Blatter facing massive challenges

As Sepp Blatter was re-elected Fifa president he made almost exactly the same speech he did in 2011 about the need to pull together and root out corruption.

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Zurich - It was like time had stood still.

As Sepp Blatter was re-elected Fifa president on Friday he made almost exactly the same speech he did in 2011 about the need to pull together and root out corruption.

The reputation of soccer's world governing body had been dragged through the mud and had to be restored, said the Swiss. The trust of the football family had to be won back and words had to be turned into action.

Even the metaphor was the same as he talked about guiding the Fifa ship out of troubled waters and into a placid harbour.

But this time Blatter's challenge, as he enters a fifth term that which will take him to the ripe old age of 83, is considerably greater than four years ago.

Not only has Fifa failed to change its scandal-plagued image, it faces an even bigger credibility crisis after United States prosecutors unveiled the gory details of alleged corruption in soccer, some involving top Fifa officials.

To complicate matters Fifa is also showing the first signs of a dangerous split in its ranks.

It is a combination that will even test a survivor like Blatter who has spent much of his 17 years in office fighting one crisis after another.

In 2011 Blatter received the backing of 186 of the 208- member associations at the time as he was returned unopposed.

This time round he faced bitter opposition from Europe, home of the world's most powerful clubs, the last three world champions and the continent where nearly all of the globe's top players ply their trade.

Blatter secured 133 votes and challenger Prince Ali bin Al Hussein got 73. It was not enough to win in the first round of voting but Prince Ali withdrew and the Swiss was re-elected.

“There is so much pressure on that man. If I were him I should reconsider continuing, that is my advice to him,” Dutch FA president Michael van Praag told reporters.

“I already told him many times, whatever he does from now on, even if he takes good decisions, nobody in the world will buy that any more,” said Van Praag, a Fifa presidential candidate before withdrawing his bid.

European soccer's governing body Uefa fell out with Blatter last year when he backtracked on a promise that his fourth term would be his last.

Uefa president Michel Platini said his federation would no longer support Blatter and the Frenchman was even more emphatic on the eve of Friday's election.

Platini explained that he had laid it on the line to Blatter in a frank and personal encounter in the president's room at Fifa headquarters.

“I have affection for Mr Blatter and he always said he was like an uncle to me,” said Platini. “But enough is enough.

“If I cannot tell him it is time to stop then who can? A true friend can tell another friend the reality. I said it with a tear in my eye,” added Platini, a one-time ally of the Fifa president.

There was even talk of European teams leading a World Cup boycott, something previously considered unthinkable by many soccer fans.

“If the whole of Uefa said that, and all of the countries were willing to do it, I think that is right,” said English FA chairman Greg Dyke.

Platini warned Fifa that cutting the number of slots allocated to Europe at the World Cup was a “red line not to be crossed”.

Fifa may quite reasonably think Europe is over-represented after seven of its 13 teams went out in the group stage of the 2014 World Cup.

But Platini was adamant, saying: “Europe will not lose a slot in 2018, we will stick to 13. That will not be changed, we are not going to allow that”.

Platini did not elaborate about would happen if Fifa crossed the line but the idea of a Uefa boycott hung in the air.

Football is generally free of the breakaway and splinter groups that have plagued other sports and media pundits say such a move by Uefa would be a calamity for the World Cup.

Europe threw its weight on Friday behind Blatter's challenger, Prince Ali of Jordan, and there were noises that national associations from other regions were prepared to join them.

However, Blatter has mastered the electoral system where the 209-member associations each hold one vote, meaning that tiny Sao Tome e Principe hold the same polling rights as football superpowers like Argentina and Germany.

Fifa distributes revenue equally among its 209 members and, away from the wealth and glamour of the big European leagues, such handouts are a lifeline for smaller federations.

There was a perfect example before the election as this week's Congress delegates were shown a film highlighting Fifa development projects in the Comoros Islands, Costa Rica and Guam.

Around Africa, South America, Asia and the Caribbean, federations see Blatter as the force keeping the game truly global in the face of growing financial power from a handful of elite European clubs and leagues.

When Blatter made his 15-minute electoral address to Congress it was clear he would be re-elected as applause rung round the auditorium before he had finished.

“It's a question of confidence, a matter of trust, trust on your side,” he said. “I am at your disposal and if you want me I thank you for it.

“Some might say I have been with you for too long but what is this notion of time?”, added Blatter who was also the governing body's secretary general from 1981 to 1998.

“I feel the time I have spent at Fifa is short.” – Reuters



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FA Cup history beckons for Wenger

Ask Arsene Wenger where he keeps his extensive medal collection and the manager of Arsenal is not sure where it is these days.

