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Sports / Football

Platini's UEFA and Blatter's FIFA

Published: 31 May 2015 - 09:26 am | Last Updated: 13 Jan 2022 - 02:26 pm

 


Zurich---Can't live with each other, can't live without each other: the tangled relationship between Sepp Blatter's FIFA and Michel Platini's UEFA reached a new low with the corruption storm that hit football's world body.
But while Blatter, who controls the World Cup, and Platini, with the Champions League, may be at daggers drawn, they each know they cannot afford a costly divorce.
Platini told Blatter to resign the day after Swiss police arrested seven FIFA officials in Zurich accused by US authorities of taking tens of millions of dollars in bribes. The French football legend said he was "disgusted" at the tarnishing of FIFA's image.
On Saturday, the day after he won his fifth term as president of the world's most powerful sporting federation, Blatter said there was a "hate" campaign coming from UEFA and "a person" within it.
Next Saturday, on the sidelines of the Champions League final in Berlin, the UEFA executive will "review its relations" with FIFA.
Some voices, such as Denmark's Allan Hansen, a member of the executive, say UEFA should withdraw from the world body.
England's FIFA vice president David Gill has already refused to serve under Blatter because of the world body's multiple scandals.
Platini says all options will be considered, but he opposes a split with FIFA, calling it the "headquarters" of football.
Blatter agreed. "FIFA needs UEFA, UEFA needs FIFA," he told a press conference Saturday after an executive meeting which his arch-rival attended.
Blatter chided the European body for blocking his efforts to introduce an "independent ethics commission", which he said could have stopped rotten officials getting onto the executive.
But the war stopped there and Europe kept its 13 places at the 2022 World Cup without a major fight at the executive committee. It had feared an attempt to see numbers cut.
- High financial stakes -
The world football war is nothing new. But the financial stakes are growing.
"Its part of history," according to Jerome Champagne, a former Blatter right hand man at FIFA who tried to stand against his former boss in the election.
Ever since controversial Brazilian Joao Havelange beat England Stanley Rous to the FIFA presidency in 1974 "UEFA has permanently -- in 1998, 2002 and again in 2011 -- tried to take power," said Champagne.
Europe, dominated by its cash rich major clubs in the Champions League, wants to restrain FIFA's power, according to Champagne.
"Behind the war of personalities, it is a war of strategic visions," he added. "Today football is becoming like basketball where there is only one league that matters, the NBA."
AFP