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originally posted by: ManFromEurope
a reply to: JadeStar
Hi JadeStar,
Great info there, didn't know a lot of it (call it ignorance, as we in Europe are constantly told to be the biggest soccerfans all over the world, yes, thank you MSM)!
Its kind of patriotism, at least the most patriotic thing we feel over here
And yes, your point of "sports ain't the thing for ATS" might be point blanc, but the FIFA should really be in ATS's alley, I think.
the investigation after all ORIGINATED IN THE USA.
originally posted by: alldaylong
a reply to: JadeStar
the investigation after all ORIGINATED IN THE USA.
It didn't.
BBC Journalists have been investigating FIFA corruption since 2006
news.bbc.co.uk...
And Jack Warner and other cronies at FIFA have been under investigation by other British Journalists since 2010.
And bloggers on Big Soccer (an American site) were investigating Jack Warner and CONCACAF as early as 2004
Scotland Yard or MI-5 didn't get involved did they?
originally posted by: alldaylong
a reply to: JadeStar
And bloggers on Big Soccer (an American site) were investigating Jack Warner and CONCACAF as early as 2004
Please supply a link to show this is in fact true. At the moment that is just here say.
He spoke, often humorously, of two CONCACAF officials, Trinidadian Jack Warner and Antiguan Paul 'Chet' Greene, who simply had much more than a fist in the till, resulting in most of FIFA's cash grants never being used for the purpose they were meant for.
FIFA vice-president Warner's trump card was his control of the 35 CONCACAF votes, which Sepp Blatter had found handy. Greene was his flamboyant minion endowed with just the sort of fair-is-foul-and-foul-is-fair cynicism that underpinned the gobbling up of 400,000 US dollars FIFA had given Antigua for the construction of its football headquarters.
We should not have to remind the presenters that it is simply not on to ridicule your host, particularly in the presence of as great an honoured guest as Nelson Mandela. It is clear that Mandela respects what Warner is doing for football, and he hopes would do for South Africa's 2010 World Cup bid. In the process the presenters may have done more hurt to their own image and that of Trinidad and Tobago rather than Nelson Mandela's image of Jack Warner.
Fifa president says former French president Nicolas Sarkozy and German counterpart Christian Wulff 'applied political pressure' to selection process
Fifa president Sepp Blatter said in a Sunday newspaper interview that French and German presidents applied political pressure before the 2018 and 2022 World Cups were awarded to Russia and Qatar, respectively.
Mr Blatter told Welt am Sonntag that "there were two political interventions" from former French president Nicolas Sarkozy and German counterpart Christian Wulff before the hosts were announced on Dec. 2, 2010.
"Messrs Sarkozy and Wulff tried to influence their voting representatives. That's why we now have a World Cup in Qatar. Those who decided it should take responsibility for it," said Mr Blatter, who said he was tired of taking the blame for something he had no control over.
"I act on the leadership principal. If a majority of the executive committee wants a World Cup in Qatar then I have to accept that," Mr Blatter said.
He suggested that the German football federation (DFB) received a recommendation from Mr Wulff "to vote for Qatar out of economic interests."
Former DFB president Theo Zwanziger wrote in his book that Mr Wulff had asked about Qatar's chances but he denied it had had any influence. Franz Beckenbauer, an executive committee member at the time, has never indicated which country he voted for.
Mr Blatter accepted no responsibly for the plight of migrant laborers building stadiums in Qatar amid reports of human rights abuses.
"Look at the German companies!" he said before naming railway and construction firms. "Deutsche Bahn, Hochtief and many more had projects in Qatar even before the World Cup was awarded."
Mr Blatter was instead concentrating on saving Fifa, which has been rocked by a widening American corruption probe that alleges bribery and racketeering worth more than $150 million involving high-ranking Fifa officials over a 24-year span.