FIFA executives arrested for corruption (1 Viewer)

Your posts really should come with a warning; "Do not drink any sort of beverage while reading"................watching soccer in the US is an acquired taste.........................and if one more talking head bozo on TV claims someday soccer is going to catch on and pass one of the big four sports in popularity in the US, I'm going to scream.

Yes, like the metric system it will catch on any day. It's great for kids because anyone over the age of one can grasp the basic concept and play, but I find it hellish to watch for any reason other than a nationalistic desire to crush other countries which of course never occurs because the US teams are awful.
 
The World Cup is but a small portion of football as it only takes place every four years. The various domestic leagues are where football happens on a daily basis so if you're just focusing on the World Cup you're missing most of the action.

NBC's cable sports network has been showing the English Premier League for two years and the ratings have been very good. Are they as good as the NHL? No but they may get close some day.

One thing to remember is that football has only had a league in this country for 20 years. Rome wasn't built in a day. However, MLS keeps adding more and more franchises and now had two in NY.

Growth is slow but it's steady.

You don't like it? Fine but it seems any problem with the sport is a pretext for naysayers to complain.

Well, as the saying goes, haters going to hate.
 
Yes, like the metric system it will catch on any day. It's great for kids because anyone over the age of one can grasp the basic concept and play, but I find it hellish to watch for any reason other than a nationalistic desire to crush other countries which of course never occurs because the US teams are awful.

Yep, the metric system has been catching on since I was in high school, so learn those measurements or you'll be lost.

That was 38 years ago and still nothing.

And I've been hearing for years how the US team is gaining ground on the rest of the world, they'd better watch out.

Sort of like international basketball teams are gaining ground on the US.

Still waiting.....................................
 
Blatter, the head of FIFA, and his supposed successor, Michel Platini, have been suspended for 90 days and other officials banned for life. They are taking steps to getting their house in order.
 
Hi Guys,

Very good to see Fifa get their collective heads out of their arses!

As to the point about MLS getting more popular I think it will continue in the US for the pure and simple reason that you dont need a ton of equipment and the rules are pretty easy for kids to learn. While you maybe correct that it isnt going to be like the big 4 sports in the US I would say that is fine. I played in the 70s and 80s and enjoyed it. My kids especially my daughter play and enjoy it a lot. So I am glad there is an outlet for my overly energetic 6 and 3 year old boys so they arent tearing up the house. For the last reason I am really glad their are so many leagues popping up in the states. The other thing that was great was going to a Major League Soccer game and not having to mortgage the house to get tickets for the whole family. Even the play off game tickets were cheap. But its a game that like many others you either like it or not, for me US Football, College or Pro is a drag, but any Baseball is great and I can watch or even listen to it on the radio or computer so I cant argue with people and their preferences. So enjoy what you enjoy!

Dave
 
Have only read a few articles about all this but wasn't Platini supposed to be the cleanskin that was going to take over from Blatter ?

Or was it the Prince guy who is the head of the Qatar Football Federation. The one who doled out millions to Carribean FIFA guys to support him against Blatter.

Either way the organisation should be shut down and the main football countries should form a new organisation with a voting system weighted to reflect population, football leagues, World Cup attendances etc. I recall seeing a comment about the Caribbean Federation guy waiting for an atoll to surface so he could give it a Federation name and get another vote. The Caribbean has 31 member countries (useless trivia point ; 5 still have the Union Jack in their flags !). You know, the famous football countries like St Martin and St Lucia where the population of the country is the size of a town in UK that would have their own 3rd Division team.

When you have a system where a minor African country or small Pacific island nation has the same voting power as football countries such as England, Germany, Brazil, Italy etc it is no surprise if going to be a corrupted system. (Reminds me of another world organisation in NY I don't have much time for).

I look forward to the Qatar World Cup when the players and fans get there and realise might not be the most ideal venue for such a massive sporting event. In the meantime how many construction workers will have been underpaid, ill treated and died to make the event happen. Most recent estimate is that 4,000 will have died by the time of the Cup if continue at previous rate. I guess at least we won't have Blatter at the end telling us how it was the best World Cup ever.

The failed bidders for the 2022 Qatar World Cup were USA, Korea, Japan and Australia and pretty sure any one of these could step in and hold it. Would be nice to see a new organisation being formed by the main football countries on the base the previous FIFA administration and Qatar bids corrupted. Won't happen but wishful thinking.

