FIFA Allegations of Corruption

coldstream

on dbl secret probation
Oct 19, 2005
5,160
27
48
Chillliwack, BC
He's baaaaaaack
Sepp Blatter gained 133 votes to Prince Ali Bin al-Hussein’s 73 in the first
round of voting, not enough to secure a two-thirds majority, but the challenger
conceded defeat

He has been busy buying votes by promising grants of up to $1M national soccer organizations.. which will be inevitably looted by its managers.. since well before the scandal broke.

In this incestuous, self contained and self propagating election process...it was no surprise. Blatter has come out with statements that he alone can 'clean' things up.. but his tenure in fact produced the rank corruption in the organization... it's a manifestation of his own character.

Maybe if he gets arrested.. he'll resign.. but he has not a smidgen honour... just blind ambition and self delusion... he's the saviour of soccer.. a legend in his own mind.
 
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Kreskin

Doctor of Thinkology
Feb 23, 2006
21,155
149
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Why do they think it is soccer only,. The Olympics spend many times that and the biggest attraction are the women track eventers. Put them in burkas and the sport would be void of fans.
If the potato sack race was an Olympic event those ladies would win gold.
 

gopher

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 26, 2005
21,513
65
48
Minnesota: Gopher State
Blackie,

Only because of the alliteration. I'd bet you that none of those pundits in that pic call the game "soccer". "Soccer" - or "sacker" as it sounds like to British ears - is a North American term that nobody else uses for the world's greatest sport.




Not so. I have seen the show enough times and know for a fact that they often use the word "soccer" and not just when introducing the show. In fact, in BBC or other British channels they have also used the word when advertising a forthcoming game.

It's just another name for the sport, nothing to get hung about.
 

Kreskin

Doctor of Thinkology
Feb 23, 2006
21,155
149
63
The corporate sponsors will likely choke him out sooner or later.
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
48,790
1,709
113
He's baaaaaaack


He has been busy buying votes by promising grants of up to $1M national soccer organizations.. which will be inevitably looted by its managers.. since well before the scandal broke.

In this incestuous, self contained and self propagating election process...it was no surprise. Blatter has come out with statements that he alone can 'clean' things up.. but his tenure in fact produced the rank corruption in the organization... it's a manifestation of his own character.

Maybe if he gets arrested.. he'll resign.. but he has not a smidgen honour... just blind ambition and self delusion... he's the saviour of soccer.. a legend in his own mind.


Of course he's back. It was a foregone conclusion he would be. The guy is a dictator and will be FIFA President for life, until he keels over and dies of a heart attack or something.

Not so. I have seen the show enough times and know for a fact that they often use the word "soccer" and not just when introducing the show. In fact, in BBC or other British channels they have also used the word when advertising a forthcoming game.

The BBC are a hopeless Left-wing institution who think that it's somehow "trendy" to use American words and phrases in their speech. Quite frankly, however, most people, especially football fans, find it annoying.

Football is the world for the sport in Britain, not soccer.

It's just another name for the sport, nothing to get hung about.
It's the North American word for it, not the British word for it. Football should be the phrase used on British television. There is no reason whatsoever for a British television station to call it "soccer."
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
11,548
0
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They're no different than the scummers running the IOC.


And can I ask, what is the job of the FIFA Prez? Shouldn't he be responsible for overseeing the scammers?


That aside, I am somewhat amused that all the talk this week is about the financial crimes the FIFA group has committed but the other obscenities committed in the name of soccer is going unmentioned...........










World Cup sponsors urged to bail over 'horrific' treatment of workers in Qatar




World Cup sponsors urged to bail over 'horrific' treatment of workers in Qatar | CTV News
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
48,790
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Apparently the Russians, the Spanish and the French (well, the French will be French) defied UEFA orders and voted for Blatter.

Blatter also got a lot of support from the Americas.

As many as 18 UEFA nations, including Russia and allies in the eastern bloc, plus Spain and UEFA president Michel Platini’s native France, went against UEFA orders to vote for Prince Ali bin Al-Hussein in Friday’s presidential election.

Russia is an avowed ally of Blatter, with public support coming from president Vladimir Putin.

