Fifa suspends Concacaf’s Sanz

Concacaf general secretary Enrique Sanz and two Congolese officials have been provisionally banned by Fifa's ethics committee.

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Geneva - Concacaf general secretary Enrique Sanz and two soccer officials from Africa were provisionally banned by Fifa's ethics committee on Monday as the fallout continued from last week's arrests before the governing body's annual Congress and presidential election.

Sanz was suspended following investigations by Fifa's own ethics committee and also by United States prosecutors while Congolese Football Association (FECAFOOT) officials Jean Guy Blaise Mayolas and Badji Mombo Wantete have also been banned.

Concacaf president Jeffrey Webb and his associate Costas Takkas were among seven soccer officials arrested in Zurich on Wednesday, two days before Fifa's annual Congress.

They are being detained pending possible extradition to the United States on corruption charges.

In all, 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.

Colombian-born Sanz, who had held the post since 2012, had already been sent on leave by Concacaf last Thursday.

The ethics committee said in a statement the Sanz was suspended “following previous decisions and further clarification, and on the basis of investigations carried out by the investigatory chamber of the Ethics Committee and the latest facts presented by the US Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of New York.”

The Congolese suspensions were “based on the fact that various breaches of the Fifa Code of Ethics appear to have been committed by said official,” the committee said.

Mayolas, FECAFOOT's vice-president, and Wantete, general secretary, were suspended for 90 days pending further investigation, renewable for another 45 days.

In another development, English Football Association board member Heather Rabbatts said she was withdrawing from Fifa's task force against racism and discrimination with immediate effect.

“Like many in the game, I find it unacceptable that so little has been done to reform Fifa,” said Rabbatts in a statement.

“It is clear from the re-election of president Blatter that the challenges facing Fifa and the ongoing damage to the reputation of football's world governing body are bound to continue to overshadow and undermine the credibility of any work in the anti-racism arena and beyond.”

Reuters



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Shakes can learn from Pitso

Bafana Bafana head coach Shakes Mashaba has done the nation no favours by hauling out the hoary old spectre of racism.

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Pressure is synonymous with sport played at the highest level, for players and coaches. So, when afforded the opportunity to play or coach at a national level, expect the heat to be on. It’s never easy – but the pressure’s part of the price to be paid for national selection. Some thrive on it, others buckle under the intense exposure and constant criticism.

And this is why Bafana Bafana head coach Shakes Mashaba has done the nation no favours by hauling out the hoary old spectre of racism after the SA national football side crashed out of the Cosafa Cup last week. In an interview afterwards, Mashaba is quoted as saying: “I understand — it goes with agendas. I want to repeat today, we had a World Cup-winning coach (Carlos Alberto Parreira). We went the same route. I’ve never heard the question, ‘Is he the right coach or not?' He came and he went. I’m going to be rude — I think my colour is a problem here. That’s what I’m going to say.”

Contained within that statement is so much of what is wrong with this country. It’s that victim mentality we refuse to shake. We are never to blame. It’s never our fault. And we certainly never take responsibility for our actions. Accusing fingers are always pointed elsewhere…

It was Steve Biko, the legendary anti-apartheid activist and founder of the Black Consciousness Movement, who, in his seminal book ‘I write what I like’, said: “Freedom is the ability to define oneself with one’s possibilities held back not by the power of other people. The most potent weapon in the hands of the oppressor is the mind of the oppressed. If one is free at heart, no man-made chains can bind one to servitude.”

There’s some valuable advice for Mashaba in those powerful words, especially as he occupies a place of national importance. He is a black role model to millions of youngsters rapidly – now 21 years after the first democratic election – emerging from the shadow of oppression. They have the world at their feet. Opportunities are limitless. And, yet, Mashaba insists on feeding young people desperate for direction and leadership a diet of victimhood and lack of responsibility. His mind, as Biko would say, is still oppressed. We expect more of people in positions of power and influence.

Say what you like about Mamelodi Sundowns coach Pitso Mosimane. He’s always portrayed as a little arrogant… But that’s just the point. Mosimane’s comfortable in his skin. He’s confident with how he goes about his work. He doesn’t have to find excuses for failure. He’s a proud, independent black role model… Someone Biko had in mind when he wrote: “Blacks are tired of standing at the touchlines to witness a game they should be playing. They want to do things for themselves and all by themselves.”

Yes, South Africa still labours under the yoke of a system of institutional racism that painfully eroded the pride and dignity of the majority of its population. Yes, the immense inequality of it all still festers and its dangerous tentacles still permeate much of everyday life in this new, improved South Africa we are desperately trying to build.

But, if we are to create black identities of confidence, pride, responsibility and financial strength, we cannot do so with attitudes like Mashaba’s. We need to send a message that to be strong and successful, you cannot be a victim of your environment, or your past. We are all bigger than that… We have to find strength within ourselves to change whatever circumstances we find ourselves in.

