You are here

Sports

Sports section

Drivers ready for 2nd National Rally

By - May 28,2015 - Last updated at May 28,2015

Khaled Juma in action in the 1st round of the National Rally (Photo courtesy of Jordan Motorsport)

AMMAN — The second round of the National Rally Championship “La Storia Museum Rally” kicks off on Friday with the participation of nine drivers.

Winner of the first round Khaled Juma told The Jordan Times that this Rally will be more challenging.

“The Rally will be held around Madaba with a total distance of 186.89km including nine special stages with a total distance of 63.69km which are all new stages. The best thing about this rally is that it will be held on gravel which gives more freedom for drivers,” he said.

Juma, who is heading the standings with 25 points, added: “I am looking to add another 25 points, but in rallying anything can happen.”

Drivers will have to go through Bahra (9.74km), Kroum (5.46km) and Ghernata (6.03km) three times each.

Meanwhile, third-placed winner Raed Habaybeh said that the rally will be an opportunity to prepare for the Jordan Rally.

“It is all a big training session for Jordan Rally and although I have only 15 points from one round I am sure that the experience I will gain for me will be useful at the Jordan Rally,” he said.

“Of course I will do my best to beat Juma on Friday. It is also a good chance to take the  lead too,” he added.

 Othman Naseef, Jordan Motorsport CEO said that all preparations for an exciting event have been concluded.

“Safety issues are our main concern and we have taken the right measures to make sure drivers and fans are safe and at the same time enjoy the event,” he said.

The rally takes its name from the La Storia Museum Complex in Madaba which is a combination of folk, history and a handicrafts centre.

“It is our way of introducing Jordan’s touristic places to the world and encourage people to visit them and enjoy one round of rallying,” Naseef said.

Only one women driver will take part in the event.

“Lina Hadidi is teaming up with her co-driver Barkev Shadian,” Naseef said.

 

“We also have Raed Habaibeh is teaming up with his daughter Marina as his co-driver and this is a great story,” he added.

Jordan hosts West Asian Basketball Championship

By - May 28,2015 - Last updated at May 28,2015

AMMAN – Jordan play Palestine in the opening of the West Asian Basketball Association (WABA) Championship on Friday.

Iraq will also play Lebanon on the opening day while Syria plays Palestine on Saturday. Three teams will move on to the 2015 FIBA Asia Championship in China in September.

Hosts China and 2014 FIBA Asia Cup champions Iran have automatically qualified. The winner of the tournament qualifies to the basketball tournament at the 2016 Summer Olympics,

Last year, Jordan won the WABA title for the second time in the absence of both the Lebanese and senior Iranian teams and represented the West Asia zone at the 5th FIBA Asia Cup.

China, as well as defending FIBA Asia Championship titleholders Iran, automatically qualified to the event held every two years and previously known as Stankovich Cup. Qatar were champs in 2004, Jordan in 2008, Lebanon in 2010 and Iran in 2012 and 2014.

Jordan first won the West Asia title in 2002. In the 2011 qualifiers, Jordan finished second behind Iran and qualified to the 26th FIBA Asia Championship where, for the first time in the country’s history, Jordan reached the final but lost the chance to qualify to the 2012 Olympic Games by losing the final 70-69 to China. Jordan then played at the FIBA Olympic Qualifying Tournament (OQT) for Men but lost to Puerto Rico and Greece and was eliminated. The OQT gave Asia’s second and third teams a chance to qualify to the London Games basketball event. 

Different age groups have been back on the west Asian and Asian scenes with the hope of rebuilding all national teams and bringing back the zeal of competition to the country’s second most popular game.

Recently, the boys were eliminated from U-16 West Asian Basketball Championship. 

Last year, Jordan hosted the 22nd FIBA Asia U-18 Championship for Women with China beating Japan in Level 1 to win the title for the 14th time. Despite finishing 5th in Level 2, Jordan Basketball Federation officials viewed the event as “a platform to jump back and advance the game on the local and regional levels”.

