Enrique to stay on at Barca

Barcelona president Josep Maria Bartomeu has insisted Luis Enrique will stay on next season despite the coach refusing to commit to the club after wrapping up a treble of titles.

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Barcelona - Barcelona president Josep Maria Bartomeu has insisted Luis Enrique will stay on next season despite the coach refusing to commit to the club after wrapping up a treble of titles on Saturday.

Barca's 3-1 victory over Juventus in the Champions League final meant they became the first team to win their domestic league and Cup and Europe's elite club competition in the same season on two occasions, repeating their feat from 2009.

Luis Enrique is coming to the end of the first year of a two-year contract but was clearly unhappy with the sacking of sporting director Andoni Zubizarreta, the man who appointed him, in January.

He fended off several questions about his future at a news conference after Saturday's final, saying he was only focused on celebrating the treble.

The uncertainty has been amplified by a looming presidential election and a new chief in place of Bartomeu might want to bring in his own man.

Bartomeu told Spanish radio on Monday he would offer Luis Enrique a contract extension if re-elected.

“There is no need to suffer, Luis Enrique will continue,” Bartomeu said.

“His season has been 10 out of 10 and there is no reason to break the contract,” he added.

Barca celebrated their magnificent season with an open top bus tour through the Catalan capital on Sunday, culminating in a spectacular party with fans at their giant Nou Camp arena.

They also announced the signing, pending a medical, of Sevilla midfielder Aleix Vidal, who has impressed for the Europa League winners this term and last month earned a first call-up to Vicente del Bosque's Spain squad. – Reuters



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Liverpool agree deal for Ings

Liverpool have agreed a deal to sign Burnley striker Danny Ings, the Premier League club announced.

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London - Liverpool have agreed a deal to sign Burnley striker Danny Ings, the Premier League club announced on Monday.

“Liverpool FC are delighted to announce that they have agreed personal terms with Danny Ings and, subject to a medical, the striker will join the club on July 1 after his contract with Burnley has expired,” the club said on their website (www.liverpoolfc.com).

Ings scored 11 goals in the Premier League last season as Burnley finished 19th and were relegated.

He was their only player to score in the last nine games.

The previous season he netted 21 times as the club won promotion from the Championship.

He has played nine times for the England under-21 team and is due to play in the European under-21 Championship in the Czech Republic later this month. – Reuters



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Bafana hit hard by withdrawals

Struck by injuries and withdrawals, Bafana coach Shakes Mashaba will have difficulty in motivating his troops for their Afcon qualifier against Gambia.

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Durban – Struck down by injuries and withdrawals, Bafana Bafana coach Shakes Mashaba will have difficulty in motivating his troops for their Africa Cup of Nations qualifier against Gambia at Moses Mabhida Stadium on Saturday.

Bafana have had four players withdraw from the original squad. Tefu Mashamaite has withdrawn due to family commitments, Dean Furman is nursing a knee injury, Sibusiso Vilakazi is out with an ankle injury and Mzikayise Mashaba is suffering with a shoulder injury.

Mashaba has called up four players to replace the quartet – Tshepo Gumede, Ntsikelelo Nyauza, Siphelele Ntshangase and Jabulani Shongwe.

“It is always difficult to get all the players on the first day, but I am happy with the numbers we have more so because most of them were on holiday and so we need to get going as soon as possible,” said Mashaba.

“It is just a pity that we won’t have the four players who have withdrawn, but such is the game of football. We have already called up replacements and I am confident they will be up to the task because none of them are new to our system,” said Mashaba.

On Monday, the Pirates trio of Patrick Phungwayo, Thabo Matlaba and Oupa Manyisa who all played for their club in their Caf Confederations Cup clash against AS Kaloum on Saturday

All the overseas-based players, with the exception of Tokelo Rantie who is getting married this weekend, have reported for national team duty – Anele Ngcongca, Ayanda Patosi, Andile Jali (all from Belgium); Thulani Serero (Netherlands); and May Mahlangu (Turkey). - ANA



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Sterling needs thicker skin - Hodgson

Roy Hodgson has told Raheem Sterling to get a ‘thicker skin’ after the Liverpool rebel performed woefully in the face of relentless taunting in Dublin.

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Roy Hodgson has told Raheem Sterling to get a ‘thicker skin’ after the Liverpool rebel performed woefully in the face of relentless taunting in Dublin.

Sterling was among the worst performers in a collective effort so uninspiring even ITV, the match broadcasters, apologised to fans via a series of sarcastic tweets.

