Trending Topics

      Next match: Villa v LFC [Premier League] Mon 13th May @ 8:00 pm
      Villa Park

      Today is the 10th of May and on this date LFC's match record is P11 W6 D4 L1

      FIFA Reputation In Tatters

      Read 8584 times
      0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
      tezmac
      • LFC Reds Subscriber
      • ******
      • 11,264 posts | 927 
      • F**k the Sun F**k Murdoch F**k the press
      Re: FIFA Reputation In Tatters
      Reply #69: Dec 04, 2010 08:38:55 pm
      There are many reasons why neither Russia or Qatar should host the world cup, but we are missing the main reason.... Supporters!! FIFA does not give a sh*t about the supporters who have to travel to these events.  it is the same with UEFA and their hosting of the champions league in far flung stadiums that are a nightmare for people to get to.

      Visas and cost will be a huge problem in Russia, as will the huge distances fans will have to travel between cities.

      Russia and FIFA is a cosy match though.  neither like freedom of the press. Putin can put an arm round Sepp and tell him that unlike that pesky free press in the UK, he does not have to worry about the Russian Media, as he has it all under control!  Russia is one of the most corrupt countries in the world.  Again FIFA can relate to this.  Many decisions in Russia are done in secret, and with no accountability (see freedom of press) between a small hiarchy of people... again FIFA like this concept.

      As for the middle east in june/july.  my god fans will need to walk round with a drip in order not to de-hydrate.  temps up to 50 degrees. Apparantlely the stadiums are going to be built with open roofs but have some completely tried and untested cooling system that pumps air into the stadium.  This bid was considered very high risk in every way, so we have the right to ask.....how the f**k did they get it????  What mind set is there in FIFA, when the pre bid technical inspection goes to the bidding country, see's no stadiums at all, no fan base, has a tiny population, no lasting legacy, no footballing history and the presentation is just a set of space age pretty drawings giving details of a theoretical cooling technology, and the think, yeah...that's the one for us!  and the government of Qatar will pay for the stadiums!! but excuse me, aren't governents not allowed to get involved in the running of football at national level.  seems like it is ok when it suits FIFA.

      I'm not saying England should have got it, but they had a very compelling case.  Why set such high criteria for bids, and then vote for those countries that are the furthest away from meeting those criteria.

      Spain and Holland/Belgium's bid was excellent, and yes the Spanish are also pissed off.  They cannot understand the decision either!

      as for Australia and the USA, they have even more reason to think this is a stitch up.  they Have great stadiums, growing support, transport networks, hotels, places to eat.  In fact all the same things that would make staging the world cup in those countries great for the supporters visiting, and the same can be said for Spain, Belgium/Holland and England.

      All of the losing countries have another thing in common.. a free press and media and democracy (I know Russia does, but it's not exactly a model version).


      Summed up my feelings exactly, redprint
      number7
      • Forum Emlyn Hughes
      • ****

      • 803 posts |
      Re: FIFA Reputation In Tatters
      Reply #70: Dec 04, 2010 11:07:04 pm
      Indeed FIFA just want money full stop! They don't really care about football's development in grass roots. In some countries, even convicted criminals still can lead their country's football associations.
      Create another world cup and that's it!
      MiciG91
      • Forum Legend - Benitez
      • *****

      • 1,664 posts | 38 
      Re: FIFA Reputation In Tatters
      Reply #71: Dec 08, 2010 02:38:00 am
      Just downloaded the new FIFA to my Laptop, tried to open the file and it said it was corrupt.   
      HUYTON RED
      • Forum Legend - Shankly
      • ******

      • 40,333 posts | 8606 
      Re: FIFA Reputation In Tatters
      Reply #72: Dec 08, 2010 02:44:30 am
      Just downloaded the new FIFA to my Laptop, tried to open the file and it said it was corrupt.   

      Ha ha ha

      When first started reading that, I was thinking "he's posting that in  the wrong thread, then the penny dropped!!

