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Gianni Infantino elected as new FIFA boss, taking over from Sepp Blatter

thorson1987

Coach
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16,907
http://www.news.com.au/sport/football/gianni-infantino-elected-as-new-fifa-boss-taking-over-from-sepp-blatter/news-story/5fef1f4b35c13f58c01bd6f9b74dc653

Gianni Infantino elected as new FIFA boss, taking over from Sepp Blatter
FEBRUARY 27, 20164:18AM

FIFA has elected Gianni Infantino of Switzerland to succeed Sepp Blatter as president of the world soccer organisation and bring it back from the brink.

Infantino, general secretary of European confederation UEFA, won in the second round of voting by 207 FIFA member associations at a congress in Zurich.

The 45-year-old Swiss-Italian took 115 votes, beating out his closest rival, Sheikh Salman bin Ebrahim Al Khalifa, the president of the Asian football federation, who claimed 88 votes in the second round, where only a simple majority of support was required.


Blatter has been banned from football for six years and US and Swiss authorities have launched major corruption investigations into FIFA and other football federations.

Infantino said that despite the scandals of the past year football deserves to be “highly respected.”

“We will restore the image of FIFA and the respect of FIFA and everyone in the world will applaud us,” a visibly surprised Infantino told the Congress.

Sheikh Salman, a member of the Bahrain royal family, was one of the first to congratulate his rival.

Having got 27 votes in the first round of the election, Prince Ali bin al Hussein of Jordan got just four in the second.

Former FIFA official Jerome Champagne had seven votes in the first round but zero in the deciding ballot.

South African tycoon Tokyo Sexwale withdrew from the contest before the first round.

The Congress was given tough warnings before the vote that the result and a series of agreed reforms had to convince a world shocked by several years of corruption scandals and doubts about World Cup bidding.


International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach said football and all sports had to improve governance.

“Today you have this great chance to turn the page,” he told the congress. “We need to give new answers to the new questions with regards to credibility and good governance.”

Earlier a reform package was adopted by 179 members, while 22 voted against and six abstained.

The measures are designed to limit the authority of the new president and his deputies and end the patronage and waste that prevailed during Blatter’s 18-year term.

The president’s job has been altered to function like a corporate chairman of the board, providing strategic guidance but with less management authority.


FIFA’s executive committee, which had become an epicentre of graft allegations, has been re-branded as a FIFA council. It will operate like a corporate board of directions.

Measures such as declaring the salary of the new president to improve financial transparency were also included.

After several years of suspicions, scandal erupted at FIFA when seven top officials were arrested at a FIFA congress in May last year.

Infantino will face immediate financial problems.

Acting Secretary general Markus Kattner said “general uncertainty” following the crisis had created tough economic times and FIFA was roughly $US550 million behind in its $US5 billion budget plan for 2015-2018.


Infantino has proposed increasing the World Cup from 32 to 40 teams and to more than double the amount given back to the 209 national associations to more than $US1 billion in total every four years.

Sheikh Salman, who is seen as closer to the FIFA old guard, had said the proposal could bankrupt FIFA.

“When I speak about figures ... I know what I am speaking about,” he said.

Blatter, 79, was the big absentee at the congress. The Swiss sports baron suffered a spectacular fall over the last nine months.


Swiss police, acting under US warrants, arrested seven FIFA officials in Zurich two days before his re-election last May.

Blatter has since been banned from football for six years for ethics breaches and could face criminal charges.

Each of the rivals went into the vote with political problems. Infantino was for seven years the right-hand man of Michel Platini, the UEFA president also banned for six years for ethics breaches.

Sheikh Salman had faced tough questions about the clampdown on pro-democracy protests in the Gulf state. He has called allegations made by human rights groups “nasty lies.”
 

Jack_Napier

Moderator
Staff member
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3,622
He's a Blatter protege isn't he? Even Blatter has come out and said he's a good choice and will continue Sepp's good work. More of the same no doubt from FIFA.
 

Jason Maher

Immortal
Messages
35,977
Like it'll make a lick of difference. Organisations like FIFA are fundamentally corrupt, and always will be.
 
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