The forward, who has been ridiculed over his desire to leave Liverpool this summer, was booed from start to finish at the Aviva Stadium, with Republic of Ireland supporters mocking the 20-year-old right up until the 66th minute when he was substituted for Andros Townsend. Hodgson said: ‘I think he’s going through a bad time publicly. You can’t expect people just to shrug off the criticism he has been receiving.

‘He tries to shrug it off, to let his football do the talking. If he is going to get it out of his system, he’s going to have to work harder still and get a thicker skin than he has at the moment.

‘We only took him off to give others the game, to air the squad.’

Despite the ineffectiveness of his showing in the 0-0 draw, Hodgson insisted he would have no hesitation in using Sterling against Slovenia in their Euro 2016 qualifier next Sunday. He said: ‘I trust Sterling. But players are not robots. He’s done some fantastic things for us, but here he didn’t hit those heights. It’ll take a lot before I and the national team sway from Raheem.’

Sterling was far from alone in a performance that extended England’s unbeaten run to 10 yet was totally bereft of imagination.

A drastic improvement would be needed in the likely event that England qualify for next summer’s European Championship and Hodgson added: ‘The intention can be there to do the right things, but sometimes it doesn’t work. There have been games when things have gone for us in terms of our play, more than they did here.

‘But I think it’s important we are critical and continue to set ourselves high standards. We want to go to France and we’ll have to play better than we did here. Ireland defended exceptionally well and were more than worth the draw.

‘We’ve had a good run but we came here believing if we played our best football we could win. But we never got close to that. We didn’t lose, but we have to accept there were a lot of things we could have done better.’ – Daily Mail



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Between Fifa and the deep blue pool

News of the Nkandla report and bribes at the World Cup have destroyed our dreams as a nation, writes Tinyiko Maluleke.

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News of the Nkandla report and bribes at the Soccer World Cup have destroyed our dreams as a nation, writes Tinyiko Maluleke.

Johannesburg - The last week of May 2015 will go down in recorded history as the week in which we learnt two painful lessons, namely that the correct spellings for “Fifa” and “swimming pool” are “fahfee” and “fire pool”.

We cringed and we gasped as we were gently tortured with televised demonstrations of how the two are operated. The full meaning and implications of the lesson are still unfolding.

For the first time in years, the US’s Federal Bureau of Investigation’s (FBI) probes threaten to unravel the fahfee culture of corruption inside Fifa. In the same week, Police Minister Nathi Nhleko made the most audacious attempt to sanitise Nkandla since November 2011, when the public protector first turned her attentions to it.

Today I am caught between the foul smell of the corruption currently being unearthed in Fifa and the unswimmable blue waters of the Nkandla fire pool, as Zweli Mkhize once described it.

The question eating me up right now is whether to jump or not to jump, and if so, which way – into the deftly imagined Nkandla fire pool or into the swirling pool of Fifa lies?

We are supposed to show some gratitude to both Nhleko and Fifa president Sepp Blatter. I know. The former for finally unpacking the security significance of a chicken run and the latter for giving South Africa the gift of a lifetime, never to be repeated in generations, namely the Fifa World Cup.

These are no small achievements. I mean, anyone who can cure South Africa of Nkandla, which is what poor Nhleko is desperately trying to do, deserves a medal.

Similarly, anyone who could bring the Fifa World Cup to Africa, nearly 100 years later, would under normal circumstances deserve the Nobel Prize. And yet no medal or prize is worth our national integrity and pride.

South Africans love football, but none more than yours truly. Not that I would kill for football. Though, in my younger football-playing days I came close to strangling a goalkeeper who kept on moving the goalposts, literally.

In my own right, I was a “famous” football player on the makeshift dusty grounds of Soweto, Meadowlands, Zone 8, where I grew up – especially in Letsogo Street, where I lived. In those days I was proudly known as Tinyiko “Teenage Dladla” Maluleke.

If you do not believe me, ask my best high-school friend, Meadow “Kaizer Motaung” Bayana.

I blame apartheid (who else?) for the fact that Meadow and I did not progress in football to the level of the likes of Petrus “Ten Ten” Nzimande, Marks “Go-man-go” Maponyane and James “Killer” Mkhwanazi, fellow residents of Ndofaya, as Meadowlands was fondly known in those days.

The Soweto of my youth was mad about football. Every Saturday at 3 o’clock we gathered around my father’s battery-operated transistor radio to listen to live football commentary.

With our eyes fixed on the rickety radio, our ears straining as it went in and out of tune, the legendary commentary of Thetha Masombuka and Koos Radebe would transport us, in the eye of the mind, to Orlando or George Goch Stadium and we would visualise the match blow by blow.