If not, we will be victims for the rest of our lives. And, the more we remain victims, the more apartheid wins. - Cape Times



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SA deserves answers on World Cup: DA

Democratic Alliance presses Safa for clarity on alleged corruption surrounding the 2010 World Cup

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Cape Town - The Democratic Alliance (DA) on Monday pressed the South African Football Association (Safa) for clarity on on alleged corruption surrounding the 2010 World Cup.

This came after President of Safa Danny Jordaan confirmed on Sunday that an amount of R120 million ($10 million US) was indeed paid to the Confederation of North, Central America and Caribbean Association Football (Concacaf), but claimed that this money was to support their football development fund and was not a bribe.

“The revelations of alleged corruption do not discount South Africa’s achievement of hosting a very successful World Cup (in 2010). However South Africans deserve to know if money changed hands improperly in our name,” said Solomon Malatsi, DA Shadow Minister of Sport and Recreation.

He said the DA will be asking a series of Parliamentary questions to get clarity on the issue.

South Africans want to know why the $10 million was paid to the Concacaf in 2008 by the Local Organising Committee (LOC) and which South African representative authorised the payment from Fifa to Concacaf on behalf of South Africa, Malatsi said.

Other questions include:

Why was this money allocated to Concacaf out of all the world football confederations, including the Confederation of African Football?

“We will also be submitting questions to get clarity on which members of the LOC made trips to Paris in 2004. This could establish the identity of the ‘high-ranking South African bid committee official’ who handed over a briefcase full of cash to a family member of Jack Warner, at a Paris hotel as a bribe to secure his vote for South Africa to host the World Cup in 2010,” Malatsi said.

The 2010 World Cup is, and will remain, one of South Africa’s shining achievements but it is vitally important to interrogate if corruption was involved in this event, he said.

Sports and Recreation Minister Fikile Mbalula last week dismissed allegations that the government paid bribes to host of the Soccer World Cup 2010.

South Africa has been sucked in the Fifa scandal which led to the arrest of seven people in Switzerland last Wednesday.

It had been alleged that South Africa paid 10 million dollars in kickbacks for hosting the event.

Mbalula said his department is yet to receive a copy of the allegations from the United States and promised to do everything in its powers to unearth any shenanigans.

“South Africa’s Department of Sports and Recreation hereby indicates that all funding by government was transferred via the National Treasury to the national Department of Sports and Recreation and that no such amount was paid by the department Sport and Recreation and the government of SA to any individual,” he said.

ANA-Xinhua



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Uefa plotting breakaway ‘World Cup’

A European Championship every two years with invites to football countries outside Europe is one of Uefa's proposals.

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A European Championship every two years with invites to other big football countries outside Europe is one of the proposals Uefa are putting forward in the fight against Fifa corruption.

The initiative would see all the top-ranked teams in world football take part in a competition that would not be under the jurisdiction of Sepp Blatter’s administration.

Blatter and Fifa have been tarnished almost beyond repair after the arrest of seven of the body’s officials and the indictment of 18 people on £100million worth of fraud, bribery and kick-back charges in a United States-led investigation.

The radical plan was proposed by Denmark’s Uefa ExCo member Allan Hansen — one of the powerbrokers keen on Uefa breaking away from Fifa — at a meeting of Europe’s 54 territories and ahead of 79-year-old Blatter’s re-election for a fifth term as president last Friday.

And the fact that Blatter defeated his rival for the presidency, Prince Ali of Jordan, despite the latter having more than half of South America’s CONMEBOL confederation voting for him, gives extra credence to Hansen’s plan.

Since the World Cup was first played for in 1930, the winner has always come from Europe or Latin America, whose football hotbeds of Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay, Chile and Colombia might all take up a Uefa invite.

Hansen believes his plan would be attractive enough to take significant sponsorship and broadcasting rights — Fifa’s two important revenue streams — away from Zurich until Fifa reforms itself to the extent that Uefa feel they can take part in a global World Cup once again.

This will not happen until Blatter is deposed but the belief is growing that it will occur a long time before the finish of his latest four-year tenure.

The FA are one of the national associations committed to making that change happen from FA president Prince William — who gave unprecedented royal support to the FA’s stance in his speech before the FA Cup final between Arsenal and Aston Villa on Saturday — to rank and file councillors.

FA chairman Greg Dyke believes it is only a matter of time before the FBI or Swiss police, who have launched a criminal investigation into the campaigns to host the 2018 and 2022 World Cups, catch up with Blatter.

Dyke spoke out after US Attorney General Loretta Lynch called the arrest of Fifa officials last Wednesday and the indictment of 18 people connected with football ‘only the beginning’.

He has called on Uefa president Michel Platini, who made a personal plea for Blatter to quit on the eve of the election, to lead a co-ordinated opposition to the Fifa president.

Uefa are holding a special ExCo meeting and a discussion involving all their 54 countries in Berlin later this week to plot their next move ahead of the Champions League final between Barcelona and Juventus on Saturday.

Dyke said: ‘It does require real leadership and Mr Platini has got to stand up. He stood up and criticised Sepp Blatter, he has now got to lead the opposition. There would certainly be us, the Dutch and the Germans demanding change.