      Good one.
      Billy1
      • Forum Legend - Paisley
      • *****

      • 10,638 posts | 1966 
      Re: FIFA Reputation In Tatters
      Reply #73: Dec 08, 2010 07:23:03 am
       F.I.F.A. and U.E.F.A. have both achieved the agendas they set for themselves about 10 years ago,and that is total control of all football associations and more importantly the clubs.It is about time the big clubs stood up to F.I.F.A. and U.E.F.A. and reclaimed football  and stopped these two organisations dictating as to when players have to be released for international duty.Maybe just maybe the corruption might stop if the power of veto is returned to the clubs. Also  these useless friendlies might be kicked into touch for all the good they do.
      « Last Edit: Dec 10, 2010 12:35:40 pm by Reslivo »
      SM
      • Forum Legend - Fagan
      • *****

      • 3,583 posts | 400 
      Re: FIFA Reputation In Tatters
      Reply #74: Dec 08, 2010 10:35:06 am
      From street level to board room level to presidents of countries it happens,its not what you know its who you know as the saying goes.

      The world is corrupt.

      I agree with this but then again I am a cynical b***ard and always will be.
      redjames83
      • Forum Paul Walsh
      • **

      • 114 posts |
      Re: FIFA Reputation In Tatters
      Reply #75: Dec 08, 2010 03:45:19 pm
      A couple of things I heard on the Radio yesterday. May have been said already.

      We could hold the World Cup tomorrow. No profit for FIFA.

      Russia and Qatar need to build stadia, by "Approved FIFA Contractors"

      We would leave "No legacy" as our staidia are here, but Qatar are going to dismantle there  Air Conditioned stadia and "give" them to African countries. Ok fine. But I have BIG issues here.

      Air Conditioned Stadia, the cost of running them, the cross infection of A/C. What happens when they break? The Green House effect of all the energy being used.

      How are the stadia going to be transported and who is going to pay for them? Which African country is going to want an A/C Football ground when they can not pay for general health care.

      FIFA are just interested in PROFIT and the associated Kickbacks.

      Can anyone tell me what the Press are saying in other countries? Dexter? anyone. It's not sour grapes. But this is a farce.

      Apparently the air conditioning is carbon neutral and powered by solar panels in the desert - again all this technology is untested though!!

      RE the stadia apparently only the top tiers of each ground will be dismantled and moved so they won't go to other countries with the air conditioning in place. Which will still leave 12 white elephant stadiums scattered around Qatar.

      However, I totally agree that part of the deal will be FIFA's favoured building contractors, there is a huge amount of money on construction and FIFA want their share.


      HUYTON RED
      • Forum Legend - Shankly
      • ******

      • 40,333 posts | 8606 
      Re: FIFA Reputation In Tatters
      Reply #76: Dec 08, 2010 04:56:41 pm
      So Blatter has come out and branded England bad losers.

      And that's the breaking news bar on SSN!!

      He's one cheeky corrupt b***ard.
      Firepool
      • Forum Legend - Benitez
      • *****

      • 2,274 posts | 224 
      • @Jenns_Design
      Re: FIFA Reputation In Tatters
      Reply #77: Dec 08, 2010 09:54:30 pm
      I heard that Qatar does not allow women in public. Women will not be able to go which will hurt sales of tickets. If this is true I would hope some men don't buy tickets just to hurt sales more. My dad said it would be great if the supporters around the world boycotted the WC in 2022 to put it to FIFA. I don't think it would happen but would be great if it did. It should go to a country that has equality for all people. I was completely gutted to hear Russia/Qatar were awarded the honor of hosting the World Cup.

      One thing I don't understand is how the USA's bid book proposal was awarded the highest points but yet when it came time to bid we didn't get it. I can not believe that our presentation was that bad. It seems like there was a lot of underhanded crap going on behind the scenes. FIFA is a farce and failure to the game.
      Bahrosa-LFC
      • Forum Legend - Fagan
      • *****

      • 2,549 posts |
      • It's Not A Badge... It's A Family Crest
      Re: FIFA Reputation In Tatters
      Reply #78: Dec 08, 2010 10:42:18 pm
      I heard that Qatar does not allow women in public. Women will not be able to go which will hurt sales of tickets. If this is true I would hope some men don't buy tickets just to hurt sales more. My dad said it would be great if the supporters around the world boycotted the WC in 2022 to put it to FIFA. I don't think it would happen but would be great if it did. It should go to a country that has equality for all people. I was completely gutted to hear Russia/Qatar were awarded the honor of hosting the World Cup.