Masombuka and Radebe may now know it, but between the two of them and the Maskandi singer, Vusi Ximba, I had my best lessons in isiZulu.

Masombuka and Radebe skilled me with great isiZulu footballing terms, while Ximba taught me the swearwords I needed when “watching” football over the radio in

the midst of a hostile company of so-called friends supporting the

other team.

The other craze of the Soweto of my times was fahfee, or mo-china, apparently known as the numbers racket in Italy or simply as Italian lottery.

I did not know about gambling addiction then, but I think my uncle Khazamula was addicted.

He betted every day and he knew what all the fahfee numbers stood for like born-agains know their Bible verses. I suspect that the mother of my friend Jan was also one.

Every day she would narrate to us a dream from the night before, whose plot was connected to what a particular fahfee number stood for.

A few glorious times I had the chance to go to Orlando Stadium to watch Orlando Pirates play Kaizer Chiefs.

It was a whole-day affair, which started with the long walk from Meadowlands to Orlando, via Mzimhlophe, followed by the long ticket queues at the stadium.

It was also a dangerous trip, not only because of the tsotsis along the way but also because of the bloody fan fights that often followed a match between Chiefs and Pirates.

But I would not trade those experiences for anything in the world. They are the stuff of my boyhood.

Later, when I went to boarding school in Limpopo, I packed my football fanaticism into my bag and took it with me.

The little boy who is crazy about football still lives in me – he still screams and kicks every time Orlando Pirates score or miss.

You can imagine then what the 2010 World Cup meant for a soul like me. It was the culmination of boyhood dreams. This sport, that fired up my imagination and nurtured my fondest dreams as a barefooted youngster in the dusty footballing streets of Soweto, came home.

So at the time I listened with utter disdain and raw disinterest to all the arguments that suggested that the 2010 Fifa World Cup was only a vanity project.

I disregarded most if not all of the powerful arguments about the greed and corruption of Fifa. I sharpened my verbal arrows in defence of the vuvuzela, which I christened a symbol of Africa crying out to be heard and to be seen. I should have been more careful and more reticent in my enthusiasm.

But nothing was going to prevent me from being at the stadium on June 11, 2010 for the opening match between Bafana Bafana and Mexico. Later I travelled to Bloemfontein to watch and enjoy Bafana beating France.

The allegations that South Africa paid a bribe of $10 million in order to win the 2010 bid sends a chill down my football-crazy spine. Like millions of soccer-loving South Africans, I take it personally.

When it was suggested by some that the South African public was going to “pay” long and hard after the Fifa 2010 World Cup, never in my wildest dreams did I imagine that we might have to “pay” in the way of a possible “national bribe”, allegedly paid on our behalf, now threatening to tarnish one of our greatest national moments.

In South Africa, the significance of the Fifa 2010 World Cup is almost at the same level as the 1994 elections that catapulted Nelson Mandela into the presidency. Until last week, few achievements decorated our young nation like the Fifa 2010 World Cup.

But you know what, if it was ill-gotten, we want no part of it. South Africans cannot fathom the possibility that the 2010 World Cup bid was not genuinely and fairly won. We do not deserve a national scam of this magnitude. Not at this time. Not ever. Our spirits are already dented by allegations that the warm-up matches were fixed.

The South African Football Association (Safa) has admitted to the payment of the $10 million with the crucial qualification being that, in their view, it was not a bribe, only a donation for the good of the game.

Safa had better be sure of its facts. The FBI is sounding very confident. The bribed are beginning to sing, from the Caribbean to the US, and Blatter seems to be running for cover.

The problem with bribes is that they are seldom, if ever, called bribes. If the word “bribe” was written into the deposit slip, then it would not be a bribe, would it? If the word “bribe” was shouted out every time a brown envelope changed hands below the table, it would not be a bribe.

There is a whole list of tactics that bribes assume for their survival. These include deliberate but plausible misnaming, delayed payment, disguised payment as well as good old payment in kind – payment in all kinds of kind. At the airport in Lagos, Nigeria, the officials ask if you have a gift for them.

On our roads, the traffic cops ask for a “cold drink” or “something to take home for the children”. Influential tender committee members obliquely ask for or receive without asking “sponsorships, thanksgiving (ditebogo) and donations”.

Banks speak of “commission” and corporates speak of an “administration fee”. No one ever uses the word bribe.

Where a culture of corruption and bribery has taken root, such as seems to have been the case within Fifa for years, it is not even necessary to ask for a bribe, either verbally or in written form. It is just understood and duly paid – no invoice, no receipt and no explanation needed. Blatter and company have always banked on the assumption that football fans, the sponsors and television networks, do not care about corruption allegations.