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Ask Arsene Wenger where he keeps his extensive medal collection and the manager of Arsenal is not sure where it is these days. He is not the type for a showy trophy room.

‘I don’t know,’ he admitted, as he prepared for this evening’s FA Cup final against Aston Villa at Wembley Stadium.

‘I am not a collection man. I am always focused on what’s next. I think the guys who come and clean the house come and take them.’

He was joking, of course, but over the past 19 years as manager of this club he has mopped up three Barclays Premier League titles, five FA Cups and five victories in the Community Shield.

Wenger remains true to English football and its rich heritage, respecting the traditions and the core values of the FA Cup as he closes in on a record-equalling sixth victory as a manager.

He is aware of George Ramsay’s achievements, the man who won the FA Cup with Aston Villa six times between 1887 and 1920.

‘It is not as easy as it looks to win it,’ added Wenger. Arsenal are overwhelming favourites to lift the trophy again, with Santi Cazorla expected to use his deep-lying midfield position as a springboard for those remorseless attacks.

This week Aston Villa’s manager Tim Sherwood has been working on an idea to muzzle Cazorla, to keep the little creator’s influence on the game to a bare minimum.

With Alexis Sanchez, Mesut Ozil and last year’s match-winner Aaron Ramsey waiting to get on the receiving end of those through-balls, Sherwood knows that his team could still be swamped.

‘There might be a little tactical adjustment, but my work is done here in the week,’ admitted Sherwood. ‘You can make some changes and talk to the players at half-time, but that’s why it’s so frustrating, because you can’t do any more.’

Whatever the outcome, Tom Cleverley, Ashley Westwood and Fabian Delph will be getting through some mileage in the centre of Villa’s midfield. Sherwood is aware of the scale of the task to convince a team who conceded eight goals without reply against Arsenal in the Premier League this season that they can win at Wembley.

Those defeats, 3-0 at Villa Park, 5-0 at the Emirates, were on Paul Lambert’s watch. But Villa’s players must also forget their last two results, a 6-1 loss at Southampton and a 1-0 defeat at home to relegated Burnley on the final day of the Premier League season.

Sherwood knows that Wenger’s team can freeze, as they did in their defeat against Chelsea in the 2009 FA Cup semi-final at this stadium.

In last season’s final they were 2-0 down inside the opening eight minutes against Hull City before they came back to win a thrilling game in extra-time.

Last month, against Championship side Reading, they needed another 30 minutes to win after Garath McCleary scored a dramatic equaliser for the Royals. Arsenal occasionally show vulnerabilities and inevitably there will be a little anxiety about the prospect of winning the FA Cup for a record 12th time. ‘If we go behind we know the game is not dead,’ added Sherwood. ‘We’ve made chances in every game we’ve played this season. This is a huge club, bigger than I thought, and a huge attraction.

‘It’s been in the doldrums for many years and this is a great chance to show everyone what we’re all about.’ The memories of Villa’s last great team, the side that won the League Cup under Ron Atkinson in 1994 and Brian Little in 1996, are fading.

Wembley has always been a stage for the big-name players to sparkle, to bring those match-winning qualities to one of the world’s most iconic football stadiums on the biggest day of the domestic calendar.

In the semi-final Villa impressed, snatching the ball from Liverpool and relying on the creative talent of young Jack Grealish and the presence of Christian Benteke during their compelling victory.

‘My little girl went to the semi-final and said, “I hope you lose because then you can take me swimming the next day”,’ added Sherwood. ‘My missus isn’t a big football fan — she had booked a holiday abroad before the Cup final.’

They have returned early, with the whole Sherwood clan taking their seats to see if Villa can win their first piece of silverware in this competition since 1957. Villa fans will return to Wembley for their first shot at the FA Cup since Roberto di Matteo scored Chelsea’s winner at the old stadium in 2000. Arsenal are formidable opposition, finishing a whopping 37 points ahead of Villa in the table and qualifying automatically for the Champions League.

Sherwood, an Arsenal fan growing up, is a huge admirer of Wenger, avidly watching his progress since his arrival in English football in 1996.

‘You have to be careful what you wish for because for me he has done a tremendous job,’ he added. ‘If you line up the chairman and director of every club they would all want a Wenger. Manchester City and Chelsea might be an exception because they have gazillions to keep throwing at it.

‘If you want a sustainable business and someone to run it, Arsene Wenger is great model of that.’

Sherwood has done brilliantly to take Aston Villa to the final, and a winner’s medal would mean everything to him, but Arsenal will shade this 2-1, maybe with extra-time again, because they have too many match-winners.– Daily Mail



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Blatter slams US, Uefa

Sepp Blatter has said that the events in the run-up to his re-election as Fifa president “do not smell right.”

