel and a Swiss police raid on Fifa headquarters as part of a probe into the votes for the 2018 and 2022 World Cup which went respectively to Russia and Qatar.

The US Justice Department, meanwhile, unsealed an indictment against nine Fifa officials and five executives, charging them with conspiracy and corruption over a 24-year span.

The Department of Justice said it unsealed the indictment as officials raided the Concacaf soccer organization headquarters in Miami as part of the case.

"It spans at least two generations of soccer officials who, as alleged, have abused their positions of trust to acquire millions of dollars in bribes and kickbacks," Attorney General Loretta Lynch said in the Justice Department statement about the charges.– AFP



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Baxter, Chiefs on collision course

Premier Soccer League champions Kaizer Chiefs and their successful head coach, Stuart Baxter, are heading for a showdown.

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Kaizer Chiefs and their successful head coach, Stuart Baxter, are headed for a showdown this week.

The two parties are set to meet to determine whether the 61-year-old Briton will continue at the helm of the popular Soweto club, who are also the current Premier Soccer League (PSL) champions.

Baxter still has a year to run on his contract, but is reported to have spoken of a few issues that are troubling him. And, because of his achievements at Chiefs, there is a great demand for his services, from teams in Africa and Europe. He is also said to be a target for the SA Football Association (Safa), who want to bring him on board as a technical director, to oversee all facets of the country’s various national teams.

For Chiefs, the decision is simple. Either they insist Baxter finishes his contract or they allow the coach to leave if he wants to, especially considering the sterling work he has done for the club.

Baxter certainly has nothing more to prove. He is on record as saying that, when offered the job at Chiefs three years ago, he jumped at the opportunity. He felt that, after the shoddy way he was treated during his tenure as Bafana Bafana coach (2004-2005), he wanted to set the record straight.

He wanted to prove, not only to Safa but to the country as a whole, that a mistake was made when he was fired as national coach. He is of the opinion that he should have been given more time then – and Bafana Bafana, who knows, could well have been on a different level by now.

Baxter’s work with Chiefs has been excellent. In his three seasons in charge of Amakhosi, he won two PSL titles and two Cup trophies. He completely overhauled the style of play at the club, adding the much-needed tactical discipline and defensive organisation that has allowed Chiefs to rise above the rest of the PSL.

His advice, guidance and inspiration have been vital in elevating the players at the club. Tefu Mashamaite has gone from just an ordinary defender, hoping to catch a game, to a superb leader and the PSL’s Player of the Season. Mandla Masango’s raw potential matured under Baxter – and he became a Bafana regular. With goalkeeper Itumeleng Khune injured for most of the season, and also holding out for an improved contract, Baxter had no hesitation in placing his trust in the reserve keepers – Brilliant Khuzwayo and Reyaad Pieterse – and both, when played, never let the side down.

Erick Mathoho, George Lebese, Willard Katsande, Siboniso Gaxa, Tsepo Masilela, Reneilwe Letsholonyane, Bernard Parker and Siphiwe Tshabalala… they all seemed to sprout wings under Baxter’s care, allowing Chiefs to regain the glory that had deserted the club before the coach’s arrival.

But, as it is, the ball is probably firmly in Baxter’s court. It’s highly doubtful that Chiefs will play hard ball with a coach that has been good to them, inspired them, and taken the club to a higher level.

So for Baxter, therefore, the question is: What does he still need to prove? What challenge would motivate and inspire him?

The answer probably resides in the past. Read between the lines of Baxter’s interviews and it’s clear the coach is still hurt by his Bafana axing. It’s a job unfinished… It would, therefore, come as no surprise if next up for Baxter is the post as Safa’s technical director. - Cape Times



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Rodgers not alone to blame for signings

Martin Samuel asks - is Brendan Rodgers working with what he wants or what he is given?

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There are 24 signings credited to Brendan Rodgers at Liverpool and it is hard to get a decent starting XI from the lot of them. Some, like Daniel Sturridge, have been dogged by bad luck. Others, like Emre Can, may train on. Most, like Mario Balotelli, have been hopeless.

Yet how many are actually his? Liverpool’s recruitment policy is run by a transfer committee. To what extent is Rodgers taking a very public fall for the mistakes of colleagues?

Dave Fallows heads the department, Michael Edwards is director of performance analysis and Barry Hunter is chief scout; where are they in all this? So much of the traditional manager’s role is farmed out these days, yet the buck still stops at the boss’s door. As six Stoke City goals went in at the weekend, all eyes were fixed on the man in the technical area.

Yet is Rodgers working with what he wants or what he is given? And could it be this knowledge that saves his job this summer?

Simon Mignolet may have arrived in the Rodgers era, but was he actually a Rodgers signing? And what of Luis Alberto, or Iago Aspas? The argument will be that the manager has the final say on recruitment, but what are his options? How are the deals presented? There is a difference between desiring a player or simply acquiescing to the best of a poor bunch. Did Rodgers pursue Balotelli or did he merely come to realise the alternatives were even worse? Any review of his season must take this into account.

There has been great unrest at Newcastle United, too, but no demonstration has called for the resignation of head of recruitment Graham Carr. Yet it is Carr’s players that have underachieved and the control Carr exerted was one of Alan Pardew’s greatest frustrations. West Ham have no manager right now but are in negotiation for several players. Much the same happened at Manchester United last summer.

We think of this as the sophisticated, continental approach because we see it works at a club like Real Madrid. Yet Madrid are in a different league from Liverpool. Madrid can recruit independently because they go out and buy the best players in the world. If the new manager is presented with Paul Pogba, David de Gea or Thomas Muller this summer, he is hardly likely to complain.

Liverpool are not in the same market and a coach may feel there were alternatives to Tiago Ilori or Divock Origi, if properly consulted.

It is strange, this absence of trust — as if anyone knows what Rodgers needs, more than Rodgers. Maybe, this summer, he should be left to make his own mistakes. He could hardly do worse.– Daily Mail



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Welbeck to miss FA Cup final

Arsenal and England striker Danny Welbeck will miss the FA Cup final against Aston Villa due to a knee injury.

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Arsenal and England striker Danny Welbeck will miss Saturday's FA Cup final against Aston Villa due to a knee injury, the club's manager Arsene Wenger confirmed.

He had been regarded as doubtful after missing the last five league games of the season.

“I was prepared for that because he didn't practice until last Friday,” Wenger told a news conference.

He added that Welbeck was also expected to miss England's friendly against the Republic of Ireland and European Championship qualifier against Slovenia in the first two weeks of June. – Reuters



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