The fans just want to watch the beautiful games and the sponsors and TV networks just want to make money, they have argued. A line must now be drawn in the sand.

I find it curious how Safa has tended to take the back seat in this unseemly saga so far. I noticed how abruptly the organisation withdrew from its own press conference on Wednesday, leaving Sports Minister Fikile Mbalula on his own. Does Safa know something we don’t? I am holding my breath.

I sincerely hope that Safa and our government have not gambled, fahfee-style, with the hopes and dreams of our nation.

* Maluleke is a professor at the University of Pretoria and writes in his personal capacity.

** The views expressed here are not necessarily those of Independent Media.

Sunday Independent



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‘Warner wanted $7m to help Egypt’

Egypt’s Al-Dahshouri Harb says former Fifa vice-president Jack Warner asked for $7m to boost Cairo’s chances.

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Cairo - The former head of Egypt's football federation said on Sunday that ex-Fifa vice-president Jack Warner asked for $7-million from Egypt, suggesting it could help with Egypt's bid to host the 2010 World Cup.

Al-Dahshouri Harb told Reuters in a telephone interview that Warner expressed interest to him in being an adviser to Egypt's bid and had said the money could be used to support poor football associations in Latin American countries.

Harb quoted Warner as saying at a meeting in the United Arab Emirates: “I have many votes in Latin America and I could be your adviser in Europe. I have many friends (there).”

Harb said Warner asked for $7-million, saying he would not take the money for himself but to give to “the poor clubs and federations in Latin America”.

The meeting took place before 2010, said Harb, who did not elaborate.

Warner could not immediately be reached for comment. He is among nine current and former 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 alleged bribes.

Warner has denied the charges against him and has said he never took a bribe. “I have been afforded no due process and I have not even been questioned in this matter,” Warner, who is from Trinidad and Tobago, said in a statement last month. “I reiterate that I am innocent of any charges.”

Egypt famously failed to receive a single vote when the host of the 2010 World Cup was announced in 2004. The tournament ultimately went to South Africa.

Aley Eddine Helal, Egypt's minister of youth and sports from 1999 to 2004, told an Egyptian TV show on Thursday that Harb had told him about the offer to help Egypt after their meeting.

“He came back and informed me that (Warner) had said: 'If you want to win, you must pay $6-7 million. One vote costs $1 million’,” said Helal.

He said Egyptian authorities had rejected the offer.

Reuters could not immediately reach Helal for further comment.

Reuters



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Russia, Qatar WC rights under threat

Russia and Qatar could lose their WC hosting rights if evidence of bribery in the bidding process emerges.

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Zurich – Russia and Qatar could be stripped of their World Cup hosting rights if evidence emerges of bribery in the bidding process, the independent chairman of Fifa’s audit and compliance committee told a Swiss newspaper.

The FBI’s investigation of bribery and corruption at Fifa includes scrutiny of how soccer’s governing body awarded World Cup hosting rights to Russia and Qatar, a U.S. law enforcement official told Reuters this week.

Domenico Scala told SonntagsZeitung that Fifa the two countries could lose the hosting rights should evidence emerge of bribery in the bidding process.

“If evidence should emerge that the awards to Qatar and Russia only came about thanks to bought votes, then the awards could be invalidated,” Scala said in an interview published on Sunday. “This evidence has not yet been brought forth.”

Russia and Qatar have previously denied wrongdoing in the conduct of their bids for the 2018 and 2022 tournaments, which were not the subject of charges announced by US prosecutors last week against Fifa officials.

Scala had made similar comments in 2013 but events over the last two weeks, which included a dawn police raid in Zurich and the arrests of several Fifa officials on US charges, have added urgency to his remarks.

Sepp Blatter unexpectedly announced on Tuesday he was resigning, just four days after securing a fifth term as Fifa president and shortly before it emerged that he too was under investigation by US law enforcement.

In a separate interview with Swiss paper Sonntags Blick, Scala also floated the idea of term limits for the Fifa presidency.

“If a Fifa president does two or three cycles that is enough,” Scala is quoted as saying.

A representative for Scala confirmed his remarks.

Fifa did not immediately respond to a request for comment. – Reuters



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Safa breaks silence, denies foul play

Safa has broken its silence on claims $10m was paid to secure the 2010 WC, denying any wrongdoing.

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Cape Town – The South African Football Association (Safa) has broken its silence on the allegations that a $10 million bribe was paid to Fifa to secure the hosting of the 2010 World Cup and insisted no crime was committed.