      One thing I don't understand is how the USA's bid book proposal was awarded the highest points but yet when it came time to bid we didn't get it. I can not believe that our presentation was that bad. It seems like there was a lot of underhanded crap going on behind the scenes. FIFA is a farce and failure to the game.
      You heard wrong.
      Dexter
      • Forum Legend - Fagan
      • *****

      • 4,279 posts | 116 
      Re: FIFA Reputation In Tatters
      Reply #79: Dec 08, 2010 10:48:16 pm
      I heard that Qatar does not allow women in public. Women will not be able to go which will hurt sales of tickets. If this is true I would hope some men don't buy tickets just to hurt sales more. My dad said it would be great if the supporters around the world boycotted the WC in 2022 to put it to FIFA. I don't think it would happen but would be great if it did. It should go to a country that has equality for all people. I was completely gutted to hear Russia/Qatar were awarded the honor of hosting the World Cup.

      One thing I don't understand is how the USA's bid book proposal was awarded the highest points but yet when it came time to bid we didn't get it. I can not believe that our presentation was that bad. It seems like there was a lot of underhanded crap going on behind the scenes. FIFA is a farce and failure to the game.
      Yeah you heard wrong.

      And I never expected USA to get it, I doubt anyone did. The last World Cup there was too recent in my opinion.
      YANK_LFC_FAN
      • LFC Reds Subscriber
      • ******
      • 3,507 posts | 426 
      • Timid men prefer the calm of despotism!
      FIFA Corruption
      Reply #80: Dec 23, 2010 10:26:16 pm
      I watched a news report on FIFA and the WC bids.  Can someone explain to me how FIFA is allowed to just do whatever they want?  How are FIFA allowed to operate which is in the strictest sense a monopoly. The enforce all the rules that they themselves make and force every league, country to abide by all the laws that they create with absolutely no oversight.

      Not too mention the insane amount of self indulgent policies that transpire in the World Cup and the World Cup bidding process. Their are stacks of papers, documents, witnesses etc all showing that FIFA openly accept bribes, they shuffle the money around to show it coming from "Other Sources" but its blatant and rampant corruption in an organization which honestly is only given its power to govern Football because they say they govern football.

      My main argument is why do all the leagues in every country do what FIFA demands and why cant a league just say "F**k Off" and start a non FIFA endorsed league?

      KennyIsKing
      • Banned
      • *****

      • 4,628 posts | 129 
      Re: FIFA Corruption
      Reply #81: Dec 23, 2010 10:32:54 pm
      Money.

      It's that simple.
      YANK_LFC_FAN
      • LFC Reds Subscriber
      • ******
      • 3,507 posts | 426 
      • Timid men prefer the calm of despotism!
      Re: FIFA Reputation In Tatters
      Reply #82: Dec 24, 2010 09:06:34 pm
      I understand the Money aspect to it.  But who appointed FIFA as the sole governing body and how can they just continue to go through corruption scandals and know one steps forward and does an independant, arbitrary investigation. Why allow an organization to influence so much power onto others with absolutely no oversight.

      FIFA has all the power only because they say they have all the power. What power do they actually wield besides making threats and trying to impose fines or sanctions.
      If every nation which runs a league demanded FIFA investigations, what could FIFA do to stop it.   Everyone who knows anything about FIFA knows that the main council accepts payments and perks from nations trying to get the WC. Why is FIFA tax exempt?  Why is FIFA allowed to make all the money they can from the WC and the host nations are the ones who lose money from the games?  Why does FIFA get to determine what advertisers are allowed at the games and the host nations get 0 advertising revenue?