‘There’s absolutely no point England saying we are not going to take part in the World Cup because our fans and players would not thank us for it and it would have no impact. It would just be gesture politics. But if we could get 10 large countries to do the same thing, then I think we could have a big impact.

‘The FBI and the Swiss authorities are much more important than the election. Blatter was always going to win that vote, it was just by how many.’

Lord Macdonald, the former Director of Public Prosecutions, expects Blatter to be questioned as part of the probe by the FBI and other law-enforcement agencies — possibly under arrest.

‘The real threat to Mr Blatter does not come from the Swiss. It comes from the US, their anti-racketeering legislation and co-operating accomplices,’ he said.

‘We may be sure that somewhere in the hallowed halls of the Justice Department in Washington, there is an organisation chart fixed to a wall with a photo of Fifa’s president pinned at the top.

‘This case threatens Mr Blatter because the scale of the corruption is so vast — and the contracts so huge — that prosecutors will not believe that wrongdoing is limited to a few rotten apples operating out of sight of an innocent president. Put bluntly, you cannot buy a World Cup in secret.’

Brazen Blatter insists he has no fear of arrest because he has done nothing wrong. He blames Fifa’s chronic troubles on a Western conspiracy led by British media and the Americans, who are upset at losing the 2022 vote to Qatar.

But the Swiss media, turning on Blatter for the first time last week, is hugely relevant along with the Swiss authorities mounting their own investigation into those two murky World Cup host awards to Russia 2018 and Qatar 2022.

Meanwhile, Uefa’s strength around the Fifa ExCo table, despite David Gill not taking up his place because he refuses to serve on any committee chaired by Blatter, was shown at the first meeting of the president’s fifth term.

Blatter had threatened to change the World Cup continent allocations to the detriment of Uefa, who were adamant they would not give up any of their 13 places. They did not lose any and, in fact, will have 14 representatives in Russia because the host country remains a separate entity, rather than having to come from a confederation’s allocation. – Daily Mail



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Blatter disgraced Fifa, says Warner

No one has brought more shame on Fifa than its president Sepp Blatter, former vice president Jack Warner said.

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Berlin - No one has brought more shame on Fifa than its president Sepp Blatter and he should step aside for a younger leader, the organisation's former vice president Jack Warner has said.

Warner, who has been accused of soliciting bribes as part of a US-led corruption case against senior soccer officials, left jail in Trinidad and Tobago on Thursday after he was granted bail, according to local media.

“Why are there no investigations in Asia, or in Europe?” Warner told German magazine Stern in an interview released on Monday.

“Why are there no investigations into Sepp Blatter? No other person has brought so much shame and disgrace on Fifa.”

Warner is among nine Fifa officials and five corporate executives charged by the US Department of Justice with running a criminal enterprise that involved more than $150 million in bribes.

Asked by Stern if he thought 79-year-old Blatter was corrupt, Warner said: “I only know this: he was elected Fifa boss five times in succession. Is he corrupt? I don't know.

“If I were his age... I'd retire and pass the presidency of Fifa on to someone younger. But everyone has different ideas of what to do with their lives.”

Once one of the most powerful men in Fifa, Warner surrendered to authorities on Wednesday after US officials sought his extradition.

Prosecutors say Warner solicited bribes worth $10 million from the South African government for them to host the 2010 World Cup and diverted bribes for personal use.

Warner issued a statement protesting his innocence on Wednesday as Fifa reeled from police raids in Switzerland and the US and a second investigation opened by the Swiss authorities into the awarding of the 2018 and 2022 World Cups.

Warner, who faces 12 charges, including racketeering and bribery, said on Wednesday he was innocent and noted he had left soccer activities four years ago.

The 72-year-old resigned from Fifa after ethics investigations were begun into a meeting he held with former Asian Football Confederation chief Mohammed Bin Hammam where payments were made to Caribbean soccer officials ahead of the election for Fifa president in 2011.

Reuters



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Time Wenger takes a gamble

If Arsene Wenger wants to seriously challenge for the Premier League title, he may have to re-look his frugal spending policy.

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In the doctor’s office, there are two types of people. There are those who get prescribed a pill and are happy with that. They take it home, down the dose and think recovery is on the way.

Then there are the others, the pessimists. They take the same tablets but without the confidence. They fish the pamphlet out of the packet, read about the side-effects.

They consider not just the cure, but its downside. Suppose the pill does something worse. May cause headaches, nausea, dizziness, skin irritation. Sounds serious. Sounds worse than what I’ve got. What if this cure makes me ill?

One imagines Arsene Wenger may be a little like that. Asked about next season and the prospect of recruitment, he talked most animatedly about cohesion. He thinks it is the most underrated quality of a successful team.

And what would impact on Arsenal’s cohesion? Buying. Not all buying, clearly. Hurried buying, thoughtless buying, expensive buying, buying without due care and attention. Wenger’s supporters think it is this attitude that sets him apart, the detail, his resistance to just taking Stan Kroenke’s chequebook and wafting it beneath the nose of the latest fashionable name from La Liga.