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Zurich - Sepp Blatter has said that the events in the run-up to his re-election as Fifa president “do not smell right” and he was the victim of “hate” on the part of European soccer's governing body Uefa.

Blatter implied that it was not just a coincidence that Swiss police arrested seven leading soccer officials, including Fifa vice-president Jeffrey Webb, two days before the Fifa Congress and presidential election.

The seven have been detained pending an extradition request from the United States where they are wanted on corruption charges.

The arrests were connected to a bribery scandal being investigated by U.S., Swiss and other law enforcement agencies that has plunged Fifa into the worst crisis in its 111-year history.

“No one is going to take it off me that it was a simple coincidence (that) this American attack (happened) two days before the elections of Fifa ,” Blatter told the RTS Swiss television channel in an interview.

“And afterwards the reaction of Uefa and (Uefa president Michel) Platini. No one is going to take this out of me...I am not certain, but it's not good.”

“Why didn't they (the police) do this in March when we had the same meeting. At that time, we had less journalists.”

Platini called on Blatter to step down as Uefa president on Thursday and Uefa's member associations said they would vote for his opponent Prince Ali bin Al Hussein.

“The Americans, if they have a financial crime that regards American citizens, must arrest these people there and not in Zurich in the moment we have a congress.”

Russia was awarded the right to host the 2018 World Cup and Qatar the 2022 tournament in a controversial vote in December 2010.

“It is a hate not only by one person of Uefa but by the organisation of Uefa that has not understood that I have been president since 1998,” Blatter said.

“I forgive everyone but I don't forget.” – Reuters



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Chelsea in Falcao talks

Chelsea opened talks with Radamel Falcao and his representatives over the possibility of taking the Colombia striker to Stamford Bridge.

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Chelsea opened talks with Radamel Falcao and his representatives over the possibility of taking the Colombia striker to Stamford Bridge.

Falcao flopped during his season on loan at Manchester United from Monaco, scoring just four goals in 29 appearances before manager Louis van Gaal confirmed last weekend that he had decided not to go ahead with a permanent deal worth £44million.

The 29-year-old’s brief spell at Old Trafford is still believed to have cost United £40m, comprising his £285,000-a-week wages and a £6m loan fee, although it’s understood that Falcao is prepared to accept a significant pay cut to secure his next move.

His agent Jorge Mendes has been offering the former Porto and Atletico Madrid striker around Europe and is said to be increasingly confident that a deal can be done with Chelsea, the newly crowned Barclays Premier League champions.

Mendes is also Jose Mourinho’s agent and has worked closely in the past with those at Stamford Bridge, including Marina Granovskaia, who is the Chelsea director responsible for all transfers.

An initial meeting took place yesterday with representatives from Monaco, who are keen to move Falcao off their wage bill.

Chelsea are in the market for a striker after veteran Ivory Coast international Didier Drogba confirmed his decision to leave the club and continue his career elsewhere.

The champions need back-up for 26-year-old Spain striker Diego Costa, who has missed a number of games this season due to persistent hamstring problems, and Falcao’s camp are adamant he can return to top form after the knee injury that ruled him out of the World Cup last summer.

Before joining United, Falcao was regarded as one of the world’s best front men, scoring 24 times in 54 matches for his country.

Meanwhile, Chelsea are set to miss out on promising Paraguayan youngster Sergio Diaz.

They entertained the Cerro Porteno forward’s father Ismael at last weekend’s final league game at home to Sunderland, but 17-year-old Diaz now seems likely to join Roma. – Daily Mail



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Rooney targets silverware as captain

Manchester United captain Wayne Rooney believes finishing in the Premier League's top four last season was essential for the record 20-times English champions.

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London - Manchester United captain Wayne Rooney believes finishing in the Premier League's top four last season was essential for the record 20-times English champions.

United came fourth in Louis van Gaal's first campaign in charge, improving on their seventh-place finish under David Moyes 12 months ago.

“Top four was a must, really,” Rooney told the United website on Friday.

“We had to get ourselves back into the Champions League and we've managed to do that. Hopefully that will provide a springboard for us to go and fight for silverware next year.”

Rooney said he enjoyed working under former Barcelona, Bayern Munich and Netherlands coach Van Gaal.

“It was exciting really, to have the chance to work under him,” he added. “The record he has got shows that he is a top manager and since he's come in he's been fantastic.

“He had faith in me and made me captain. Seeing the way he works and his different style of management, it's clear why he's been successful.”

England striker Rooney accepted that United started the season slowly as they adjusted to Van Gaal.