The allegations were a false narrative aimed at tarnishing the image of the country, the body said in a statement released late on Saturday,

“The association is alarmed by the narrative that has developed around its strong support for the S government’s inclusion of the African Diaspora in the World Cup legacy projects, specifically in the Caribbean.”

Safa said money given to Caribbean football association Concacaf was part of a well-publicised African Diaspora programme that formed part of the government’s African Renaissance initiative – the brainchild of then president Thabo Mbeki.

“We find it quite surprising therefore that the dominant narrative describes the very popular African Renaissance programme’s African Diaspora support project as a bribe – almost four years after the actual vote to grant South Africa these hosting rights.

“We categorically deny that this was a bribe in return for a vote. It belittles the hard work done by Madiba, Archbishop Tutu, the South African government and numerous others who sacrificed their time and money and family lives to make our country proud! It tarnishes their images in the most unscrupulous manner.”

Safa said the narrative that has emerged in the wake of the arrest of top Fifa officials wrongly implies that support projects related to the 2010 Fifa World Cup were not reported at the time, and that government leaders and officials are now trying to outline these only in a bid to explain away wrongdoing.

It went on to cite remarks by Mbeki asserting that South Africa sought to host the World Cup as part of his administration’s initiatives to promote the continent.

“This is not a dream. It is a practical policy… the successful hosting of the Fifa World Cup in Africa will provide a powerful, irresistible momentum to the African renaissance,” it quoted Mbeki as saying in the run-up to the country being awarded the tournament.

It added that Fifa wrote to the government on “19 September 2007 outlining its wish that the South African Bid and the 2010 Fifa World Cup Programme should leave a lasting legacy for football and society.

“In this letter, Fifa informed the Department of Foreign Affairs of the establishment of the ‘Win in Africa with Africa’ programme and that Fifa had allocated $70 million for the programme.

“Fifa also confirmed in the same letter the South African government’s commitment of $10 million for the African Diaspora legacy programme, specifically for the Caribbean countries. Fifa also agreed to administer the fund through the Fifa account.”

It again quoted Mbeki as writing in 2010 that six years earlier he had pledged that the bid would help millions of Africans on the continent and members of the African diaspora to put behind them a history of conflict and oppression and its legacy of endemic poverty.

“South African foreign policy at the time consciously reached out to the African Diaspora to incorporate them into the African Renaissance that led to the bid to host the Fifa World Cup on African soil,” Safa added.

It said that Fifa members who voted for South Africa in 2004, said afterwards that they were swayed by the strength of the country’s bid and appeals by former president Nelson Mandela.

Safa said it noted that the indictment of Fifa officials by US authorities referred to payments made to Concacaf as a direct result of South Africa transferring funds to Fifa as a bribe.

“The indictment notes payments made on 2 January 2008, 31 January 2008 and on 7 March 2008 to the Caribbean Football Union and Concacaf by Fifa.

“To our knowledge, the South African government did not make any payment from government coffers for this project as it was subsequently decided, in a letter written by (Safa president) Dr Danny Jordaan on 10 December 2007 to Fifa, that the money should rather be taken from the LOC (local organising committee) budget and then sent directly to Concacaf.”

Safa said it was impossible that funds earmarked for government were diverted by Fifa by agreement because all revenue flows “pertaining to the Fifa World Cup are signed between the football association and Fifa.

“Therefore no government funds were spent on managing the 2010 Fifa World Cup beyond the lasting legacy infrastructure that the country’s citizens continue to use to this day.” – ANA



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Soccer is only about winning: Mourinho

Jose Mourinho says soccer is about winning and managers who favour a beautiful game are stupid.

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London – Jose Mourinho believes football is only about winning and that managers who favour a possession-dominated beautiful game and neglect steely defence and lethal counter-attacking are “stupid”.

Mourinho’s Chelsea were described on numerous occasions last season as boring despite their relentless domination of the Premier League.

The west London side finished eight points ahead of second-placed Manchester City, lost only three league fixtures and boasted a goal difference of plus 41 – second only to City.

A new generation of managers such as Liverpool’s Brendan Rodgers and Everton’s Roberto Martinez have been hailed in recent seasons for playing stylish, attacking football.

Purists argue that Arsenal play a more exciting brand of soccer and City score more goals but Mourinho will always be defined by winning.

“When people talk about a new generation of coaches, what is the new generation? The generation will always be the ones that win,” the Portuguese told The Sunday Times.

“And the ones that win occasionally or never win will always be something else.”

Mourinho has made winning his mantra.

Chelsea effectively won the title in April with a 1-0 victory over Manchester United despite the Blues enjoying just 30 percent possession.