      Who the F**k allows this? I just dont understand why, arguably the biggest football nation on earth, England has all the facilities, hotels, media centers already built and ready to host an awesome WC get no votes compared to a country that has no facilities ready to host, which has never had a WC game or team and now their are links directly related to Qatar business interests in league with numerous FIFA officials, who surprisingly are the ones who voted on the WC hosts.   Why is this ignored?  The entire process of the WC bid and the "Bid Book" and all that is just so open to corruption.
      Frankly, Mr Shankly
      • Guest
      Re: FIFA Reputation In Tatters
      Reply #83: Dec 24, 2010 09:22:52 pm
      Well if a major league did threaten a split then that would only be a good thing and more often than not succeeds in doing so with it's threat so it's a win win situation. It's not going to happen because FIFA have far too much power.
      YANK_LFC_FAN
      • LFC Reds Subscriber
      • ******
      • 3,507 posts | 426 
      • Timid men prefer the calm of despotism!
      Re: FIFA Reputation In Tatters
      Reply #84: Dec 25, 2010 01:48:15 am
      Well if a major league did threaten a split then that would only be a good thing and more often than not succeeds in doing so with it's threat so it's a win win situation. It's not going to happen because FIFA have far too much power.
      Does UEFA have the power to split from FIFA?  Arguably the money that FIFA makes is almost entirely dependant on the UEFA teams and Associations. Their is no way FIFA could continue its dominance without European clubs.

      I think what needs to happen is a major shakeup and scandal. Something that FIFA cant escape. Eventually FIFA is going to hang itself. All it takes is a major government to come forward under the auspices of International laws and demand investigations into the financial dealings of FIFA.  Regardless of what power FIFA thinks they have, they still must abide by International laws and accountance.

      I hope that the recent Bidding process and the fact that Qatar, a nation with absolutely 0 presence or standing in the football world has been given the biggest football tournament in the world.  I dont believe that England received 1 vote and their must of been some sort of monetary influence. I think naming Qatar as host could be a big problem for FIFA and I hope that the FA pursues it. If any governing body has the clout to make FIFA explain their decision its the FA.  All the reports said that England and the US had the best Bids and that the stadiums and infrastructure needed to host the games were already in place and ready.   I am willing to bet that all the "New Building Contracts" in Qatar, now needed from multiple corporations, in order to get the country ready are linked directly to FIFA board members, but as usual no one will look into that and it will be ignored.
      Reslivo
      • Forum Legend - Paisley
      • *****

      • 14,490 posts | 521 
      Re: FIFA Reputation In Tatters
      Reply #85: Dec 25, 2010 01:52:36 am
      Does UEFA have the power to split from FIFA?  Arguably the money that FIFA makes is almost entirely dependant on the UEFA teams and Associations. Their is no way FIFA could continue its dominance without European clubs.

      I think what needs to happen is a major shakeup and scandal. Something that FIFA cant escape. Eventually FIFA is going to hang itself. All it takes is a major government to come forward under the auspices of International laws and demand investigations into the financial dealings of FIFA.  Regardless of what power FIFA thinks they have, they still must abide by International laws and accountance.

      I hope that the recent Bidding process and the fact that Qatar, a nation with absolutely 0 presence or standing in the football world has been given the biggest football tournament in the world.  I dont believe that England received 1 vote and their must of been some sort of monetary influence. I think naming Qatar as host could be a big problem for FIFA and I hope that the FA pursues it. If any governing body has the clout to make FIFA explain their decision its the FA.  All the reports said that England and the US had the best Bids and that the stadiums and infrastructure needed to host the games were already in place and ready.   I am willing to bet that all the "New Building Contracts" in Qatar, now needed from multiple corporations, in order to get the country ready are linked directly to FIFA board members, but as usual no one will look into that and it will be ignored.

      No, and they wouldn't split from FIFA in any case.

      Platini is under Blatter's thumb. Can't you tell by the UEFA spending rules? They're aimed at English clubs.

      In any case, if anyone was going to split from FIFA & UEFA, it'd be the individual Football Associations. You could argue that the FA is the real governing body of football, as it's the English footballing head - and, as we invented the damn game, we should have absolute power over who does what with it and why.

      If that was the case, though, we'd have gotten 2018 & USA would have gotten 2022 - and of course there'd be uproar about that from many other countries claiming they're not being given a chance.