“The manager came in with new ideas, a new way to play, new training methods and we did find that difficult at first,” the 29-year-old said.

“The manager told us before we started that we were going to find it difficult and there were also a lot of new players who came in during the summer and it can be difficult for them to bed into a new league and a new team.”

Rooney was happy with his performances last season.

“I think my form's been good,” he said. “I've played in a few different positions and scored a few goals but I could probably have scored more.

“Overall I'm happy with my first season as captain, glad that we're back in the Champions League and I'm looking forward to trying to help the team be successful next season.”

Rooney said he relished the demands of being appointed United skipper.

“It was a huge honour to be given the captaincy, it was something I really wanted to do and hopefully I can be successful,” he explained.

“There was no silverware for us this season. Next season the focus will be on winning some silverware and I hope I can lead the team to doing that.” – Reuters



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Blatter has surprise to improve image

Sepp Blatter says he knows how to create a better image for Fifa and promises to unveil surprising plans.

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Zurich - Sepp Blatter says he knows how to create a better image for Fifa and promises to unveil surprising plans on the first working day of his fifth term as president.

Buoyant after being re-elected at the Congress of soccer's ruling body on Friday, the 79-year-old Swiss told Fifa TV he would have time to work on his plans after the “tragic events” involving officials at his organisation earlier this week.

“This gives me now the time because I was said to be responsible with what's happened. I take the responsibility and we have to build up now a better image of Fifa and I know how to do it,” said Blatter.

“I cannot disclose it now but we will do it as from tomorrow morning. We have a meeting of the executive committee and they will listen to me, they will receive some information or some messages, some of them will be surprised.”

Neither Blatter nor his opponent Prince Ali bin Al Hussein received the necessary two-thirds of the ballot in the first round of the election.

Blatter secured 133 votes against 73 for Prince Ali but the Jordanian then swiftly conceded.

Reflecting on a turbulent week that saw a spate of arrests of high-ranking Fifa officials amid an FBI investigation, Blatter said: “It was a very difficult Congress due to the circumstances of these events.

“I would say also kind of tragic events, Wednesday and Thursday in Zurich and all with the media in the world, what they said about Fifa.”

Blatter said his address to member associations at the Congress “was spoken out of the heart” and he thought everyone would understand how serious he was in wanting to stay in the role and “to bring back this credibility”. – Reuters



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Santos sues Neymar, Barca over transfer

Brazilian soccer club Santos said it filed a suit with Fifa seeking compensation for a breach of contract in the transfer of forward Neymar to FC Barcelona.

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Sao Paulo - Brazilian soccer club Santos said it filed a suit with Fifa seeking compensation for a breach of contract in the transfer of forward Neymar to FC Barcelona, adding to the controversy that led to the resignation of the president of the Spanish champions.

Modesto Roma, the president of Santos, said the team filed the suit against Barcelona, Neymar, his father and marketing firm Neymar Sports e Marketing.

“Santos believes that Barcelona, Neymar and his company violated the transfer contract and therefore, it claims compensation of damages,” Roma said in a statement.

The suit comes as Brazilian authorities began to investigate allegations of corruption in its soccer industry following a U.S. probe that led to the arrests this week of top officials at Fifa.

Barcelona have been accused of tax fraud by Spanish authorities after it came to light the striker's transfer fee, initially disclosed as 57.1 million euros, was in fact closer to 100 million euros.

Sandro Rosell resigned the Barcelona club presidency last year over the allegations. Rosell, his successor Josep Bartomeu and the club will stand trial on charges they committed tax fraud in the signing of Neymar.

The defendants have denied any wrongdoing. – Reuters



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Brazil to review suspicious contracts

The Brazilian Football Confederation will review any contracts under suspicion in charges filed by US prosecutors, the group's president said.

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Rio de Janeiro - The Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF) will review any contracts under suspicion in charges filed by United States prosecutors, the group's president said on Friday and ruled out resigning.

Marco Polo Del Nero, who took over from jailed former CBF chief Jose Maria Marin last year, said he was saddened by the corruption charges against his longtime friend and former boss, but he denied any involvement in bribery schemes laid out in indictments filed in New York on Wednesday.

“I won't resign because I had nothing to do with it,” Del Nero told a press conference at CBF headquarters in Rio de Janeiro. “I knew nothing.”

Del Nero did not specify which contracts would be reviewed. The US Federal Bureau of Investigation found evidence of millions of dollars in bribes paid for a 1996 sponsorship deal between Brazil's national team and a US sportswear company, with details matching a deal with Nike Inc.

Nike has said it is cooperating with the investigation and that the indictment does not accuse the company of crimes.