His critics feel this is the caution that holds Arsenal back. Wenger’s belief he has the prettiest wife at home, that only the most beautiful can replace the batch of Arsenal players who on Saturday retained the FA Cup at Wembley. Except Arsenal do not compete for the most beautiful. Wenger says Gareth Bale is beyond him, Paul Pogba, too.

‘I’m not against spending money,’ he said, ‘but I want a good rapport between price and quality.’

And cohesion, obviously. It is as if he wants a guarantee that any new signing will not disrupt what already exists. And no guarantee can be given.

Yet, to see Arsenal in full flow against Aston Villa at Wembley was to ponder the words of Louis van Gaal and Jose Mourinho. ‘Arsenal may have a better team than Chelsea,’ Van Gaal said, while Mourinho claimed Arsenal were four players short of producing a team to match the Invincibles.

They are wind-up merchants, the rival managers, obviously. Any praise directed at Wenger is invariably a back-handed compliment. Arsenal are so good, runs the logic, why haven’t they won more?

Yet Wenger must occasionally ask the same question — certainly on Saturday when Arsenal reduced Aston Villa to the most abject FA Cup final appearance since Millwall against Manchester United in 2004.

Arsenal finished third in the League but did not look it at Wembley. They looked like a team that should be contending for the title — and will next season, if Wenger is prepared to risk a little of his precious cohesion.

He did it with Mesut Ozil, one of the outstanding players of this match and getting better with each season in the English game, and with Alexis Sanchez, arguably the buy of the season and now scorer of one of the truly great Wembley goals. Maybe he should back his judgment more often.

Arsenal might not be willing to pay £80million for Bale, but they are comfortable working with the band below. Might Karim Benzema, Sami Khedira or Arturo Vidal of Juventus hold the key to the next stage of their development?

‘We are third in the league but I feel we have moved forward,’ said Wenger. ‘People think it is always about buying but, as well, it’s about cohesion. That’s a very important factor, usually underrated by people. We have to keep our cohesion, but also add quality, and the quality we need is in short numbers, that is for sure.

‘Paul Pogba, Gareth Bale, we have not spent that kind of money. People forget that for years we had to sell our best players. That was a very difficult period. I know people don’t want to know about it, but that was the reality. Since we buy again we slowly come back to a more competitive level.

‘But those players cost you stratospheric numbers and we wouldn’t be involved in that, for financial reasons. I have not made a clear decision on what we will do but, anyway, I am more focused on quality. Today, Santi Cazorla has been voted man of the match, but he did not cost £150m. Francis Coquelin has been one of the best players on the pitch, and what did he cost? You have to look at the real quality of people and players.’

True. Yet Sanchez and Ozil were magnificent, too — and they were the players who broke the mould of Wenger’s spending. Nobody is arguing that he should go wild this summer, but Saturday was as frustrating as it was exciting for Arsenal because it showed what the club could be. When Per Mertesacker scored the third after 62 minutes, Villa manager Tim Sherwood must have feared his team could have gone for six, as happened at Southampton. Arsenal’s last two goals were scored against a defence who had close to given up.

Were it not for Shay Given in goal, and a quite wonderful block by Kieran Richardson, this could have been the biggest winning margin in an FA Cup final in more than a century.

Wenger says he will have a better idea of where Arsenal stand when they face Chelsea in the Community Shield on August 2. He expects every big club around them to buy.

Yet that, alone, cannot be an excuse for stagnation or, worse, a retreat. Arsenal have a 60,000-capacity stadium charging the highest prices in the history of football.

And a better team than Chelsea? Not right now, but it could be. Arsenal have to remember that, on occasions, the drugs do work. – Daily Mail



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Toure ‘definitely’ staying at City

Yaya Toure has cooled speculation surrounding his future at Manchester City, the Ivorian saying he will “definitely stay”.

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London - Midfield lynchpin Yaya Toure has cooled speculation surrounding his future at Manchester City, the Ivorian saying he will “definitely stay” because he wants to win more silverware at the Premier League club.

Toure's agent Dimitri Seluk said last month his client was “90 percent certain” to leave the Etihad Stadium but backtracked last week and suggested the player would remain in Manchester following a meeting with the club.

The 32-year-old Toure, who joined City in 2010 and played a dominant role in two Premier League title wins in 2012 and 2014, endured a frustrating season after suffering a loss of form as City failed to claim any trophies.

“I will definitely stay. The fans don't have to be worried,” Toure told the Manchester Evening News.

“My target this year is to try to do everything possible to make this team improve well.

“I am sure with my experience, (and) maybe I hope, with the players coming in a couple of weeks, a couple of months, definitely it is going to be a strong City next year.”

City finished runners-up to Chelsea in the Premier League and were knocked out of the Champions League by treble-chasing finalists Barcelona in the round of 16.

Toure is targeting an improvement of his own form as well as European success in the Champions League next season.

“I will start working again, because last season there has been a lot of football for me,” he said. “Now is a good time to rest and next season you are going to see the top one.

“What I want for the fans is the Champions League. I will do everything that's possible.” – Reuters



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Chiefs, Baxter set to part ways?