      I say split the FA from FIFA & UEFA, found a new governing body in England and F**k FIFA up the ass.
      Frankly, Mr Shankly
      • Guest
      Re: FIFA Reputation In Tatters
      Reply #86: Dec 25, 2010 01:55:25 am
      Yeah Platini is hanging out of Blatters arse. The pair of complete wankers.
      kenny
      • Forum Legend - Fagan
      • *****

      • 4,314 posts | 76 
      Re: FIFA Reputation In Tatters
      Reply #87: Dec 25, 2010 02:41:57 am
      Its actually come to the stage where now i couldn't give a rats about FIFA or any relation to international football. FIFA is so corrupted its sad. Club footy all the way.
      RedPuppy
      • Still European.
      • LFC Reds Subscriber
      • ******
      • 19,256 posts | 2856 
      • Parum Rutilus Canis: Illegitimi non carborundum
      Re: FIFA Reputation In Tatters
      Reply #88: Dec 25, 2010 08:02:09 pm
      I posted this in the London 2012 Olympics to be held in French in the Current Affairs Board, but I think it is relevant here too.

      Just how Privileged this people are, and the power they command is disgusting

      I was taking to a friend in work today, and we got on to to Qatar, Fifa, and then I said about Boris Johnson and him trying to stop the Fifa cronies getting FREE 5 STAR for the Olympics.

      We went searching and I stumbled across this. I know it's the Mail, but from this I could not give a stuff about the Olympics and  glad we have not got the World Cup.

      Now it is a long article, be well worth a read.



      On your marks, get set, grovel! The secret dirty deal struck to secure the Olympics

      There was something rather un-British about all that grovelling to Fifa last week. That, at least, appears to be the new national consensus after even the combined charms of Prince William, David Cameron and David Beckham failed to land England the World Cup.

      We are not, we now realise, the kind of people who prostrate themselves to fat ­foreign sports bureaucrats. The mother of parliaments will never yield its cherished prerogatives to the rococo whims of some grubby Swiss tax-dodgers.

      Oh, wait a minute . . .

      Entirely without the help of Mr Julian Assange, we can reveal an international sporting equivalent of the WikiLeaks cables.

      Our document cache is just as long, just as embarrassing to Britain, and just as closely held as the collected thoughts of the U.S. diplomatic corps: it is the complete, ­contractually binding and previously ­confidential set of demands made by the 115-member International Olympic ­Committee (IOC) on poor old London for the 2012 Olympic Games.

      Like the WikiLeaks, the Olympics leak is by turns creepy and amusing. And it is just as revealing in its detail.

      We already knew, for instance, about the politburo nature of the IOC.

      What we did not know is that London is, according to these contracts, required to provide the IOC and the ‘Olympic Family’ (including the Committee members, staff and officials) with 40,000 hotel-room bookings for the entire duration of the Games.

      This includes 1,800 four and five-star hotel rooms for the IOC elite. Six Park Lane hotels have been booked out for the ­duration of the Games, including the Dorchester, the Grosvenor and the Hilton.

      The 40,000-room booking does not, of course, include accommodation for the competitors themselves — they are having an Olympic Village built for them at a cost to taxpayer of £325 million.

      Nor is any accommodation being reserved for spectators. On the evidence of the documents, visitors to the Games will probably find that any hotel within a 50-mile radius of London is already fully booked by the third assistant director of the Togolese handball federation and his extensive support staff.

      We knew the IOC was being given 250 miles of so-called ‘Zil’ lanes — named after the old Soviet limousines that enjoyed traffic-free passage. They will stretch from London to Weymouth, where the sailing games are being held. It now emerges that there will also be 500 air-conditioned limos whose drivers must wear hats and uniforms.

      The IOC does love its little details. The hat stipulation is one of literally hundreds of examples of its micro-management. ­London must provide a ‘dance café’ in the Olympic Village, so that the ­athletes can boogie together.

      A flower shop is also required, which the IOC insists ‘should ­provide a range of flowers and gifts for customers in the Olympic ­Village’. British taxpayers will be relieved to know that ‘a balloon rental service is optional’.

      The guidance given by the Olympocrats can be bewildering — it offers pages of information about the employment of housekeepers for the athletes, for example.

      ‘It is recommended that the same housekeeping staff perform their duties for the same teams daily’, because this will ‘build relationships and trust’, ‘give confidence’ and ‘maintain standards’. Making the bed is not enough.

      These IOC edicts are called the ‘Olympic technical manuals’. They are attached to the contract signed by the then Mayor of London, Ken Livingstone, when we won the right to host the Games in July 2005.

