‘FIFA Is No Longer ‘Toxic’- Re-elected President Infantino

‘FIFA Is No Longer ‘Toxic’- Re-elected President Infantino

By Brian Bariyo Tumuramye

Gianni Infantino will run football’s world governing body FIFA (Federation of International Football) for four more years, after being reelected by acclamation for a second term as president in Paris on Wednesday.

The 49-year-old Swiss-Italian was the only candidate, so his election was never in doubt, and the traditional vote was replaced with a round of applause at FIFA’s 69th Congress. In his closing speech, an emotional Infantino thanked the delegates from FIFA’s 211 member associations for their support and promised he would “not stand still” but would continue to develop the game and “defend football”. He said his priorities would be creation of more youth competitions, a continued push on women’s football, more investments in technology and the organisation of a “world convention on football development”.

Infantino used his opening speech, however, to list his achievements since taking over at an extraordinary congress in February 2016, when he was  given the task of restoring FIFA  reputation. That was after the corruption scandals of 2015 which brought down his predecessor Sepp Blatter and a generation of football administrators with far higher profiles than his own. Reflecting on how far FIFA has come in three years and four months, Infantino said: “Today nobody is talking about crisis, nobody is talking about rebuilding from scratch, nobody is talking about corruption.  We have turned things around. FIFA has gone from being toxic, almost criminal, to what it should be; an organisation that develops and cares about football.” He then listed “the 11 best things we’ve done” since 2016 – 11 because it is his and FIFA’s “magic number”, Starting with money, which he admitted was at “the core of Fifa’s problems” in the past, Infantino said the federation has never been in a stronger position and its work is now completely “open”, with “thick finance and governance reports” and external audits that track every penny it invests in development projects.

In regards to the bottom line, he said the four-year budget has grown from 5billion US dollars (£3.9billion) in 2014 to 6.4billion dollars (£5billion) now, “at a time when people said nobody would want to be associated with Fifa and when we were coming from our worst crisis”. He said FIFA’s cash reserves had almost tripled to more than £2billion, despite tripling the amount it distributes to its members to grow the game. “We’re not spending it on dodgy deals, we’re investing it with you and checking that it is done,” he said. He then moved on to the decision to expand the 2026 World Cup from 32 to 48 teams, claiming it would give “50 or 60 more countries the chance to qualify” and that would encourage them to invest more in football. Infantino hailed the introduction of video assistant referees as “probably the biggest success story” for FIFA and the rule-making body IFAB in last decade, “Is it perfect? No, but it’s very close,” he said. He concluded “this is not the end, it’s just the beginning” – and, on the evidence at congress, there would appear to be few who disagree.

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