Del Nero left a gathering of world soccer organization Fifa in Zurich, Switzerland shortly after senior officials, including Marin, were arrested and face extradition to the United States. The Fédération Internationale de Football Association (Fifa) annual congress re-elected Swiss Sepp Blatter, 79, to a fifth term on Friday despite pressure on him to resign.

Del Nero said he had rushed back to Brazil in order to give all necessary explanations to authorities, including federal police who began their own investigation of corruption allegations over decades at the highest levels of Brazilian soccer.

Brazil's constitution forbids extradition of Brazilians.

Del Nero fits the description of one of two unidentified co-conspirators in the indictment, both of whom are described as “high-ranking officials” at CBF, Fifa and a South American soccer association.

Del Nero said he was not one of the unidentified co-conspirators whom the indictment said took bribes in connection with contracts for marketing and broadcast rights.

CBF handed over contracts signed under Marin and his predecessors to federal prosecutors, Del Nero said, in order to show a willingness to collaborate.

Reuters



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Blatter wins Fifa election

Sepp Blatter has won Fifa's presidential election, establishing himself as a politician who can weather any storm.

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Zurich - A new election triumph in the midst of a corruption scandal established Fifa president Sepp Blatter as the politician who can come through any storm.

Unapologetically divisive, Blatter has had to deal with scandal virtually since his first day in office.

And Blatter knows that he still has a long way to go to reach the aim he outlined Friday of getting Fifa in a safe port “where the boats will stop rocking.”

“He sees it all like a marathon. And he is one of the most determined men you will meet,” said one Fifa executive member about the 79-year-old Swiss official.

Blatter, who has been at Fifa for 40 years, 17 as its president, went into the vote revered by some as the beautiful game's 'Jesus' and scorned by others as a rogue clinging to power.

The arrest on Wednesday of seven Fifa officials wanted by US authorities for accepting tens of millions of dollars of bribes seemed like a hammer blow to the veteran sports baron.

But he came through allegations about 'brown envelopes' handed out before his first election in 1998 and the collapse of the ISL sports marketing empire.

 

This week, Blatter's power base in Africa and Asia remained firm. Blatter said people around the world unfairly held him “ultimately responsible” for everything that goes on in football and a fifth term was won.

Blatter believes however that his jealous rivals no longer apply the notion of fair play in their backroom battles with him. He told the Congress he had a “question” about the timing of the arrests, two days before the election.

“In my 40 years at Fifa I have learned to live with hostility and resentment,” he said recently.

“However as the German language proverb puts it: sympathy is free, but envy must be earned.”

There is a lot to envy.

Blatter is in 70th place on the Forbes list of the world's most powerful people -- the only sports leader in the group jostling behind the likes of Vladimir Putin and Barack Obama.

The former amateur footballer -- an old fashioned striker -- joined Fifa in 1975 from a position marketing Swiss watches.

He became secretary general in 1981 and was elected to the top job in 1998 after another controversial president, Brazilian Joao Havelange, finally ended his 24 year reign.

Blatter, who also worked as a public relations official and general secretary of the Swiss ice hockey federation, claims credit for building Fifa's financial muscle -- $1.5 billion in cash reserves.

When he joined Fifa it was in a small Zurich building with about 10 staff. One story says that it was Blatter who went to the bank to get a loan when they could not be paid.

But Fifa made about $5.7 billion (5.3 billion euros) in the four years between the 2010 and 2014 World Cups and now has about 1,400 staff.

The workaholic Blatter says his main achievement has been to make football “universal” -- the first World Cups in Asia (South Korea and Japan in 2002 although the decision was taken before he became president) and Africa (2010) came in his tenure.

Hundreds of millions of dollars are given to national federations and in development grants.

 

But since the day he took office, accusations of skulduggery have never been far away from Fifa. In recent months, he has been fighting allegations about the awarding of the 2018 and 2022 World Cups to Russia and Qatar.

Blatter also told UEFA, the European confederation in 2011 that if elected then it would be his last term.

But the Fifa president has never been implicated in wrongdoing and he has always shrugged off controversy -- apart from one episode in 2006 when he tried to stop a book on Fifa being published in Switzerland,

And so the football world is divided.

Dominican Republic FA president Osiris Guzman last month compared Blatter to Jesus, Winston Churchill, Moses, Abraham Lincoln and Martin Luther King at a Central and North American confederation (CONCACAF) meeting.

Asia and Africa declared strong public support for Blatter against his challenger Prince Ali bin al Hussein, brother of Jordan's monarch.

But Europe has turned against him. UEFA leader Michel Platini says Blatter lied when he said in 2011 that he would stand down this time.

