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October 27, 2015

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UEFA’s Infantino enters FIFA fray

With Michel Platini expected to be ruled out of the FIFA presidential election because of his suspension, UEFA made a surprising last-minute decision yesterday to throw its support behind the Frenchman’s right-hand man.

Gianni Infantino, the general secretary under Platini for the last six years, was given the go-ahead by an emergency UEFA executive committee meeting held via video conference to join a growing field of up to seven contenders.

On a deadline day full of late tactical changes, Asian soccer confederation president Sheikh Salman bin Ibrahim al-Khalifa of Bahrain joined the field and Liberian soccer federation president Musa Bility also entered the race.

Bility’s candidacy to replace Sepp Blatter in the February 26 election comes two months after his campaign seemed over when African soccer leaders refused to support him.

“I don’t want to go into any race that I cannot win,” Bility said, adding that more than 25 of the 54 African voting federations offered to nominate him.

Bility joined the race one day after longtime African soccer confederation president Issa Hayatou — the interim FIFA president while Blatter is suspended — met with Sheikh Salman in Cairo.

Sheikh Salman previously supported Platini’s campaign but decided to seek the top job himself after the UEFA president was suspended for 90 days in a FIFA ethics investigation. Blatter was suspended as part of the same investigation.

Infantino, who was already viewed as a contender to be appointed FIFA secretary general, gives UEFA another option if FIFA’s election committee bars Platini as a candidate.

His candidacy also could strengthen a Europe-Asia alliance that seemed decisive earlier in the campaign.

UEFA said in a statement that the Swiss lawyer “has our full support in his campaign to become FIFA president.”

“He is in the process of submitting the required nominations and will issue a statement on his candidacy later today,” the European soccer body said.

Other probable candidates vying for the FIFA job include Prince Ali bin al-Hussein of Jordan, South African tycoon Tokyo Sexwale, former FIFA official Jerome Champagne and David Nakhid, a former player from Trinidad and Tobago.

The 49-year-old Sheikh Salman’s entry was already being criticized by rights groups who urged FIFA’s election committee to reject him as a candidate when it conducts integrity checks.

Another candidate, South Korea’s Chung Mong-joon, pulled out of the race yesterday. A scion of South Korea’s Hyundai industrial conglomerate, Chung was banned from the sport for six years by FIFA, after an investigation into the decision to award the 2018 World Cup to Russia and the 2022 tournament to Qatar.




 

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