      The contract itself was later made public, but for years London 2012 and City Hall refused to publish the manuals, furiously resisting Freedom of Information requests on the grounds that the ‘confidence of the IOC’ must not be breached.

      It took two years of campaigning by Paul Charman, a strikingly determined east Londoner, for the documents to come to light.

      The real reason, perhaps, for this sensitivity is not because of the hats, the dance cafés or any of the other petty embarrassments. It is because the documents show that the British authorities have ­cravenly agreed to let the IOC ­create what is, in effect, a state within a state.

      During the Games, normal ­London life, including ordinary commerce and the right to basic freedoms, must be subordinated to the five-ring circus that is the Olympic ‘brand protection’ policy.

      The IOC is paranoid about what it calls ‘ambush marketing’, which it claims is a ‘serious potential threat to the Olympic Movement’ even if it admits that it has, in fact, ‘not been a significant problem in the past’.

      Ambush marketing, in the Olympocrats’ eyes, appears to be any branding or promotion for an organisation which has not paid large amounts of money to the Olympics organisers.

      Candidate cities, the manuals say, ‘are required to obtain control of all billboard advertising, city transport advertising, airport advertising etc for the duration of the Games and the month preceding it to support the marketing ­programme’. The cost of hiring these billboards alone will surely be enormous.

      Customs officers and police must ‘co-operate’ in taking action against unapproved Olympics advertising and the ­confiscation of non-official goods.

      So in other words, police officers may be diverted from catching criminals to enforcing the commercial interests of the IOC. ­Customs officers, instead of searching for heroin and child pornography, may end up targeting fake Olympics T-shirts.

      Spectators at the Games ‘must not wear clothes or accessories with commercial messages other than the manufacturers’ brand name’. So, for instance, any ten-year-old boy who is foolish enough to wear his Manchester United ­replica shirt, emblazoned with the commercial logo of the team’s sponsor Aon, could be forced to remove it or be denied admission to the Games.

      No ‘athlete or other participant’ at the Games can wear any ­clothing on which the manufacturer’s name takes up more than 10 per cent of the surface area, or 12 square centimetres.

      No journalist covering the Games is allowed any ‘signage of any kind’, even for his or her own publication — on ‘camera bags, hats or other garments’.

      The toughest restrictions apply inside and immediately around the Olympics venues (if you’re a newsagent next to, say, Greenwich Park with a Pepsi sign on your shopfront, heaven help you). But there are also quite serious restrictions in so-called ‘Level 4’ areas — that is, the whole of the rest of the city — in which the organisers of the London Games ‘must attempt to exert as much control over advertising as possible’.

      ‘Brand protection teams’ will, according to the manuals, ‘conduct surveillance . . . in the [host] city’.

      They must ‘attempt to confiscate any infringing ambush material whether inside or outside the venue’.

      So much for the idea that it was just the police that had search-and-seizure powers on the streets of London.

      Some of the teams will be accompanied by ‘an attorney, in case it becomes necessary to serve any court documents’.

      And they ‘must have a police officer within the team or on call within range to assist if necessary in the enforcement of the orders’.

      Here, things become even more grandiose. There is even, according to the documents, an ‘airspace plan’ for London 2012, ‘to prohibit any [non-sponsored] presence within the airspace above Olympic venues, and in the ­surrounding areas within the host city’.

      However, even the IOC has the grace to admit that ‘there may be obstacles to carrying out airspace requirements completely. For example, it may be impossible to alter the regular flight pattern of commercial airlines’.

      Long-suffering taxpayers have been given the impression that the Games will put our nation on the global map, but the documents suggest that something rather ­different will happen. In fact, a geographical space off north-west Europe currently occupied by a nation called Britain will, for the duration of the Games, be taken over by an entirely new country.

      For at every ceremony during London 2012, by contractual requirement, the Olympic flag must be more prominent than the Union flag: ‘Precedence of flags: Olympic Flag, Flag of the Organising ­Committees for the Olympic Games (OCOG) or city, flag of the province, region or canton, national flag,’ the manuals insist.