Platini says Blatter made some good decisions “often in difficult circumstances” but that now he cannot face a life of “emptiness” without Fifa's power.

Blatter, married three times and now helped a lot by his daughter Corinne, says he feels fit enough to go on.

Four years ago, Blatter thought it was his last mandate, he told reporters recently. But “times change”, he added.

Why does he keep getting re-elected?

“He has a way of making people dependent or indebted to him, but not in a way that people regret it,” one Blatter confidant told AFP.

“These people know where they are with Blatter.

“They don't know where they will be with someone else.”

AFP



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Blatter charms in last election pitch

Sepp Blatter used all the tricks of the old master he is after 17 years in the job to woo delegates in his last speech before the election.

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Zurich - Incumbent Fifa president Sepp Blatter used all the tricks of the old master he is after 17 years in the job to woo delegates at the Fifa Congress when he made his final election pitch before voting began for a new president on Friday.

The 79-year-old Swiss, who has been president since 1998 and is seeking a fifth term, gave a far more assured delivery than his challenger, 39-year-old Prince Ali Bin Al Hussein of Jordan.

Prince Ali looked more nervous and his speech was a little lighter on substance than Blatter, who got a round of applause when he told the 209 delegates he “did not want to leave them”.

Blatter, who joined Fifa in 1975, said he felt that he had only been at Fifa for a short time and wanted to stay longer.

“What is time anyway. I find that the time I have spent at Fifa is very short,” he said, “The more one ages the more time flies by quickly. I am with you, and I would like to stay with you,” he said to a round of clapping.

Addressing the problems Fifa is facing regarding corruption charges against past and present members of world soccer's governing body, he said these problems needed to be addressed immediately. Change would start tomorrow, he said.

Prince Ali, who spent four years on the Fifa executive committee before leaving it on Friday to be replaced by Shaikh Salman of Bahrain, pledged an open, more democratic Fifa if he won the vote.

“We have heard in recent days, voices which described our Fifa as an avaricious body which feeds on the game that the world loves.

“We have heard questions raised about whether our family is morally bankrupt. And we have heard countless individuals ponder how on earth it could have gotten so bad.

“There are no easy answers. And no blame that can be cast that will wash away the stain that marks us all,” he said.

“Change is not an event. It is a process. It is not about empowering wrongdoing and then demanding to root it out. Our path - and our way to the future - must be lit by the creation of a culture that empowers transparency, inclusively and accountability.

“Our rehabilitation in public perception will only come through the actions and work of all of us, together, pulling in the same direction, for the good of the sport, and for Fifa,” the prince said.

Despite the problems facing the organisation Blatter was the overwhelming favourite to secure victory.

Reuters



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Palestine drops Israel Fifa suspension bid

The Palestine Football Association dropped its motion on Friday asking for Israel to be suspended by Fifa.

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Zurich - The Palestine Football Association (PFA) dropped its motion on Friday asking for Israel to be suspended by Fifa.

The motion had been included on the agenda at the Fifa Congress but PFA president Jibril Rajoub said he had been persuaded to back down. “I decided to drop the suspension but it does not mean that I give up the resistance,” he said.

The PFA has accused Israel of hampering its activities and restricting the movement of players between the Gaza Strip and the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

Israel cites security concerns for the restrictions it imposes and the country's football association has argued that it has no control over security forces.

Soccer's world governing body has been trying to settle the matter for two years and Blatter this month travelled to the region and meet Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas.

“A lot of colleagues who I respect and I appreciate explained to me how it is painful for them to hear in this family about the issue of suspension,” said Rajoub.

Reuters



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Blatter set to win new term

Sepp Blatter is expected to be re-elected, defying growing calls for him to step down in the face of corruption scandals.

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Zurich - World soccer boss Sepp Blatter was expected to be re-elected on Friday, defying growing calls for him to step down in the face of corruption scandals engulfing the sport's governing body.

Addressing delegates at Fifa's annual Congress in Switzerland, where members will later vote to decide the organisation's presidency, Blatter promised more transparency and urged members to remain unified.

Europe, which accounts for all but three of the countries that have ever made it to a World Cup's final match, is particularly keen to banish the 79-year-old Swiss. But Asian, African and Latin American states are expected to rally around him. Each of the 209 countries in Fifa has an equal vote.

On a visit to Berlin, British Prime Minister David Cameron told Blatter to go “the sooner the better”. Chancellor Angela Merkel said the dirty side of soccer must be cleaned up.

In a low key-address that contrasted with a more defiant reaction on Thursday, Blatter said he was “appealing to unity and team spirit so we can move forward together.”