The top three teams from the FIBA Asia U-18 Championship represent FIBA Asia at the FIBA U-19 World Championship for Women to be played in Russia in July 2015. 

It was in 2013 and after nearly a 20-year break, that Jordan returned to the Asian women’s competitions when the U-16 women’s team played at the 3rd FIBA Asia U-16 Championship for Women in Sri Lanka where they finished 5th in Level 2.

With the women’s game having little prominence locally, the national team had not competed on the Asian scene since 1995 when Jordan became the first Arab team to play at the Asian Basketball Confederation Women’s Championship in Japan and the U-18 team played at FIBA Asia U-18 Championship in 1996 in Thailand where they finished 8th.

Therefore, the U-18 and U-16 teams are viewed by ex-coaches, players and officials as momentous for being back on the court as the only Arab squad alongside leading Asian teams. 

 

Although the men’s basketball team reached the World Championship in 2010 — and was the only Jordanian team to actually reach that stage — after the Junior team qualified in 1995, official support for Jordan’s second most popular sport is seen as below par for most observers, leading to a decline in the game locally and less competitive on the international scene.

Kingdom hosts Lebanon, plays Trinidad and Tobago in June

By - May 28,2015 - Last updated at May 28,2015

AMMAN  — Jordan has three friendlies line-up up in the next few weeks as the squad readies for qualifiers for the 2018 World Cup doubling as part of the qualification for 2019 Asian Cup as well. 

The Jordan Football Association announced that the Kingdom’s squad will host Lebanon on May 30 before leaving to Turkey for a training camp during which they will face Kuwait on June 5. They will also play World’s 65th-ranked Trinidad and Tobago on June 16.

The Kingdom will play their first Group B qualifier against Kyrgyzstan on June 11 before playing Asian Cup champs Australia, Tajikistan, and Bangladesh.

“It has been a long season, and there has been little time after the end of local competitions and regrouping for our upcoming agenda,” coach Ahmad Abdul Qader noted adding that he waited for the U-23 squad’s qualifiers and the completion of Wihdat and Jazira’s Round of 16 of the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) Cup matches to finalise his line-up.

 “Playing a team like Trinidad and Tobago which previously qualified to the World Cup will help our team in the upcoming phase,” Abdul Qader said adding ‘’regardless of the results, facing advanced teams is crucial and always beneficial”.

Jordan is now 103rd in the latest FIFA World Rankings — and 12th among Asian teams. The squad dropped out of the top 100 after two friendlies where it lost 2-1 to Saudi Arabia and 1-0 to Syria. In their last official competition, Jordan failed to reach the quarters of the 16th AFC Asian Cup 2015. It was its third time at the finals first taking part in Asian Cup qualifiers in 1972.

Jordan’s best ever FIFA ranking was 37th in 2004 after reaching the Asian Cup quarter-final when they lost to Japan. In 2011, Jordan again reached the quarter-finals.

The squad also had the most memorable World Cup qualifiers in 2013 when they played Uruguay in their intercontinental qualifying tie for a place in the 2014 World Cup. Jordan lost the home game 5-0 and held the former World Cup champs 0-0 in the away match, losing the chance to move to the World Cup for the first time. 

 

The Kingdom had never reached this far in World Cup qualifications since taking part in the World Cup qualifiers as of 1985. Round 3 had been the furthest Jordan reached in the past seven times in the qualifiers since 1986.

James, Cavaliers earn finals spot

By - May 27,2015 - Last updated at May 28,2015

LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers smiles after a play against Atlanta Hawks during Game 4 of the Eastern Conference Finals of the 2015 NBA play-offs in Cleveland on Tuesday (AFP photo by Gregory Shamus)

CLEVELAND — The championship LeBron James craves more than any other, the one he came back home to get, is within reach after Cleveland routed Atlanta 118-88 on Tuesday to complete a series sweep and secure its place in the NBA Finals.

James scored 23 points and Kyrie Irving provided a boost after missing two games as Cleveland cruised to victory and set up a meeting with either Golden State or Houston.