Spain and France as nations are huge beneficiaries of Qatari investment. Both of their FIFA executive members voted in 2010 for Qatar to stage the 2022 World Cup.

As Blatter began a fifth four-year term on Saturday, Prince Ali and Uefa were analysing how and why more than a third of Europe’s 53-nation membership could have defied Platini’s request to vote as a bloc.

We believe as many as 18 Europeans may have voted for Blatter,’ said a source close to Prince Ali, who polled 73 votes to Blatter’s 133. It is understood a chunk of his 73 ballots came from the Americas.

One veteran FIFA insider told the Mail on Sunday that Blatter’s supporters within Europe include Turkey, Cyprus, Finland, as well as France, Spain and Russia.

The European mutiny cast new light on next Saturday’s UEFA emergency session in Berlin on the sidelines of the Champions League final.

Platini has called together his top brass to decide what action to take in the wake of Blatter’s victory, but it is clear there is no prospect of a World Cup boycott.


UEFA nations betrayed pro-reform mandate to oust Sepp Blatter as FIFA president | Daily Mail Online


As many as 18 UEFA nations went against orders to vote for Prince Ali Bin al Hussein in Friday's presidential election


Blatter walks past the UEFA president Michel Platini, who had urged his member nations to vote for Prince Ali
 

Curious Cdn

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 22, 2015
37,070
7
36
No one mentioning how corrupt the sport of Soccer(football Is) This sport appears
to be a big phony game including who gets to host it. 14 likely going to end up in the
courts.
I know wrestling is fake and I don't care for it but it is still better than the most boring
game in the world soccer. Little Ref's running around with little yellow and red cards
admonishing players for playing tough. Never could stand the game that appears to
be disgracing itself.

If you recall during the last Olympics, the US women won their gold by some pretty naked refereeing shenanigans.They were patently obvious, the whole world was watching. It is about as corrupt and bent as Olympic figure skating.
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
11,548
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36
Jack Warner, a former vice president of world soccer’s governing body, FIFA, defended himself against corruption charges on Sunday by citing an article from The Onion, apparently unaware that it was satire.


Mr. Warner, 72, who was arrested last week in connection with a wide-ranging criminal investigation by the United States Justice Department, held up the faux news report, calling it evidence of an American conspiracy, in a video statement that was uploaded to the web and then removed later in the day


The satirical article, published Wednesday under the headline, “FIFA Frantically Announces 2015 Summer World Cup in the United States,” mockingly suggested that, to placate American officials, the governing body had added a new tournament, which would begin the very same day.


Holding up a printout of The Onion piece as if it were a genuine news report, Mr. Warner told viewers of the video posted on his personal website, Facebook page and YouTube channel, “All this has stemmed from the failed U.S. bid to host the World Cup.”




Mr. Warner, the leader of Trinidad’s Independent and Liberal Party, went on to suggest that American officials were primarily motivated by losing a bid to host the 2022 World Cup.


“The U.S. applied to hold the World Cup in 2022 and they lost the bid to Qatar — a small country, an Arabic country, a Muslim country,” he said.


“I could understand the U.S. embarrassment,” Mr. Warner continued, but it is important, he added, to “take your losses like a man.”


After Mr. Warner’s error in mistaking The Onion for a news source was noted, and mocked, on social networks, the video disappeared without explanation from his website and social media accounts.


Two hours later, it was replaced by an edited version of the video, missing 63 seconds and all references to The Onion.






http://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/01/w...icmst=1409232722000&bicmet=1419773522000&_r=0








FIFA Frantically Announces 2015 Summer World Cup In United States
Global Soccer Tournament To Kick Off In America Later This Afternoon









ZURICH—After the Justice Department indicted numerous executives from world soccer’s governing body on charges of corruption and bribery, frantic and visibly nervous officials from FIFA held an impromptu press conference Wednesday to announce that the United States has been selected to host this summer’s 2015 World Cup.