Kaizer Chiefs are set to put an end to all the rumour and speculation currently surrounding the popular Soweto club.

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Kaizer Chiefs are set to put an end to all the rumour and speculation currently surrounding the popular Soweto club. The Premier Soccer League (PSL) champions will hold a press conference tomorrow, at which it will reveal the future of coach Stuart Baxter and top player Itumeleng Khune.

As things stand, it looks as if, in all likelihood, both will depart Chiefs.

After Baxter’s fantastic three-season achievement at the Joburg club, winning two PSL titles and two Cup trophies – the Nedbank Cup and MTN8 – he is in great demand. The 61-year-old Brit is weighing up numerous offers from overseas, the latest being Turkish side Genclerbirligi, and he is also the SA Football Association’s top candidate for the post of technical director of football.

With Baxter set to leave, Steve Komphela is the favourite for the vacant Amakhosi coaching job. Currently at the helm of Maritzburg United, Komphela, a former Chiefs defender, and an ex-Bafana coach, is said to be the man highest on Chiefs’ want-list.

And that puts in danger the future of current assistant-coach Doctor Khumalo. Having spent quite some time as an assistant, Khumalo probably now feels he is ready to make the step up as a head coach. And, if he doesn’t get the Chiefs job, he’s likely to move on too.

The champion Gauteng club is also not prepared to concede to Khune’s financial demands. The goalkeeper’s contract ends on June 30, but Chiefs insist they cannot afford the numbers the player has put on the table for a renewal. As such, Mamelodi Sundowns, with the buying power of mining magnate Patrice Motsepe behind them, are the only club who can afford Khune – and that is likely to be his destination next season.

Chiefs believe that, in goalkeepers Brilliant Khuzwayo and Reyaad Pieterse, they have two young custodians good enough for the rigours of the PSL.

There is also some doubt as to whether Amakhosi can retain their two central defenders, Tefu Mashamaite and Erick Mathoho.

Mashamaite is the current PSL Player of the Season and his contract comes to an end this month. He is currently in negotiation with the club.

Mathoho has overseas offers to consider and he, too, could soon be on his way.

While Chiefs will clarify everything tomorrow, one thing is clear: The PSL champions will have to rebuild everything for next season. And that’s good news for the rest of the league… at least it gives them a better chance of trying to win the PSL title.



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Sherwood issues ultimatum to Benteke

Tim Sherwood has told Christian Benteke that he must sign a new contract this summer, with a number of Premier League clubs interested in the Belgian.

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The Aston Villa manager, Tim Sherwood, has told Christian Benteke that he must sign a new contract this summer, with a number of Premier League clubs, including Liverpool and Tottenham Hotspur, interested in the Belgian.

Benteke, 24, has two years left on his current deal, which includes a £32.5m buyout clause, and Sherwood is firm that if any club wanted to sign him this summer they would have to meet that asking price. Well beaten in Saturday's FA Cup final, Villa want to end the uncertainty over the striker's future as a number of players are poised to leave.

On Benteke, Sherwood said: “I think it is right to talk to him about the speculation and we need to put it to bed. He needs to sign a new contract. We need to offer him a new contract, which the club are prepared to do, and he needs to sign it. When he does, we know he's not going anywhere. We know he's happy. It's out there - I put it out there - that he's got a buyout clause. If no one meets that, he won't be going anywhere.”

Sherwood said that he has already told a number of players that they will not figure prominently in his plans next season and will be allowed to leave if the club can find better options. He confirmed that he had asked Ron Vlaar to stay and hoped the club could sign on-loan Manchester United midfielder Tom Cleverley permanently.

“I have told Tom I want him to stay. We will have a chat with his representatives and see if we can get a deal done. I would have thought Tom would have had a few options. He's enjoyed his time here. I think he has flourished and it is up to him.”

After what was expected to be Randy Lerner's last visit to England to support the club he bought in 2006, Sherwood said that he still had scope to make signings. “We can spend if I can justify it to the owners. I need to get to work. You can't wait around or you miss your targets.” – The Independent



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Blatter’s daughter blames ‘dark forces’

Sepp Blatter’s daughter issued a staunch defence of her father, claiming he was the victim of a conspiracy to unseat him.

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Within hours of his tempestuous appointment to serve a fifth term as Fifa president, Sepp Blatter was to be found on a sofa with a World Cup trophy in the background posing for photographs with his family.

The importance of the close-knit Team Blatter to bolstering the 79-year-old's 17-year reign at the Zurich headquarters of football's world governing body was underlined yesterday when his daughter issued a staunch defence of her father, claiming he was the victim of a conspiracy to unseat him.

Corinne Blatter, his only child, insisted that it was not in her father's character to accept or offer bribes and suggested that the storm over alleged corruption would blow over in “two or three weeks”.

Mr Blatter has not been directly implicated in the corruption scandal but is facing demands to stand down after the unveiling by the FBI of allegations of industrial-scale bribery in the organisation during his tenure. Mrs Blatter, 54, who runs an English school in Mr Blatter's hometown of Visp, softened her father's insistence this weekend that his troubles were down to grudges borne by the American authorities and the English press.