It is only the second time Cavaliers have made it to the Finals, but the fifth straight visit for James, who returned to Cleveland this season after four successful years with Miami.

None of Cleveland’s top sports teams — in the NBA, NFL or MLB — have won a title since 1964. Cavaliers are four wins from ending that drought, and if they can, James will have a title that would put him in a class by himself. Other players have won more championships, but none has ever done it for his success-starved home region.

“We have everything it takes to win,” James said after Cavs were presented with the conference trophy.

However, they’ve got their eyes on more than the Eastern Conference crown.

“Cleveland,” owner Dan Gibert said, addressing the crowd. “We’re not settling for this.”

Jeff Teague scored 17 and Paul Millsap 16 for Atlanta, which won a team-record 60 games during the regular season and made the conference finals for the first time since 1970. But Hawks were no match for Cavaliers and had no answer for James, who nearly averaged a triple-double in the four games.

J.R. Smith added 18 points and Tristan Thompson had 16 points and 11 rebounds for Cavs.

Unlike 2007, when James celebrated at the final horn, he was very business-like after the clock hit zero. Standing at centre court, he turned to Smith and said “four more”.

It was a tough way for Hawks to end a remarkable season. They survived a tumultuous offseason, and their young roster gelled in January when they became the first franchise to go 17-0 in a calendar month. They went on to win 19 straight, improved their win-loss record by 22 wins over last season and beat Brooklyn and Washington in the playoffs to make their first conference finals since 1994.

But an injury to starting forward Thabo Sefolosha in April was followed by DeMarre Carroll injuring his knee in the series opener, before Kyle Korver’s season ended in Game 2 with an ankle injury.

Those all hurt, but it was James who inflicted the most pain.

James carried Cavs to their first finals appearance eight years ago, when they were swept by San Antonio. Cleveland was a heavy underdog then and it was assumed the Cavs would get back again. But James left in 2010 to join the Heat, a move that dropped Cavaliers from relevance and into the lower rungs of the standings.

His return to his home team, to play alongside Kevin Love — out for the season with a shoulder injury — and Irving immediately made Cavaliers the team to beat in the East.

It didn’t go exactly as planned under first-year coach David Blatt, who left his family in Israel to take Cavs’ job.

“We’re in Cleveland,” Blatt cracked. “Nothing is easy here.”

Cavs lost centre Anderson Varejao to a season-ending Achilles injury in December and they were 19-20 before trading for Smith, Iman Shumpert and Timofey Mozgov, a trio that provided the intended boost.

Irving, who missed Cleveland’s previous two games with tendinitis in his left knee, scored 16 and the All-Star point guard looked better than he has in weeks.

 

Unlike Game 3, when he missed his first 10 shots, James started much better and scored 15 in the first half as the Cavs opened a 17-point halftime lead. They pushed it to 20 early in the third, withstood a brief rally by Hawks and spent the fourth quarter playing their reserves and getting ready for a party and some time off before the finals.

Crown Prince participates in Allgaeu Orient Rally

May 27,2015 - Last updated at May 27,2015

HRH Crown Prince Hussein greets participants in the Allgaeu Orient Rally in Azraq, around 100km east of Amman, on Wednesday (Photo courtesy of Royal Court)

AMMAN — HRH Crown Prince Hussein on Wednesday participated in Allgaeu Orient Rally in Azraq.

Crown Prince Hussein, along with 500 participants from Germany, a number of European countries, and Jordan, crossed around 25 kilometres in the desert, starting from Kian Khana to Amra Palace in Azraq in the northeast of Jordan, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

The charity rally took off from Oberstaufen in Germany on May 10, passing Austria, Italy, Eastern Europe, Greece and Turkey, with Jordan as its final stop. 

Some 258 cars took part in the rally, eight of which belong to Jordanians. 

Participants will stay in Jordan for another four days to visit tourist sites, villages and desert areas as part of a programme to promote tourism in the Kingdom, according to Petra.