He also sought to distance himself from the scandal, the biggest crisis Fifa has faced in its 111-year history.

U.S. authorities have accused top Fifa figures and sports executives of corruption, while Switzerland is investigating the award of the next World Cup finals to Russia and Qatar.

The scandal widened on Friday when Britain's Serious Fraud Office said it was examining possible corruption at Fifa.

A judge in Argentina has ordered the arrest of three businessmen accused of using bribery to obtain soccer media rights, and the Brazilian Senate moved to open a formal inquiry into soccer bribery allegations.

Fifa takes in billions of dollars in revenue from television marketing rights and sponsorships, making it one of the wealthiest and most powerful sports bodies in the world. It has been dogged by corruption scandals for decades, mostly investigating itself and avoiding scrutiny by criminal courts.

“We cannot watch everyone all the time. We have 1.6 billion people directly or indirectly touched by our game,” Blatter said.

Russia and Qatar deny wrongdoing in their successful bids to host the cup.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has accused the United States of meddling in an effort to prevent Blatter's re-election.

Qatar on Friday issued a further defence of its bid and said it would carry on with plans to stage the event. The decision to host the world's biggest soccer tournament in a small desert state where daytime summer temperatures rarely fall below 40 degrees Celsius startled many in global sport.

Blatter, who has been criticised for not doing enough to combat corruption in Fifa, is being challenged by Jordanian Prince Ali bin Al Hussein for the most powerful job in soccer.

Many of Blatter's opponents have spoken of steps they can take if he secures re-election. English Football Association chairman Greg Dyke said England could back a possible boycott of the 2018 World Cup if Blatter stays in office.

Other European soccer officials have also alluded to the prospect of a boycott, but that is still seen as unlikely given the tournament's importance to the global game.

Some countries that have supported Blatter said they were switching allegiance following the scandal, but the numbers still appeared to favour his re-election.

Most of the developing world in Africa, Asia and parts of Central America and the Caribbean are reluctant to vote for a new Fifa leadership given that the organization guarantees them annual grants and bonus payments in World Cup years.

Kuwait's Sheikh Ahmad Al-Fahad Al-Sabah, one of the most powerful men in world sport, said Blatter is the right man for the job and should be re-elected.

“Fifa should have a leader with a lot of experience,” the Fifa executive committee member told Reuters at Zurich's Baur au Lac hotel, where seven Fifa executives were arrested on Wednesday.

On Friday, New Zealand Football said it would vote for 39-year-old Prince Ali despite a previous unanimous commitment from countries in the Oceania Football Confederation in January to back Blatter. Canada also said it would not support Blatter.

Adding to the pressure on Fifa and Blatter, there are growing concerns from sponsors, many of whom have backed the organisation despite nearly 20 years of corruption allegations.

German sportswear company Adidas said Fifa 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. Credit card company Visa urged immediate reforms and Coca-Cola said the charges had “tarnished the mission and ideals of the Fifa World Cup”.

Reuters



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Fifa to ref Safa dispute

Safa’s eThekwini Region is embroiled in a battle with the national football association that has now been referred to Fifa.

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Durban - The SA Football Association eThekwini Region is embroiled in a battle with the national football association that has now been referred to the Federation Internationale de Football Association’s legal division (Fifa).

In the midst of this battle, Safa eThekwini on Thursday launched two separate high court applications against their bank, FirstRand Bank Limited, to have their bank account unfrozen and almost R300 000 transferred back into this account.

In court papers, Safa eThekwini’s president, Alpha Mchunu, said they learned from their bank branch that this was done on instruction from Safa’s head office.

The bank’s attorney, Jason Michael Smith Incorporated Attorneys, on Thursday confirmed to the Daily News that they were not opposing this application and had complied by re-instating the account and transferring the money.

According to Mchunu’s affidavit in the separate court matters, the bank account was frozen at 11.59pm on April 23 with no communication to indicate why.

The eThekwini region had opened this account in 2006 and Mchunu said it operated without hindrance until April 24.

He said it was only after a meeting with the branch business manager that they learnt the bank was acting on instruction from Safa head office.

Further, after a visit to the bank on May 5 by Mchunu and Safa eThekwini’s vice president, Erik Smith, to try pay their staff salaries, they learned there was no money in the region’s account.

A few days later, and after a back and forth of communication between the bank and Safa eThekwini’s lawyer, they learned the bank transferred the funds into a new account on the instructions of Safa national.

The bank branch manager apparently also said this money was then moved into the bank’s suspense account until the issue of the frozen account was finalised.

Mchunu explained the possible reason their bank account was affected was because of their current dispute with Safa.

