Blatter and Asian Football
Confederation President Bin Hammam have accepted longstanding invitations to
attend the UEFA Congress.
The 53-nation meeting opens
Tuesday and will give UEFA President Michel Platini a second four-year term
unopposed.
Platini has asked both
candidates to be guests at UEFA's official dinner on Monday evening, which will
be held on a boat on the River Seine. Leaders of FIFA's other confederations
are also attending.
As incumbent FIFA President,
Blatter gets to address UEFA members Tuesday morning at the start of the
Congress at the Grand Palais.
Europe's football agenda was
overshadowed by world events when Qatar's Bin Hammam confirmed last Friday he
would try to end Blatter's 13-year hold on the game's most powerful job.
UEFA members make up more
than one quarter of the maximum 208 FIFA voters that Blatter and Bin Hammam
will attempt to woo before a June 1 election in Zurich.
The winner needs a two-thirds
majority of valid votes cast in the first ballot, or a majority in the second.
FIFA has set an April 1 deadline for other candidates to be nominated by a
single member federation.
The first FIFA election since
2002 — when Bin Hammam helped manage Blatter's successful campaign — promises a
hard-fought contest between former allies.
Platini has no such worries
retaining his presidential office on Tuesday.
However, he could play a
fascinating role in the fight between his two FIFA Executive Committee
colleagues.
The former France playing
great was mentored in football politics by Blatter after being chosen to
organize the successful 1998 World Cup staged in his home country.
However, Bin Hammam has
recently revealed he offered to support any Platini bid to take on Blatter in
2011. Platini also voted for Qatar's successful bid to host the 2022 World Cup.
Platini has been seen as a
strong candidate for the 2015 FIFA election, when Blatter would be 79.
While Blatter is unpopular
with some European football powers, including England, other UEFA members could
regard Bin Hammam as an unwanted barrier to Platini's FIFA ambitions.
In January, Platini said he
would not declare himself a FIFA candidate while promising UEFA members he would
serve them for four more years.
FIFA rivals Blatter, Bin Hammam seek Europe votes
Publication Date:
Mon, 2011-03-21 19:27
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