Asked about who she thought was behind the crisis at Fifa, she told the BBC: “I wouldn't say from the Americans and the British, but certainly people working behind the scenes… I don't know if you want to call them dark forces but I mean they really tried hard.” The mother-of-one said he had been “deeply affected” by the criticism of recent days.

Mr Blatter claimed yesterday that Uefa president Michel Platini had sought to persuade him to resign on Thursday, suggesting they discuss matters over a whisky. Mr Platini, who called for Mr Blatter to be voted out of office, is claimed to have told the Fifa president: “You can have a giant party and you can keep your office here at Fifa.”

In a separate interview with Swiss newspaper Blick, Mrs Blatter said: “If he is attacked personally, then that hurts him very much. The angry words of Mr Platini have particularly hit him.”

It was reported in South Africa yesterday that the country had paid $10m (£6.5m) to the football body led by Jack Warner, a key figure in the corruption allegations, though he denies any wrongdoing. Mr Blatter denied this weekend that he had any links with a $10m payment apparently authorised in Zurich. – The Independent



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Wilshere’s abusive ant-Spurs chant

Jack Wilshere celebrated Arsenal’s FA Cup triumph with another string of expletives aimed at Tottenham after an all-night party.

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Jack Wilshere celebrated Arsenal’s FA Cup triumph with another string of expletives aimed at Tottenham after an all-night party with his team-mates.

Wilshere sang anti-Spurs songs from the balcony last season following the open-top bus parade in north London to markArsenal’s 3-2 victory over Hull City in the FA Cup final. And, despite a warning from the club about his behaviour, the midfielder heaped more embarrassment on Arsenal as he celebrated their historic 12th FA Cup, sealed by a 4-0 win over Aston Villa .

Young children, along with Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger, were present at the celebrations as Wilshere chanted: ‘What do we think of Tottenham?’ before adding: ‘And what do we think of s***?’

Wilshere then continued with another anti-Tottenham song riddled with expletives before the microphone was snatched from him.The midfielder was pictured leaving a nightclub in the early hours before going on to Arsenal’s victory parade in the streets of Islington.

An Arsenal spokesman said: ‘Like any broadcast, we apologised when there was swearing.’

The 23-year-old, a second-half substitute in the final against Villa, insists his team can go on to win the Barclays Premier League title next season.

He said: ‘It’s different to last year when we had the pressure of no trophy for 10 years and it was almost as if we had to win it.

‘Of course we had to win the Cup as well but we could enjoy it more this time and take in the atmosphere and that’s what we did.

‘It was a comfortable victory and that was because we’d won the trophy last year.

‘There wasn’t so much pressure and we knew if we matched their intensity we’d have the quality to win the game. We did that. The big one for us is the Premier League. We’ve progressed this year, we’ve finished third and got automatic Champions League qualification.‘Next year we feel we can really push Chelsea, (Manchester) City and United for the title.

‘The competition is ferocious and it’s going to be the same next season — it’s part of football. I remember coming away from games like United away thinking “We dominated that game” but we never really got anything for it. So I think this year was a big thing.

‘We’ve got players who can hurt teams with (Alexis) Sanchez and (Mesut) Ozil, world-class players we’ve added in the last two seasons.‘Ozil has had a great season, he’s settled, and Sanchez’s first season was unheard of. So we’re looking forward to next season.’ – Daily Mail



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SA’s 2010 huge ticket sales shock

The controversy swirling around SA’s 2010 World Cup has deepened further with fresh allegations levelled at Fifa.

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Johannesburg - The controversy swirling around South Africa’s 2010 World Cup has deepened further with fresh claims that Fifa allegedly identified serious issues with South Africa’s bid two weeks before choosing it as the host nation – but did nothing about it.

This was because football’s world governing body was more concerned with putting on a good “TV show” when it named South Africa as the winning bidder, according to a new report, which also says the tournament has left the country with “an oversupply of underutilised stadiums”.

The report says South Africans are still shouldering the financial burden of the tournament years down the line.

The research, published by a British academic days before nine Fifa officials were charged with decades of corruption, appears to undermine the idea that the organisation has been a positive force in Africa – a factor that played a key part in Sepp Blatter’s re-election as president, on Friday.

The disclosure comes as South Africa is still reeling from a $10 million scandal that has all but tarnished the country’s acclaimed status as a credible 2010 World Cup bid winner.

Danny Jordaan, who spearheaded South Africa’s 2010 bid, refused to comment on the report on Sunday. He referred enquiries to Sports Minister Fikile Mbalula, who also declined to comment.

“I am not going to comment on Fifa,” Mbalula said on Sunday.

The latest twist came as pressure mounted on Fifa president Sepp Blatter to quit over the corruption scandal. Britain has called on Europe to consider boycotting future World Cups, if Blatter doesn’t quit.

John Whittingdale, the British government minister with overall responsibility for sport, renewed calls for Blatter to step aside on Sunday, saying all options should be considered when it came to pressurising him to resign, including boycotting the World Cup.