Another overlooked aspect is that the money involved for the Caribbean FIFA guys being bribed was sufficient that it was also being used to affect the politics of some of those countries.

Time to shut it down and start again.
 
Below are the 8 candidates running to replace Sepp Blatter. French, Arab or African and a Caribbean. I would rule Platini out and Prince Ali looks good purely on the info that came with this list.

Prince Ali bin al Hussein

The 39-year-old brother of Jordan's King Abdullah was a member of his country's special forces, specialising in parachute jumps. The prince was on the FIFA executive from 2011 until this year when he first challenged Sepp Blatter for the presidency. Prince Ali championed the cause of allowing women to play football in a hijab. He has repeatedly demanded greater transparency within FIFA and promised to increase the share of revenues sent back to the national associations. He has condemned the "backroom deals" that he says are one of the biggest causes of FIFA's long-standing troubles. The prince has been one of the main advocates of releasing the Garcia report into the 2010 votes that gave the 2018 and 2022 World Cups to Russia and Qatar respectively.

Michel Platini

One of the greatest footballers of all time and, until he was implicated in a Swiss criminal investigation into FIFA, one of the sport's most skilful politicians. After being co-chairman of France's 1998 World Cup organisation, he became president of UEFA in 2007 and has since been re-elected twice. But the Frenchman's 90-day suspension while FIFA investigates a $A2,74 million payment from the world body without a written contract has seriously hit the chances of the man who was once hot favourite. Platini, 60, made his name as a sports administrator by pressing for football's riches and decision-making to be spread between members.

Jerome Champagne

The 57-year-old was a French diplomat in Oman, Los Angeles and Brazil before becoming a protocol advisor for the 1998 World Cup organisers. He joined FIFA in 1999 and rose to become deputy secretary general under Sepp Blatter, leaving in 2010. "I am not ashamed of the FIFA years," he said. Though not a footballer, Champagne was a freelance journalist for the magazine France Football. Champagne had tried to challenge Blatter in the election this year but could not get the required five signatures from national associations to enter. He has vowed to bring in greater transparency, stronger ethical standards and modernise the world body's administration.

David Nakhid

The mystery candidate in the FIFA race. Nakhid, 51, was captain of Trinidad and Tobagao and played club football with Grasshoppers in Switzerland, Waregem in Belgium and New England Revolution in the United States. His main administrative post has been running his own chain of football academies. Nakhid said it is time for football's power to be moved away from Europe and that it will need a former player to reform the world body. "I cannot be reckless. I am committed to transformation that is fair and even-handed and will deal with all or any breaches and improprieties," he said.

Tokyo Sexwale

The South African anti-apartheid campaigner, who entered the race on Saturday, wants to make history by becoming the first African to head football's governing body in its 111-year history. A former politician and one of his country's wealthiest men Sexwale, 62, was jailed alongside Nelson Mandela. He served 13 years of an 18-year jail term on Robben Island on terrorism charges. A member of South Africa's 2010 World Cup bid team he serves on FIFA's anti-racism and anti-discrimination committee, likening racism to "a monster that is trying to infiltrate sporting fields". He is also a FIFA media committee member.

Shaikh Salman bin Brahim al Khalifa
The soft-spoken Bahraini royal took over an Asian confederation in turmoil in 2013 after Mohamed bin Hammam was kicked out in disgrace, but he now enjoys an iron grip on the body. Enjoys strong backing from Kuwaiti powerbroker Sheikh Ahmad al Fahad al Sabah, one of the most influential figures in world sport and a major player in both FIFA and the Olympic movement. This year, Shaikh Salman was re-elected unopposed for a full, four-year term and became a FIFA vice president into the bargain. But he has been dogged by allegations that he was complicit in Bahrain's harsh crackdown on pro-democracy activists in 2011, charges he denies.

Gianni Infantino

The 45-year-old Swiss lawyer joined UEFA in 2000 and became general secretary in 2009. Multi-lingual, Infantino's original role was to deal with legal, commercial and professional football matters. He was subsequently appointed as director of legal affairs and club licensing division in 2004. He worked on fostering close contacts with the European Union, the Council of Europe and governmental authorities. Prior to joining UEFA he had a lot of experience working in sport. He had been an advisor to various football bodies in Italy, Spain and Switzerland before then working as the general secretary of the International Centre for Sports Studies at the University of Neuchatel.

