UEFA elects surprise candidate Ceferin as new leader

The Slovenian lawyer said that UEFA had to be a leader in good governance and transparency

Slovenia's Aleksander Ceferin, candidate for the UEFA presidency, delivers a speech during the opening of the 12th Extraordinary UEFA congress in Lagonissi, some 40 kilometers south of Athens, on September 14, 2016. PHOTO: AFP

ATHENS:
UEFA on Wednesday overwhelmingly elected Slovenian lawyer Aleksander Ceferin, almost unknown three months ago, as its new president to lead the world's most powerful football confederation into a new era after Michel Platini was forced to resign.

Ceferin, 48, beat Dutch football association chief Michael van Praag by 42 votes to 13 in the first round of voting after promising "bold" moves and an end to "intrigues" as the 55-member European body faces challenges over its flagship Champions League.

"The wind of change is blowing through European football. It is the end of one era and the start of a new one," Ceferin said in a speech to a special congress in Athens shortly after Platini gave a farewell address and left through a side door.

Ceferin highlighted the credibility challenges facing scandal-tainted football, along with regular accusations of match-fixing and doping.

But he told a special congress in Athens: "I am not here to emphasise the negativitites that surround us. I don't want to live in an empire of fear where every day we wake and see another negativity surfacing.

"I want to bring out all the good things UEFA has been doing and you have been doing."

He added:  "We are all tired of the current situation and look forward to a normalisation period that will be about positive things, about friendship, about football."

My conscience is clear, Platini tells UEFA

Ceferin said that UEFA had to be a leader in good governance and transparency.

"We should stop with politics, plots, intrigues, lack of transparency, self interest, it is football first. It is what I promise to all of you today, nothing more nothing less."

On top of the absence of Platini since October, after he was suspended over a $2 million payment from FIFA, UEFA has also faced disquiet over changes to the Champions League and speculation that major clubs could break away to form their own tournament.

Van Praag had called for a new look at a UEFA reform announced last week under which England, Germany, Italy and Spain will be guaranteed four places in the Champions League from 2018.


According to English Football Association chief executive Martin Glenn whether the plan goes ahead will be "the first big decision' facing Ceferin, who made no mention of the big four in his speech.

At the start of the Congress, football legend Platini was given respectful applause for a farewell speech in which he said he felt no guilt about the payment which destroyed his career as a sports leader.

"Just simply know that my conscience is clear, that I am certain that I committed not the slightest fault and that I am continuing to fight legally," the 62-year-old said.

Platini and former FIFA leader Sepp Blatter are both under criminal investigation by Swiss prosecutors over the payment that Blatter authorised in 2011 for work carried out a decade earlier without a contract.

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Platini was elected to a third five-year-term in March last year but was suspended in October over the payment and never returned to his office.  He officially resigned in May.

"You are going to continue this beautiful mission without me, for reasons that I do not wish to come back on today," he said.

Platini, who had also been a FIFA vice president in line to take over from Blatter, thanked all those who supported him during the scandal.

"I would also stress that I bear no grudges against those who have not supported me, everyone has the right to their own convictions."

Platini was originally suspended for six years and though his appeals to FIFA and the Court of Arbitration for Sport have failed, the ban has been cut to four years.

Platini said he had fought as UEFA leader to preserve football from "all the excesses that its planetary success has engendered."

"It is a game, not a product, a sport not a market and a show not a business," said the Frenchman.
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