 

The proceeds of last year’s Allgaeu Orient Rally went to the benefit of young Jordanians with hearing difficulties and in need of cochlear implants, under the Crown Prince’s directives.

Harden helps Rockets stay alive, beat Warriors

By - May 26,2015 - Last updated at May 26,2015

HOUSTON — Houston’s James Harden scored a play-off career-high 45 points while Golden State’s Stephen Curry suffered a scary fall as the Rockets led from start to finish and beat the Warriors 128-115 on Monday to stave off elimination from the NBA play-offs.

The Rockets scored 45 points in the first quarter — equalling a play-off record — to quickly get on top. They were up by 22 in the second quarter when league MVP Curry landed on his head in a nasty spill and missed about 12 minutes before returning.

Curry’s first field goal after returning was a 3-pointer that got Golden State within six points with less than 8-1/2 minutes remaining. But Harden, who had 17 points in the fourth quarter, scored the next seven points as part of 10 straight by Houston to push the lead to 114-98 and effectively end it, cutting the series deficit to 3-1.

Harden’s match-winning performance made up for a disappointing output in Game 3.

“I always want to take it out on my opponent in a good way,” Harden said. “Just being aggressive, taking shots, getting to the basket, not really forcing anything and allowing the game to come to me.”

Klay Thompson had 24 points and Curry added 23 for Golden State, which had been looking to secure its first trip to the NBA Finals since 1975 after routing Houston 115-80 on Saturday night to take a 3-0 lead in the series.

The Warriors will try again at home in Game 5 on Wednesday.

Houston bounced back from a 3-1 deficit to the Los Angeles Clippers in the conference semifinals. But they face a much bigger challenge in this series, as no team in NBA history has won a play-off series after trailing 3-0.

Houston’s Dwight Howard had 14 points and 12 rebounds, and received a flagrant 1 foul early in the third quarter after throwing an elbow at Andrew Bogut’s head. He would be suspended by accumulation of flagrant foul points if the NBA upgrades it to a flagrant 2 after review.

“I hope not,” Howard said when asked about that possibility. “But there’s nothing I can do about it at this point. It’s never my intention to hurt anybody on the floor. My reaction was to try to get him off me, but I can’t react that way.”

The Warriors made 20 3-pointers and Houston had 17 to set an NBA record for most 3-pointers combined in a play-off game.

Curry was injured after he jumped in the air as Trevor Ariza was about to go up for a shot. Ariza saw him and stopped abruptly, causing Curry to be upended in midair when he crashed into Ariza’s shoulder. His head hit the court and it propelled him up and back onto the floor where he remained for several minutes.

Curry looked dazed as he was attended to before slowly getting up and walking off the court.

“It was all minor stuff compared to how it looked,” Curry said. “But I’ll get some good rest and be ready to go. Since it happened to now, nothing has gotten worse.”

Ariza didn’t realise who it was that sailed over him until the play was over.

 

“I was just trying to pump fake and get somebody off their feet,” Ariza said. “I didn’t know that he flipped over... it wasn’t intentional or anything like that.”

Real Madrid fires Ancelotti after disappointing season

By - May 26,2015 - Last updated at May 26,2015

Ex-Real Madrid coach Carlo Ancelotti (AFP photo)

MADRID — Real Madrid fired coach Carlo Ancelotti late Monday as the Spanish club again showed it won’t tolerate a season without a major trophy.

Ancelotti was let go despite being popular among both players and fans and having led Madrid to its 10th European Cup title just a year ago. This season the team finished second in the Spanish league — two points behind archrival Barcelona — lost in the Champions League semifinals to Juventus and exited the Copa del Rey against crosstown rival Atletico Madrid.

While the team did win the Club World Cup, that did little to appease Madrid’s notoriously impatient directors.

Club president Florentino Perez announced the firing after a board meeting and said Ancelotti’s successor would be announced next week.

Perez said it had been a “very difficult decision” because the Italian had in two years earned his personal affection — as well as that of the board and the fans — and “now forms part of our history because with him we won our 10th cup”.