      Her Majesty will doubtless acquiesce to the IOC’s demands for an Olympic ceremony and royal reception on the day before the Games officially open, although it is worth noting that she has little choice.

      The documents make clear that, as a matter of course, ‘IOC members are presented to the Head of State’, after which they will all watch ‘an artistic programme reflecting local traditions or ­culture’. What a national triumph.

      Naturally, the costs associated with all of this are not borne purely by the British taxpayer: £1.4 billion of sponsorship has been raised to finance the games, and the IOC will contribute tens of ­millions more.

      The trouble is that the burden on the taxpayer has already reached roughly £12 billion. We may be ­paying the piper, but these ­documents show that it is the IOC who is ­calling the tune.

      In perhaps the most insulting touch of all, London must ‘ensure that billboards and pageantry are displayed throughout the city’.

      As well as being in English, ‘such billboards and pageantry shall be in French’ — which is the second language of the IOC.

      London beat Paris to host the 2012 Olympics, and yet we are required to plaster our capital city with thousands of posters in French.

      England may still be sore about losing the World Cup last week — but by God, look at the Olympic guidelines and you’ll realise that we dodged a bullet.

      There really are only so many Zil lanes and smartly dressed chauffeurs a country can put up with.

      http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1337328/London-Olympics-2012-Union-Jacks-sidelined-roads-closed-VIPs.html

      « Last Edit: Dec 25, 2010 08:07:16 pm by RedPuppy »
      YANK_LFC_FAN
      • LFC Reds Subscriber
      • ******
      • 3,507 posts | 426 
      • Timid men prefer the calm of despotism!
      Re: FIFA Reputation In Tatters
      Reply #89: Dec 26, 2010 12:57:32 am
      The liberties that FIFA puts into the Bid contracts are unreal. First, any money that is made during the games, whether its from advertising, tickets, hotels, food etc Anything is completely, 100% tax free.  So FIFA pays 0 dollars in tax for every dollar they make.  So normally when any community or city hosts an event the city collects its local tax to help offset any costs.   Now FIFA forces all the cities who are "Priveledged" enough to host a match, to pay for all the costs including police and security, medical staffs.  So not only do they force the local communities to host the game for free and receive no compensation, they also require free lodging and meals for all FIFA reps and transportation.  So any community that hosts a game automatically loses money because the costs associated with hosting the match and meeting all FIFA's rules are outweighed by any money made from ticket sales, which FIFA gets the majority of also and forcing the local government to then pay their taxes.

      Holland published a report about the costs associated for hosting the WC and they, against FIFA regulations, made it public and it shows how insanely crooked FIFA is and that all the rules make it Impossible for any host nation to make money.  FIFA's explanation is that the privelege and marketing for the games provides for costs and the increase in populations for the host cities make it profitable for retailers and business owners.

      Every time their is a scandal FIFA just sweeps it under the rug and continues on and on and on....Honestly I dont think any of the top FIFA reps truly care about Football. Its, as usual, just business.  Their is no explanation why Qatar would get the bid instead of England. England would of hosted an AWESOME World Cup.  Instead big business won out, now its in the middle of the desert in the F***ing summer. Now the matches are going to be decided by the team that doesn't die from heat stroke instead of scoring goals.  Oh wait, FIFA said they plan on "Air Conditioning" an outdoor stadium, in the middle east, in the desert, in the summer.    Good luck with that!
      RedPuppy
      • Still European.
      • LFC Reds Subscriber
      • ******
      • 19,256 posts | 2856 
      • Parum Rutilus Canis: Illegitimi non carborundum
      Re: FIFA Reputation In Tatters
      Reply #90: Jan 02, 2011 09:36:09 pm
      Firstly, we MUST remember that there is NO Corruption within the the FIFA Family.

      Remember that those horrid people from the BBC were nasty men spoiling the FIFA Families name and just telling lies...

      So really there is NO need for this to happen, but here it is...


      Sepp Blatter proposes Fifa anti-corruption committee
      Fifa president Sepp Blatter says he wants to set up an anti-corruption committee to police world football's governing body.

      The move comes after allegations of corruption dogged Fifa throughout the bidding process and voting for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups.

      Blatter said: "This committee will strengthen our credibility and give us a new image in terms of transparency.