He said his branch held a quadrennial congress in August last year and their regional executive committee was elected. This included the election of a branch president (Mchunu), vice-president and general-secretary.

Mchunu said there were no complaints raised during these elections, but Safa sent a letter to their branch stating it did not recognise this quadrennial congress “implying that any decision taken at the congress was null and void”.

He said Safa did not provide any reasons for their decision but said that after a national emergency meeting, it was decided the eThekwini region was not functional and was placed under administration.

The region replied saying this decision was “unknown and unconstitutional”.

With no response, Mchunu said they wrote another letter declaring a dispute with Safa and called on them to “desist from interfering” in their administration and affairs.

However, Mchunu said in January the nationally appointed administrator convened a meeting at the Elangeni Hotel with members of the region and in April convened an “extraordinary congress” electing a parallel regional executive committee.

“What was strange about this was the fact that the members of the regional executive committee were not notified (of this congress) and that Safa called the regional executive committee members to its headquarters in Johannesburg on the same date as the congress,” read Mchunu’s affidavit.

He said they travelled to Johannesburg only to be told when they arrived that the meeting could not proceed.

“Obviously, the idea was to ensure that the regional executive committee was not part and parcel of the extraordinary congress.”

Safa then apparently sent out a letter congratulating the newly elected executive committee and said they would provide the new leadership with support and encouraged stakeholders to do the same.

It was then that the eThekwini region escalated the matter to Fifa and soon afterwards, Mchunu said, their bank account was frozen and the money was transferred out of the account.

Mchunu argued that Safa had no power to instruct a bank on the financial affairs of a regional structure and said the bank should not have taken instruction from a third party.

noelene.barbeau@inl.co.za

Daily News



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Fifa’s culture must change

Fifa's culture must change if it is to reclaim its credibility, a senior official told delegates at its annual congress.

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Zurich - Fifa's culture must change if it is to reclaim its credibility as an open and honest organisation, one of its own senior officials told delegates at its annual congress on Friday.

After Fifa president Sepp Blatter had spoken at the start of proceedings, repeating his nautical analogies about steering the good ship Fifa back to calm waters, Domenico Scala, chairman of the Audit and Compliance Committee, issued a stark warning.

“A change of culture within Fifa is essential if the organisation is to eliminate improper conduct,” the Swiss-Italian told delegates, adding that the change had to be articulated by football's leaders.

Fifa was rocked on Wednesday when seven officials were arrested in an early morning raid in Zurich as part of a joint United States/Swiss investigation into widespread malpractice involving a wide-ranging spread of Fifa activities since the early 1990s.

Scala told delegates that Fifa had restructured many of its internal bodies, with greater controls and limits, in a bid to stop the proliferation of corruption.

He repeated that it was soccer's world governing body who alerted the Swiss authorities last November about possible irregularities regarding the 2018 and 2022 World Cup bids, but agreed more had to be done.

“Fifa has delivered an impressive list of material changes to its governance,” he said.

“However, to enact these changes across the entire football pyramid requires much more than a set of instruments. It requires recognition that the culture needs to change to ensure that changes become part of a new DNA of how the organisation, and the football community, operates.”

Fifa microscope

He said that Fifa was now under the microscope more than ever, adding: “The culture of an organisation, or a community, goes to the individual level, to the ethical and moral beliefs that guide the behaviour of all of us.

“To support the change we need a culture that censures inappropriate behaviour and enforces rules vigorously, fairly and responsively.

“Our culture needs to change through leaders at all levels of the football pyramid.

“It is the leaders' tone at the top that ensures it is embedded at all levels of the organisation. This tone must be honest and stop any malpractice to occur.

“It must be communicated with sincerity in both words and actions.”

He said that Fifa's role in the world was different from what it may have been in the past.

“We all need to live up to our responsibilities to comply with ethical and legal standards, and our own internal rules and regulations, in order to protect the game of football, because Fifa's reputation across the world has changed dramatically.

“Everything is under the microscope. Nothing goes unnoticed so we must try and prevent any wrongdoing or errors.”

Among those arrested or indicted this week were two current Fifa vice-presidents, a former Fifa vice-president and members of its ruling executive committee. – Reuters



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Bomb scare at Fifa congress

Zurich police confirmed they were responding to a bomb alert at the venue where Fifa is hosting its annual congress.

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Zurich police confirmed they were responding to a bomb alert at the venue where Fifa is hosting its widely-watched annual congress, amid a massive corruption scandal rocking world football's governing body.

Zurich police spokeswoman Brigitte Vogt confirmed to that a bomb alert had been received at the venue.

“The police are there,” she said, refusing to provide further details. – AFP



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