West Asia delays call on who to back for AFC job
ANY agreement on which candidate the West Asian Football Federation will support for the continent's top job will have to wait until next month.
Yousef al-Serkal of the United Arab Emirates, Sheik Salman bin Ibrahim al-Khalifa of Bahrain and Hafez al-Medlej of Saudi Arabia, all from the WAFF zone, have put their names for the vacant Asian Football Confederation presidency.
Long-time FIFA Executive Committee member Worawi Makudi of Thailand is the only other candidate ahead of the May 2 election, which will determine who leads the continental football body until 2015. Having three West Asian candidates potentially splitting support gives Worawi, the only candidate from the eastern half of the confederation, a natural advantage.
FIFA vice president Prince Ali bin al-Hussein called a meeting in Amman, Jordan, on Wednesday to give the three candidates a chance to present their plans and programs to regional delegates. No decision was reached among the representatives of 10 football associations, but the concept of supporting a single candidate hasn't been ruled out.
"It was a unanimous decision to support all nominees and to create an opportunity for an open dialogue ... to agree on one candidate who will carry the AFC presidency for the development of this sport at all levels," Prince Ali said. Another meeting will be held next month in Amman.
China's Zhang Jilong, who has been acting president since Qatar's Mohamed bin Hammam was suspended by football's world governing body in May 2011, announced last weekend that he would not put himself forward to be president.
Yousef al-Serkal of the United Arab Emirates, Sheik Salman bin Ibrahim al-Khalifa of Bahrain and Hafez al-Medlej of Saudi Arabia, all from the WAFF zone, have put their names for the vacant Asian Football Confederation presidency.
Long-time FIFA Executive Committee member Worawi Makudi of Thailand is the only other candidate ahead of the May 2 election, which will determine who leads the continental football body until 2015. Having three West Asian candidates potentially splitting support gives Worawi, the only candidate from the eastern half of the confederation, a natural advantage.
FIFA vice president Prince Ali bin al-Hussein called a meeting in Amman, Jordan, on Wednesday to give the three candidates a chance to present their plans and programs to regional delegates. No decision was reached among the representatives of 10 football associations, but the concept of supporting a single candidate hasn't been ruled out.
"It was a unanimous decision to support all nominees and to create an opportunity for an open dialogue ... to agree on one candidate who will carry the AFC presidency for the development of this sport at all levels," Prince Ali said. Another meeting will be held next month in Amman.
China's Zhang Jilong, who has been acting president since Qatar's Mohamed bin Hammam was suspended by football's world governing body in May 2011, announced last weekend that he would not put himself forward to be president.
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