Blatter has, meanwhile, downplayed the impact of the scandal on one of the world’s most powerful sports bodies.

The report found that only 15 days before the tournament was awarded to South Africa in 2004, Fifa officials noted that the estimated budgets put forward by the bid committee were wildly optimistic.

South Africa claimed that the cost per seat of each new stadium would work out at $636 (R7 727 at today’s exchange rates) – whereas rival bidders Egypt, Libya, Morocco and Tunisia priced theirs at between $1 818 and $2 691.

Fifa also appeared to realise that South Africa would not raise as much money through the sale of tickets as it estimated.

“In the inspection group’s opinion, the total amount of ticket sales revenue ($467 459 448) will be very difficult to reach,” they said. Ticket sales reached only $300m.

The paper, published in the journal Project Management, was produced by Dr Eamonn Molloy, who has spent 10 years studying the impact of “mega projects” on countries that hold sports tournaments.

“There was a bit of a Field of Dreams belief which is that if you build stadiums people will come and use them – but history shows us that virtually never happens,” Molloy said.

“Fifa was quite happy to proceed knowing that (South Africa’s) bid book proposals were way too optimistic.”

According to its accounts, Fifa made $2.35bn from the tournament, mainly from selling television rights, while South Africa spent $4.9bn – two-thirds of which was spent on building the stadiums.

Molloy added that even if the immense corruption allegations levelled at Fifa were put to one side, the organisation’s business model appeared to be “profoundly flawed” and did not work in the interests of developing countries. “It invests a little bit and extracts 10 times as much – I don’t think that’s a good deal,” he said.

“Fifa’s strategy is clearly profit-maximising and exploitative.

“Any claims that it has a net benefit in any of the countries where it hosts the World Cup – there’s no evidence to suggest that. There’s strong evidence to suggest it ends up costing those countries significant amounts of money.”

In South Africa, many of the stadiums left behind were “overdesigned” and contained expensive equipment which had to be maintained at taxpayers’ expense, even though some of it was never used.

Meanwhile, Sports Minister Fikile Mbalula again distanced the government from the reported $10m bribe paid to secure the 2010 World Cup bid. He said whatever money that might have changed hands between South African and Fifa officials – whether in the form of a bribe or not – was not public money.

“We remain concerned at the ongoing media speculation which only plays into the hands of those whose objective it is to tarnish the good name and integrity of our country. We reject these falsehoods with the contempt they deserve,” Mbalula said on Sunday.

But he contradicted Jordaan, who admitted to the $10m, which he said was paid to the Confederation of North, Central American and Caribbean Association Football in 2008, as South Africa’s contribution towards their football development fund.

Independent on Sunday and The Star



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Mbalula’s statement on Fifa saga

Fikile Mbalula’s remarks on allegations that South Africa paid a bribe to secure World Cup hosting rights.

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Cape Town - In the wake of the latest media revelations, South Africa’s Minister of Sport and Recreation Fikile Mbalula on Sunday issued a statement on the allegations that the government of South Africa paid a bribe to secure the rights to host the 2010 Fifa Football World Cup following remarks attributed to Safa President Dr Danny Jordaan.

“We remain concerned at the ongoing media speculation which only plays into the hands of those whose objective is to tarnish the good name and integrity of our country. We reject these falsehoods with the contempt they deserve. As a government and people of South Africa we are enjoined to combat such propaganda against our country.

“Accordingly, we appeal to all our people, media included, to desist from speculating on names of individuals who may or not be implicated in the allegations. Equally, we call on all those involved in the bidding and hosting of the 2010 Fifa World Cup to avoid expressing comments that can only play into the hands of those who seek to perpetuate negative stereotypes against South Africa in particular and Africa in general.

“Whatever the motive of those involved, nothing can detract from the fact that the hosting by South Africa of the 2010 Fifa World Cup, the first on the African continent, remains one of the most beautiful spectacle and successful tournament the world has ever witnessed in Fifa’s history.

“We frown upon any insinuations made in the indictment by the US authorities that suggest that the government of South Africa or any of its citizens have been involved in any wrongdoing without substantiating the allegations, let alone naming the alleged co-conspirators. We refuse to allow the reputation of our republic to be tarnished unduly without affording the republic and its citizens an opportunity to respond to any allegations made. We view this as an attack on our sovereignty.

“We wish to reiterate our earlier communicated position that the government of the Republic of South Africa and the Local Organising Committee have not expended any public funds in the amount of $10 million towards bribery of anyone to secure the rights to host the 2010 Fifa World Cup. Any inferences drawn from the statements attributed to Dr Danny Jordaan which seeks to insinuate that our position is contradictory is therefore not only misleading but mischievous at best. We reaffirm our position that no public funds have been utilised to pay any bribe or to commit any unlawful acts.”

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Fifa probe: Blatter may be quizzed

Fifa boss Sepp Blatter may be questioned as the corruption investigation continues.

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Zurich - South Africa denied that a $10-million payment it made in 2008 was in any way a bribe to Fifa for the 2010 World Cup, in the latest twist to the massive corruption scandal engulfing world football's governing body.