      "I will take care of it personally, to ensure there is no corruption at Fifa."


      Blatter told Swiss newspaper SonntagsZeitung the committee would consist of seven to nine members "not only from sport but from politics, finance, business and culture".

      And the Swiss confirmed he would not sit on the committee himself as he wanted to guarantee its independence.

      The move to set up an anti-corruption unit will raise questions about the future of Fifa's ethics committee, which investigated claims of corruption last year.

      Following the investigation, Fifa's executive committee members Amos Adamu and Reynald Temarii were suspended over allegations they offered to sell their votes during bidding for the World Cup, something the pair vehemently denied.

      They both subsequently missed December's ballot in which Russia was chosen to host the 2018 tournament and Qatar the 2022 event, following a secret vote by the remaining 22 committee members.

      During the bidding process for the World Cups, Fifa was also forced to investigate rumours of collusion between member associations and their bid committees in relation to the 2018 and 2022 World Cup bidding process.

      At that time, Fifa secretary general Jerome Valcke warned all countries that mutual voting deals were against Fifa rules.

      The 2018 Spain-Portugal and 2022 Qatar bids were cleared of collusion in the investigation.

      A BBC Panorama programme broadcast three days before the World Cup vote alleged three Fifa officials, Nicolas Leoz, Issa Hayatou and Ricardo Teixeira, took bribes in the 1990s.

      Denying any wrongdoing, vice-president Hayatou has threatened to sue while Leoz and Teixeira are said to have also denied wrongdoing.

      Fifa said at the time the case was "definitely closed" as allegations had already been investigated in Switzerland, with no Fifa officials being convicted.

      Guilty I think!
      Frankly, Mr Shankly
      • Guest
      Re: FIFA Reputation In Tatters
      Reply #91: Jan 02, 2011 10:48:31 pm
      Firstly, we MUST remember that there is NO Corruption within the the FIFA Family.

      Remember that those horrid people from the BBC were nasty men spoiling the FIFA Families name and just telling lies...

      So really there is NO need for this to happen, but here it is...


      Sepp Blatter proposes Fifa anti-corruption committee
      Fifa president Sepp Blatter says he wants to set up an anti-corruption committee to police world football's governing body.

      The move comes after allegations of corruption dogged Fifa throughout the bidding process and voting for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups.

      Blatter said: "This committee will strengthen our credibility and give us a new image in terms of transparency.

      "I will take care of it personally, to ensure there is no corruption at Fifa."


      Blatter told Swiss newspaper SonntagsZeitung the committee would consist of seven to nine members "not only from sport but from politics, finance, business and culture".

      And the Swiss confirmed he would not sit on the committee himself as he wanted to guarantee its independence.

      The move to set up an anti-corruption unit will raise questions about the future of Fifa's ethics committee, which investigated claims of corruption last year.

      Following the investigation, Fifa's executive committee members Amos Adamu and Reynald Temarii were suspended over allegations they offered to sell their votes during bidding for the World Cup, something the pair vehemently denied.

      They both subsequently missed December's ballot in which Russia was chosen to host the 2018 tournament and Qatar the 2022 event, following a secret vote by the remaining 22 committee members.

      During the bidding process for the World Cups, Fifa was also forced to investigate rumours of collusion between member associations and their bid committees in relation to the 2018 and 2022 World Cup bidding process.

      At that time, Fifa secretary general Jerome Valcke warned all countries that mutual voting deals were against Fifa rules.

      The 2018 Spain-Portugal and 2022 Qatar bids were cleared of collusion in the investigation.

      A BBC Panorama programme broadcast three days before the World Cup vote alleged three Fifa officials, Nicolas Leoz, Issa Hayatou and Ricardo Teixeira, took bribes in the 1990s.

      Denying any wrongdoing, vice-president Hayatou has threatened to sue while Leoz and Teixeira are said to have also denied wrongdoing.

      Fifa said at the time the case was "definitely closed" as allegations had already been investigated in Switzerland, with no Fifa officials being convicted.

      Guilty I think!


      How can the world's media show a blind eye to what is undoubtedly one of the most corrupt governing bodies in sport...and it's governing the world's most popular sport ffs!

      Quick Reply