“We are thrilled to reveal that, for the first time in 21 years, the World Cup will finally return to America, with matches set to kick off today at 5 p.m. local time in Los Angeles,” said FIFA president Sepp Blatter, smiling broadly before unveiling the tournament’s official logo, a hand-drawn stick figure kicking a soccer ball with “USA 2015!” hastily scribbled in black marker above its head.


“With world-class venues in cities across the country and a rapidly growing passion for the sport, the U.S. is the perfect choice—really the only choice—for this summer’s tournament. Everyone at FIFA is certain that the 2015 World Cup in America will be a tremendous success, and billions of fans from around the world will, in just a few hours, come together to enjoy this wonderful display of soccer over the coming weeks.”


At press time, the U.S. national team was leading defending champions Germany in the World Cup’s opening match after being awarded 12 penalties in the game’s first three minutes.
 

gopher

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 26, 2005
21,513
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Minnesota: Gopher State
Blackie,


The BBC are a hopeless Left-wing institution who think that it's somehow "trendy" to use American words and phrases in their speech. Quite frankly, however, most people, especially football fans, find it annoying.

Football is the world for the sport in Britain, not soccer.

Quote:
It's just another name for the sport, nothing to get hung about.

It's the North American word for it, not the British word for it. Football should be the phrase used on British television. There is no reason whatsoever for a British television station to call it "soccer."




I've seen Brits used the term soccer more than once. In fact Hall of Fame player Alan Willey who is from England, has lived here in the Twin Cities for 40 years, still uses the term when he reports the sport on tv. By the way, he is largely responsible for the growth of the sport in this state.


Mebbe some day the folks in BBC will be persuaded to use the term football.

We shall see ....
 

EagleSmack

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 16, 2005
44,168
96
48
USA
If you recall during the last Olympics, the US women won their gold by some pretty naked refereeing shenanigans.They were patently obvious, the whole world was watching. It is about as corrupt and bent as Olympic figure skating.


 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
41,030
43
48
Red Deer AB
What a wicked web we weave . . . . Pretty fuking low is all I'm going to say.

Before the arrests, FIFA had been beset by the Palestinian resolution to suspend Israel from the international body because of its violent interference in the affairs of Palestinian soccer. The violence included arrests and harassment of Palestinian players, refusing to allow them to enter the West Bank to play, and even thebrutal shootingsof two star players in the feet. This attack destroyed careers and ruined their chance to ever play professional soccer again.
Earlier today, the Palestinian soccer federation president, Jibril Rajoub, withdrew the motion his group had filed to suspend Israel’s membership. It’s hard to tell whether he backed down because he no longer had the votes, because he was bought off or because FIFA was bought off. At any rate, the reaction among Palestinians will be swift and negative. This is another in a long line of betrayals by the PA of the Palestine national cause.
http://www.intifada-palestine.com/2015/05/did-israel-buy-its-way-out-of-fifa-suspension/
 
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Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
48,790
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I've seen Brits used the term soccer more than once. In fact Hall of Fame player Alan Willey who is from England, has lived here in the Twin Cities for 40 years,

Well that probably explains it then.

If the Americans are right about Fifa corruption, England's World Cup bid never stood a chance


Thanks to US and Swiss investigators, we now seem to know why England's 2018 World Cup bid failed. But will the culprits ever be brought to justice?


By every measure of logic and fairness we should have been serious contenders to host the contest Photo: PA



By Boris Johnson, Mayor of London and new Conservative MP for Uxbridge and South Ruislip
31 May 2015
The Telegraph
355 Comments

Looking back, I can remember clearly when I first had an inkling of the disaster. It was the night before the fatal vote in 2010, and we in the England delegation were summoned to that swanky Zurich hotel where the Fifa hierarchs like to do their deals.

It must have been about 10pm. Somewhere upstairs the Prime Minister was schmoozing a series of mendacious figures from the world of international football. Prince William was on another doomed mission somewhere else. I found myself in a dimly lit bar, drinking beer with Gary Lineker and Fabio Capello, while keeping an eye on the door.

Our instructions were simple. If any Fifa executive walked in, we were to make ourselves as pleasant as we decently could. We were to inveigle ourselves into their society, to tell self-deprecating jokes, to put them at their ease in the approved British manner – in short, to use whatever feeble charms we possessed to persuade them to vote for us.