Two separate investigations are being carried out by American and Swiss authorities for alleged rampant and long-running corruption within Fifa, with several top officials arrested and accused by US investigators of taking tens of millions of dollars in bribes.

Several top football officials have been questioned by Swiss investigators, and Fifa President Sepp Blatter too could be quizzed “in the future if needed”, according to Swiss prosecutors.

The biggest-ever scandal to rock world football erupted on Wednesday when seven Fifa officials were arrested in their Zurich hotel as part of the US probe.

They and seven others were charged for racketeering, wire fraud and money laundering conspiracies that ran from 1991 to the present day, and accused of taking or conspiring to solicit $150-million in bribes.

An example cited in US papers was the 2004 selection process for the 2010 World Cup, with investigators claiming that South African officials paid $10-million to former Fifa vice-president Jack Warner - one of the 14 indicted - in order to secure the bid.

South African Football Association President Danny Jordaan confirmed on Sunday that the organising committee made a payment of $10-million in 2008, but insisted this was not a bribe.

“I haven't paid a bribe or taken a bribe from anybody in my life. We don't know who is mentioned there (in the indictment),” Jordaan told the Sunday Independent.

“How could we have paid a bribe for votes four years after we had won the bid?” Jordaan said, adding that the payment was South Africa's contribution towards the Confederation of North, Central American and Caribbean Association Football's (CONCACAF) football development fund.

Warner, who was then also president of CONCACAF, has blasted the US, saying charges against him and other Fifa officials “stems from a lost (American) bid to host the 2022 World Cup”.

The 72-year-old surrendered to police in Trinidad and Tobago on Wednesday, but has maintained his innocence all week. He was released after paying $400 000 in bail.

Swiss authorities were meanwhile running a parallel probe into allegations of bribery in the process over the controversial awarding of the 2018 and 2022 World Cups to Russia and Qatar.

A Swiss justice spokesman said top football officials were interviewed as “people who could provide information”, without giving further details.

He added that Blatter “will not be questioned at this stage”.

“If necessary, he will be in the future.”

Seven senior Fifa officials are believed to be among those heard by investigators - Confederation of African Football (CAF) president Issa Hayatou (Cameroon), Angel Miguel Villar Llona (Spain), Michel D'Hooge (Belgium), Senes Erzik (Turkey), Marios Lefkaritis (Cyprus), Hany Abo Rida (Egypt) and Vitaly Mutko (Russia).

Two other current members of the Executive Committee who voted in 2010 for Qatar and Russia live in Switzerland - Blatter and Uefa President Michel Platini.

Swiss investigators were believed to be prioritising those living abroad as they were in town for a Fifa meeting on Saturday.

Blatter, who was re-elected to a fifth term as Fifa president on Friday despite the scandal, has accused US investigators of using the arrests as an attempt “interfere with the congress” that returned him to power.

The 79-year-old Swiss has argued that while many hold him “ultimately responsible for (the) actions and reputation of the global football community”, he “cannot monitor everyone all of the time”.

In an interview published on Sunday by Swiss tabloid SonntagsBlick, Blatter said he “has been treated with zero respect” in the last few days.

He also said he was “very disappointed” by Platini, who has openly asked him to step down from the top job.

Platini has said Uefa will review relations with Fifa on June 6, while English Football Association chief Greg Dyke indicated England could be ready to back a European boycott of the World Cup.

German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier insisted Fifa must make a new start following Blatter's re-election and said football's governing body was out of touch with the sport it serves.

“I have serious doubts that Fifa will be able to handle this massive task without making a serious new start,” he told German daily Die Welt on Sunday.

“The gap between the machinations of their officials and the many players, coaches, parents, referees and fans around the world, who with a lot of passion, ensure every week that football lives, could not be greater.”

In underlining the far-reaching nature of the scandal, British bank Barclays announced it had launched an internal review into whether its accounts were used for corrupt payments by Fifa officials, a banking source told AFP.

Another British bank, Standard Chartered, said on Friday that it was looking into two payments cleared by the bank that were mentioned in the indictment.

A third named bank, HSBC, has so far declined to comment.

AFP



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Birds’ wings clipped

Moroka Swallows have been relegated from top-tier SA soccer for the first time in their 68-year history.

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Johannesburg - Famed Soweto club Moroka Swallows were relegated on Sunday from top-flight South African football for the first time in their 68-year history.

The once-powerful Birds dropped out of contention for top place in a promotion mini-league after losing 1-0 at Black Leopards.

A Roggert Nyundu goal after 32 minutes at a packed stadium in Thohoyandou condemned Swallows to lower-league football.

Swallows finished second last in the 2015 Premiership, forcing them into a double-round mini-league with Jomo Cosmos and Leopards, who came second and third in the second division.

Cosmos, owned and coached by 1980s South African football legend Jomo Sono, will gain promotion on goal difference if they win at Swallows on Wednesday.

Any other result would bring Leopards back to the top tier.

The South African Premiership offers unrivalled African domestic club football riches with multi-million-rand prizes up for grabs in the league and three cup competitions.

AFP



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