Home Lightbox Blatter Resignation Opens New FIFA Race

Blatter Resignation Opens New FIFA Race

by AFP
Fabrice Coffrini—AFP

Fabrice Coffrini—AFP

Michel Platini, Prince Ali bin al-Hussein and Luis Figo are top contenders for next chief of football organization.

Sepp Blatter’s shock resignation opened up a new race Wednesday to become president of FIFA with a mission to reform football’s scandal-tainted world body.

The names of UEFA President Michel Platini, Prince Ali bin al-Hussein, who challenged Blatter in a vote last Friday, and Portuguese football great Luis Figo were immediately pushed forward. They were quickly joined in the mix by legendary Brazilian midfielder Zico and highly experienced South Korean official Chung Mong-Joon, both of whom said they were considering making a run at the job

But no figure made an official declaration. “There will be jostling for position. The election will take time,” commented one FIFA executive member in the hours after the 79-year-old Blatter gave in to pressure to stand down over a bribery scandal that hit the football body.

French football legend-turned-politician Platini is the best known of the potential runners. The 59-year-old, three-time winner of the Ballon d’Or, established his administrator credentials as organizer of the 1998 World Cup. He has headed UEFA since 2007. Platini decided last year not to run against Blatter in the election on Friday. He did not rule out an attempt in 2019 however.

But Platini’s own reelection in April to a new term in charge of the wealthiest and most powerful of football’s regional confederations could also hold him back from a bid for FIFA.

Platini praised the “difficult” and “brave” decision made by Blatter to stand down. But he gave no sign of his own intentions.

Jordan’s Prince Ali, who was a FIFA vice president until Friday when he lost the presidential election to Blatter, made it known through a spokesman that he is “ready” for football’s top job. “As for new elections, Prince Ali is ready,” said Sala Sabra, vice-president of the Jordanian football federation which the prince heads up. The prince, Sabra added, was also ready “to take up the presidency immediately” if asked.

Blatter said he would remain in office until a new election is held. But the extraordinary congress is not expected until between December this year and March 2016. In Friday’s election, Blatter won 133 votes—seven short of the required majority—to Prince Ali’s 73 in the first round of voting. The prince, standing on a reform ticket, withdrew before the second round, allowing Blatter in for his short-lived fifth term.

Luis Figo welcomed Blatter’s departure by saying: “Now we should, responsibly and calmly, find a consensual solution worldwide in order to start a new era of dynamism, transparency and democracy in FIFA.”

Figo was given strong backing by the Portuguese for his own candidacy, withdrawn in the week before voting to give Prince Ali a better chance. Portuguese Football Federation president Fernando Gomes said a Figo run this time would be “an individual choice.”

Dutch Football Association chief Michael Van Praag also pulled out of the race to help Prince Ali. He told Dutch media he would test opinion at a UEFA meeting in Berlin on Saturday “and then consider my plans.” Another former footballer mulling his options was Brazil’s Zico who said on his Facebook page: “Why not? I don’t have support yet, but if it’s open, I can become a candidate. It’s still an idea. Who knows?” Zico is currently coach to Indian club FC Goa.

Van Praag had said he would be a stop-gap president to carry out emergency reforms if elected last week. Asia, and Africa, strong supporters of Blatter, could also put forward candidates now that the field is open.

Sheikh Ahmad Al-Fahad Al-Sabah, the Kuwaiti head of the Olympic Council of Asia, became a new member of FIFA’s executive committee on Saturday. But he would probably have to choose between the OCA and FIFA. Asian Football Confederation president Shaikh Salman bin Ebrahim al Khalifa, a Bahraini royal, is also a potential choice, while another possibility from Asia is South Korean Chung, a former FIFA vice-president, who lost his own position on the FIFA executive board to Prince Ali in 2011.

Addressing a press conference in Seoul, Chung said he would decide on whether to run “after meeting with prominent figures in international football and listening to their opinions.”

Confederation of African Football chief Issay Hayatou stood against Blatter in 2002 and then became a loyal ally. But the Cameroonian is now 68 and undergoes kidney dialysis. He has also been reprimanded in the past for accepting cash payments. He denies any wrongdoing.

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