I managed to join a group from – I think – Latin America. They were full of fun and life. They loved London, they adored England, they recognised our role in the creation of football. But would they vote for us? I looked into their merry faces; I scanned their eyes for a clue; and I was none the wiser.

My tension grew. We all knew that the case for England 2018 was superb; we knew that by every measure of logic and fairness we should be serious contenders to host the World Cup. But what was actually going to happen? At length I sought out the nice young British executive who had been put in charge of the PR for our bid - and I asked him straight out; and I will never forget the look I saw in his eyes – a look of sudden and terrifying candour.

I had talked to him for months, on and off, and had never known him to deviate from a tone of buoyant optimism. We had sketched out all sorts of scenarios for success, and they each depended on progressing to the second round. If X country or Y country were eliminated, we would tell ourselves, then all their first round votes would transfer to us.

By the second round we would be in an immensely strong position. Fortified with the votes of X or Y, we would scorch into the third round – and, bingo! Everyone would vote for England as the safe bet, and it would be Three Lions on a Shirt, Jules Rimet gleaming again in Wembley, and a general feeling of orgiastic national good humour.


Police raid the Miami HQ of the North American football association, CONCACAF

England would host the greatest tournament of the world’s most popular game for the first time since 1966 – and all we had to do was get through that first round of voting. But could we? “I don’t know,” said our campaign manager in a whisper. “I have moments when I just can’t see where our votes are coming from.”

As we were to see the following day, he was right to be nervous. It was a rout, a fiasco, a moment of national humiliation and derision. England was blown a collective raspberry in a global version of the Eurovision song contest. Nobody’s votes transferred to us, because we beat nobody. We managed to be kicked out first with nul points and only two votes, one of which came from the English chap on Fifa.

And ever since I have asked myself why we bombed so badly. We seemed to have such a good case. England had given the game to the world, and yet we hadn’t hosted the Cup for two generations. We had by far the most developed markets for TV and advertising.

We had a football-loving public. Above all we had the infrastructure to put on a world-class sporting event, as we showed beyond doubt in 2012.

And it isn’t as if we failed to woo the Fifa executives. When their delegation was in town, we made sure their traffic lights were always on green, like a series of invisible butlers holding open the doors of a palace. I even joined the 32-stone Chuck Blazer for breakfast – or for one of his series of breakfasts. Blatter, I am afraid, was treated with a reverence that was positively emetic. And none of it was enough.

Now, thanks in large part to the indefatigable work of the British press, we now appear to know the reason. The whole Fifa edifice was and is weevilled with apparent corruption. While other countries turned a blind eye, the Americans have stepped in. The US has an extraordinary doctrine – that if you commit a crime by using an American banking network then you have committed a crime under American law and must answer to America; and if it brings the kleptocrats of Fifa to justice, then I am all for it.


FA President Prince William, footballer David Beckham and the Prime Minister share a joke at a meeting in 2010 before the announcement that Russia would host the World Cup in 2018, not England

I hope that the law now takes its course: that Sepp Blatter is finally forced to take responsibility for what appears to have happened on his watch, and to resign. If they had any sense of honour the sponsors would now pull the plug on this plainly fraudulent organisation.

In an ideal world the guilty would be convicted and Fifa would be wound up and replaced – as I have long since argued – by a more transparent and accountable body. I have to say, alas, that I am not entirely certain that things will turn out this way. As both the US and Swiss investigators acknowledge, bribery is difficult to prove.

And then there is a further geopolitical problem. You and I may rejoice at the notion of Britain and America triumphing in the final reel of the movie – James Bond and Felix Leiter coming together to winkle Blofeld from his lair. Not everyone sees it that way; not everyone likes the idea of an Anglo-American imperium. You may have noted that the French and Spanish Fifa wallahs decided, amazingly, to vote for Blatter.

All we can do is watch events, send whatever evidence we have to the Americans, and live in hope. And if the Swiss police indeed show that the 2010 contest was corrupted, then it will have to be re-run. London stands ready.


If the Americans are right about Fifa corruption, England's World Cup bid never stood a chance - Telegraph