Musa Bility

President of the Liberian Football Association, Bility's candidacy is something of surprise. He is one of a select band of Africans to stand for the presidency following current acting FIFA head Issa Hayatou in 2002, and Sexwale this time around. "If we are to change football, then we have to make sure that those (that) have been running FIFA for the last 20-25 years have nothing to do with it," the 48-year-old Bility told the BBC after announcing his candidature.
 
Really !

Who cares ?
It's like speaking at no end about the Kardashian
You like soccer . Good . Practice it with your friends and kids

Oh. I almost forgot . IMHO:salute::
 
Really !

Who cares ?
It's like speaking at no end about the Kardashian
You like soccer . Good . Practice it with your friends and kids

Oh. I almost forgot . IMHO:salute::

Wait a minute--you're a European, Mirof, you have to like soccer!

Someone check his papers....

:D

Prost!
Brad
 
Wait a minute--you're a European, Mirof, you have to like soccer!

Someone check his papers....

:D

Prost!
Brad

NOT TRUE BRAD!!! I'm Welsh ( so a European too, apparently) - and I cannot stand that "sport".

Apart from not liking the game itself, as a spectacle ( I think it's a boring game to watch - just my opinion), - I don't like the money-making business it has spawned either. I don't like many of the people who run it, play it, or the other hanger-ons - such as the "Alphabeticals" ( as I call them). You know, the FIFA's, UEFA's FA's etcetera. Most of whom appear to be mostly fat-cat, middle-aged old men - who only seem to pop-up in scandalous newspaper reports - and don't appear to have much purpose at all - except milking money from "The Fans"; - several of whom, or the antics they get up to, don't appeal much to me either!!

Trouble is - many of the true, well-behaved fans, have now been priced out of going to the actual matches, or taking their kids there - because of the abberant behaviours of some - and sky-high entrance fees - caused in no small way by the telephone-number salaries of all concerned with the game itself (players, managers, agents ,"Alphabeticals" etc).

No, Brad - not ALL Europeans like the round ball "sport" at all.:mad: And feel free to check "my papers" out any-time - whatever they are??{sm4}

Now, if it's an oval shaped ball you're talking about - then, that's a different kettle of fish. :D jb
 
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Okay, the subject of this thread talks about the FIFA, but I just take it to give out my opinions about professional sports in general.
Be it a small ball, a larger ball, or an oval shaped ball, I find it extremely ridiculous to read again and again what sums of money are involved with sports.
People who can play a sport good enough for the masses, for professional teams, owned by some billionaires, make millions of $'s a year.
They get transferred from one team to another for 10's of millions of $'s every now and then.
The crowd in many countries seems to go with it, no matter what.
I absolutely don't get it, how so many families can afford watching a game live in the stadiums.
I got free tickets to a Bengals Football game last year, and me and my son went to watch it.
Beside having free tickets, it cost $25.00 to park my car, and with a few beers and some food, I ended up paying a good part more than a $100.00 for that night.
That is with free tickets {eek3}

With all these millions and billions involved in many sports, what does a reasonable thinking human expect, is happening behind the scenes when decisions are made where the next world cup gonna be?
I find it sickening to read comments like: Oh my good, can you believe it, they were corrupt. They bought the World Cup location?
Just give me a break.

Oh well, I guess the papers/magazines have to come up with something to entertain.

So, be it that some FIFA executives get arrested, or the Kardashian's have a new outfit, I don't give a rat's ***.

But, truth is, when the next Soccer Euro Cup comes around and then the World Cup again later, I will be watching some games.
Because it's fun to have a party at home with some friends or meeting them at a bar and watch it.
I like those days.

Unless it will be becoming a "pay per view" only thing at some point, which I honestly expect, then they can do it without me :wink2:

Konrad
 
Really !

Who cares ?
It's like speaking at no end about the Kardashian
You like soccer . Good . Practice it with your friends and kids

Oh. I almost forgot . IMHO:salute::

Thanks Mirof, your comments most appreciated.

Could you provide me with a list of other subjects you are not interested in ? That way I can make sure I only discuss subjects you like.

I would like you to know I dont play soccer with my kids. We dont have time as there are too many Kardashian TV shows for us to watch. You should try it as some time as has great fashion and hairstyles and the plot and acting is brilliant. I think it is so unfair Kim has not been nominated for a best actress Oscar. People just dont appreciate the Kardashians for all the good they do in the world. IMHO:salute::

Best, Brett
 

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