Chelsea were untroubled by waves of United passes and clinically carved them open with irresistible counter-attacking led by the effervescent Eden Hazard.

In a goalless draw against Arsenal at the Emirates Stadium one week later Mourinho’s side were subjected to chants of “boring boring Chelsea” by the mass ranks of Gunners supporters.

But Mourinho, who has won eight league titles, seven domestic cups, one UEFA cup and two Champions Leagues has always favoured substance over style.

“What it is, is people who got some idea, some philosophy, and want to create something like ‘We build very well from the back, we have a very good ball possession we don’t play counter-attack,’ the 52-year-old added.

“But if you don’t play counter-attack then it’s because you are stupid. Counter-attack is a fantastic item of football, an ammunition that you have, and when you find your opponent unbalanced you have a fantastic moment to score a goal.

“So I think people are creating (illusions) and it has influenced public opinion. But football will never change. Football is to win.” – Reuters



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Warner ‘solicited’ Egypt for $7m

Ex-Fifa boss Jack Warner allegedly asked Egypt for $7m in exchange for votes to host the 2010 World Cup.

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Former Fifa vice president Jack Warner asked Egypt to pay a $7 million bribe in exchange for seven votes to host the 2010 World Cup, a former Egyptian minister alleged on Sunday.

Former minister of youth and sports, Aley Eddine Helal, told AFP that Warner, who is now at the heart of a corruption scandal engulfing football’s world governing body, asked for the money in 2004.

“Warner was the one who approached us from Fifa. He said he could guarantee us seven votes… He asked for $1 million for each vote,” Helal claimed.

Egypt, one of the countries dominating African football, was a candidate to host the 2010 World Cup, but it received no votes in the 2004 Fifa ballot. South Africa was chosen to host the tournament.

Helal told privately owned Egyptian channel ONTV in a Thursday phone interview that someone “from Fifa” had approached Egypt in 2004, saying: “If you pay, we can help you”.

In the same interview, Helal alleged Warner met with then Egyptian Football Association president Youssef el-Dahshori in the United Arab Emirates to ask for the cash.

“Our decision was not to indulge in this issue,” Helal told ONTV. – AFP



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Barca’s new direct play does trick

Barca’s new direct play strategy saw them become the first European side to win the treble for a second time.

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Barcelona – Winning goals from Luis Suarez and Neymar on the counter-attack to sink Juventus in the Champions League final encapsulated the new direct play from Barcelona that saw them become the first European side to win the treble for the second time.

Suarez has provided an acute understanding and extra fire power following his comeback from a biting ban last October and is the final piece of the jigsaw in an attacking trident for Barca that is devastating to watch.

The Uruguayan perhaps did not have his best game for Barca but he was still heavily influential in defeating Juventus with his predatory instincts seeing him pounce and slot home the ball after Lionel Messi’s initial shot was saved by Gianluigi Buffon.

When Barca last won the treble in 2009 they accomplished it through ball possession and short passing but now they are at their most dangerous on the breakaway.

It was after Alvaro Morata had equalised for Juventus and the Italians were bossing the game at 1-1 that Messi found the space in the lead up to Suarez’s goal and similarly in injury time Neymar sealed the win on another counter.

“We knew about his quality and his record,” said Luis Enrique, referring to Suarez in a news conference, who joined Barca from Liverpool ahead of this campaign.

“The only doubt was whether he was going to be able to adapt here. You can now see it has worked out. He has an incredible hunger and desire to win trophies.

The coach also praised the contribution of Messi and Neymar.

“Messi is our key player and the second goal was his. We are very happy with him and he gave us what he has been giving us all this season,” he said.

“Last year (Neymar) had a very good season despite it being the first (at the club). Now he has developed and he has been spectacular. He demonstrated that he is one of the best players in the world.”

Barca have found solidity in defence and the impact of Luis Enrique’s work on strategy at set-plays has clearly worked as it is no longer such a weak point.

But still it has been the three forwards that have made the difference.

Crucially, Luis Enrique and Messi have improved their relationship in recent months and this was emphasised by the image of them hugging on the pitch after the final in Berlin. – Reuters



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BBC seen docs of Warner ‘bribes’

The BBC claims to have seen evidence detailing what happened to the $10m sent to Jack Warner.

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London – The BBC claims to have seen evidence detailing what happened to the $10 million soccer’s world governing body Fifa sent to former vice-president Jack Warner.

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

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

The BBC reported on Sunday that it had seen documents showing Warner had used the money for cash withdrawals, personal loans and to launder money.

“The papers seen by the BBC detail three wire transfers by Fifa,” the report said.

“In the three transactions – on January 4, February 1 and March 10 2008 – funds totalling $10m from Fifa accounts were received into Concacaf accounts controlled by Jack Warner.”

Warner, a central figure in world football’s deepening scandal, had constantly denied any wrongdoing but vowed last week to tell investigators all he knew about corruption within the sport’s governing body.

The 72-year-old announced his plans to reveal all in a paid political address in his homeland of Trinidad and Tobago, titled The gloves are off.

“The documents reveal how the money was spent and moved around,” the BBC said in its report.

“JTA Supermarkets, a large chain in Trinidad, received $4 860 000 from the accounts.

“The money was paid in instalments from January 2008 to March 2009. The largest payment was $1 350 000, paid in February 2008.” – Reuters



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Triumphant Luis coy on future

Coach Luis Enrique has declined to say if he will still be at the helm of Barcelona next season.

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Berlin – Barcelona coach Luis Enrique declined to say if he will still be at the helm next season after leading them to a treble in his first season including Saturday's Champions League triumph over Juventus.

Barca's 3-1 victory in the final in Berlin meant they became the first team to win their domestic league and Cup and Europe's elite club competition in the same season on two occasions, repeating their feat from 2009.

Their achievement was all the more remarkable as they were mired in an institutional crisis around the turn of the year which led to the dismissal of sporting director Andoni Zubizarreta.

Luis Enrique, who was appointed by Zubizarreta, was clearly unhappy with the sacking and, with results not going Barca's way, speculation swirled that a change of coach might also be imminent.

The uncertainty has been amplified by the calling of a presidential election. A new chief in place of incumbent Josep Maria Bartomeu might want to bring in his own man to take charge of the first team.

Luis Enrique fended off several questions about his future at his post-match news conference, saying he was only focused on celebrating the Champions League win.

“There is nothing confirmed but I do confirm there will be a big party tonight,” he told reporters.

“My goal is to enjoy the moment, enjoy a nice summer,” added the former Barca and Spain midfielder, who took over at the Nou Camp after an impressive spell at Celta Vigo in 2013-14.

“We never imagined we could win the three titles. You try to do your work well but with these kinds of players it makes everything easier.”

Barcelona centre back Gerard Pique, who celebrated the Champions League success by cutting out the net from one of the goals at the Olympic Stadium and making off with it, appeared convinced that Luis Enrique would stay on.

“It's not up to me to say if he will continue or not but seeing the way he celebrated tonight, how much he loves this club, I am sure he will stay,” Pique told reporters.

Luis Enrique also received strong backing from club captain Andres Iniesta, who was voted man of the match on Saturday.

“It's my hope he'll continue next year,” Iniesta said. “He hasn't said anything to the contrary so I hope next year we can face new challenges together.” – Reuters



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Warner refusing to eat humble pie

The world waits with bated breath for former Fifa vice-president Jack Warner to spill the beans.

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The sight of an elderly man of 72, briefcase in hand and waving almost lethargically to people calling out his name, would not normally make for great TV footage.

But when that man is Austin Warner, better known as Jack, it is a different story altogether.

This is the man who attacked Roy Keane in September 2008 when Dwight Yorke, who was playing for Sunderland, quit the Trinidad and Tobago national team.

Warner blamed this on the temperamental Keane.

Today Warner is the man at the centre of the Fifa corruption scandal, blown wide open by the US authorities investigating it.

But he is an enigma.

At the height of this tsunami around him, he makes time to address supporters of his political party back home in Trinidad and Tobago, where he was once the national minister of security.

He has worn many hats in his life, but it was as vice-president of Fifa and president of the Confederation of North, Central American and Caribbean Association Football (Concacaf) that Warner cast a dark spell over South Africa.

The country’s relationship with him is an albatross around its neck. The story is that Warner took money under the table to hand us the hosting rights to the 2010 World Cup.

Money changed hands and the charge sheet of the FBI alleges that Warner’s bank balance grew fatter.

Sports Minister Fikile Mbalula denies this.

Warner was not alone in this scam as other high-ranking Fifa officials, including Nicolas Leoz, are the subject of this American swoop on world football corruption.

Those like Warner, who have not been nabbed, are subject to Interpol’s red alerts.

Everyone else who has taken money has said aye about their involvement, but Warner continues to say nay.

Former Fifa executive member Chuck Blazer has led the confessions, admitting benefiting improperly from the awarding of the World Cup to South Africa.

But instead of admitting to this corruption, Warner told members of his Independent Liberal Party (ILP) that he had his own dossier of wrongdoing on Fifa president Sepp Blatter, who has stepped down as head of soccer’s controlling body.

Warner reportedly said he had documents and cheques that linked Fifa officials, “including embattled president Sepp Blatter, to the 2010 election in Trinidad and Tobago”.

He seems to blame everyone but himself in the current mess, “a criminal enterprise that involved $150 million (R1.9bn) in bribes”.

“I will no longer keep secrets for those who actively seek to destroy the country,” Warner said.

When it finally dawned on him that the issue at hand was football corruption and his role in it, especially the bribe from South Africa, Warner said in his frail septuagenarian’s voice: “It is not true that they gave me any bribe.”

It has since emerged that his son Daryll sold 2010 World Cup tickets at highly inflated prices, netting himself handsome profits. This is the same son who runs the family business empire back home.

In fact, both his sons. Daryll and Daryan, have agreed to assist American authorities as part of separate plea deals.

But the old man wants to tell the world it is Blatter who is corrupt, not him.

He’s had several run-ins with Blatter, since the time he left in 2011.

If he did not jump, he stood to be pushed.

A university graduate, he’s an educated man with, clearly, a sharp mind that seems to be leaving him.

He now believes in his own phantom of invincibility.

A Concacaf Integrity Report released two years ago cast him in a bad light and he had to resign as a member of parliament in Trinidad and Tobago. His detractors – and they aren’t few in the Caribbean – have accused him of using Concacaf as his cash cow.

Instead of confronting the issue, Warner formed his own political party.

However, he did not fool everyone. In a July 6, 2013 report, the Jamaica Observer wrote the following: “But in an immediate response, Prime Minister Kamla Persad Bissessar told supporters of her ruling United National Congress (UNC) that Warner’s move was designed to bring down your duly elected government.”

Warner the father, businessman, politician has his flaws. But as a football chief, he’s been particularly damaging to the integrity of South Africa.

The world waits with bated breath for Warner to spill the beans as he’s promised. Hopefully he will, if this is not another one of his wily ways to wriggle out of a spot of bother.

He’s done it before.



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Gambia gamble? Defender backs SA

Defender Thulani Hlatshwayo believes SA has a battle on its hands to qualify for the 2017 Afcon cup.

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Bafana Bafana and Bidvest Wits defender Thulani Hlatshwayo says they will have to go all out to qualify for the 2017 Africa Cup of Nations (Afcon) in Gabon.

Referring to their recent Cosafa Cup meltdown, Hlatshwayo said: “That was a totally new team and most of the guys were playing with each other for the first time.

“Remember, the clubs did not want to release players, so it was pretty hard for the guys to gel in a short time.

“I was watching the games from home and the guys tried their best, it is just that results didn’t come their way. They were playing very well and creating chances, it is a pity they couldn’t convert them.”

Bafana were knocked out of the Southern Region Tournament by Botswana in the quarter-finals via penalties, before also losing out in the Plate section to Malawi in similar fashion.

The Wits skipper is part of Shakes Mashaba’s 27-men squad seeking a spot in the continental showpiece, with their first opponents being an unknown Gambia side at Durban’s Moses Mabhida Stadium next Saturday.

“I have no clue about them (Gambia), I have never seen them play, I don’t know their players, but I’m certain the coach will sit with us during the course of the week to tell us about the opposition in order to get us ready for the game.”

The defender was part of the Bafana team that did duty at the Afcon tournament in Equatorial Guinea earlier this year, where they failed to make the knockout stages.

However, he says they didn’t come home empty-handed, as the tournament helped the team to know their strengths and weaknesses.

“That was an experience of a life-time, though we did not do well.

“I learned a lot from that (Afcon) tournament and I will be using that to help the team qualify for next year’s event.

“As national team players, we want to make the country proud and strive for success,” explained the former Ajax Cape Town player.

Hlatshwayo also refle-cted on his past season’s performance, his team fini-shing third on the standings, but having no silverware to display for their brilliant showing and being nominated for the PSL Defender of the Season award.

“This has to be one of the best PSL seasons I have had so far. Thanks to coach Gavin Hunt, who has been fantastic since I’ve started working with him.

“He is a role model and always keeps his players on their toes. I think being part of the Bafana team also played a huge role in developing my game.

“I want to continue doing well, for both club and country.

”Playing for a national team is an honour and I want to do my best so that we can be a force in the continent.”

Bafana are in Group M of the quali-fiers, along with Gambia, Mauritania and Cameroon.

Hlatshwayo is optimistic Bafana will do well in the qualifiers.

“We have the talent, the players, the coaching staff to perform at a high level.”

The Wits skipper will need to bring his stellar club season performance to help Mashaba’s team qualify for Afcon.



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