Shortly after Perez’s announcement Ancelotti posted a comment on his official Twitter account.

“I’ll keep the memory of two fantastic years at the club, its fans and my players. Hala Madrid and nothing else,” Ancelotti tweeted in Spanish.

The Italian coach is one of the most decorated in football, having won titles at Milan, Chelsea and Paris Saint-Germain before taking the Madrid job two years ago. He now joins a long list of top-class managers to have been fired by Madrid, which has gone through 11 coaches since Vicente del Bosque’s four-year reign ended in 2003.

Jose Mourinho is the longest-serving Madrid manager since then, lasting three seasons before leaving by mutual consent to return to Chelsea.

Ancelotti had received an ovation at the Bernabeu after Madrid beat Getafe 7-3 in the team’s final game of the season on Saturday. Cristiano Ronaldo had also shown his support for the Italian coach by posting a photograph of himself next to Ancelotti on his official Twitter account.

“Great coach and amazing person. Hope we work together next season,” Ronaldo tweeted Saturday.

Nevertheless, Perez said it was time the club moved on and achieved “a new impetus that will enable us to win new titles and achieve our maximum competitive level in a new phase”.

Perez said it would be “a very good thing if the new coach could speak Spanish” but declined to make any comment on who might be in contention for the job. Napoli’s Rafa Benitez, a former youth coach at Madrid, is widely reported to be among the candidates.

Ancelotti completed two years of the three-year contract he signed with Madrid in June 2013. Perez thanked him for his time at Madrid and said the decision to replace him was taken after the season had ended.

Perez declined to comment on exactly why the board decided to replace the coach, saying simply that “after two years, Madrid’s need to win requires us to give the club a new impulse forward”.

LeBron’s triple-double helps Cavs top Hawks in thriller

By - May 25,2015 - Last updated at May 25,2015

Cleveland Cavaliers’ Tristan Thompson dunks on Atlanta Hawks’ Shelvin Mack during Game 3 of the Eastern Conference finals of the NBA basketball play-offs in Cleveland on Sunday (AP photo by Tony Dejak)

CLEVELAND — LeBron James shook off an atrocious shooting start and withstood Atlanta’s gritty comeback to record a triple-double as Cleveland Cavaliers moved within one win of the NBA Finals by beating the Hawks 114-111 in overtime on Sunday to take a 3-0 series lead.

James missed his first 10 shots, but finished with 37 points, 18 rebounds and 13 assists. The Cavs needed every single one of them to hold off the top-seeded Hawks, who fought Cleveland until the final seconds despite being without injured shooter Kyle Korver and losing Al Horford, who was ejected in the first half.

James hit a three pointer with 36.4 seconds left to put Cavs ahead by one and the superstar dropped a runner with 12.8 left to make it 114-111.

“He just wouldn’t let us lose,” coach David Blatt said.

Atlanta had two chances to tie it in the final seconds, but Shelvin Mack missed two three pointers.

When the final horn sounded, an exhausted James, who was favouring his right leg for most of overtime, dropped to the floor and had to be helped to his feet.

“I worked extremely hard and for me as a leader no matter how I’m feeling I’ve got to try to make some plays,” James said.

He’ll have just one day to rest up before Cavs try to earn their second Finals trip — and the fifth in a row for James — in Game 4 on Tuesday night.

Jeff Teague scored 30 points and Paul Millsap 22 for Hawks, who scratched and clawed for 53 minutes.

Down 10 in the fourth, Hawks showed championship toughness and nearly pulled off a win that would have guaranteed them another home game on Thursday. They’ll have to dig deep again, and they are facing long odds to win the series as no NBA team has ever overcome a 3-0 deficit.

Teague dropped a nasty, step-back jumper with 55 seconds left to put Hawks up 111-109, but James answered — following an offensive rebound by Tristan Thompson — to knock down a corner three like the one he made at the buzzer to beat Chicago in the second round, making it 112-111 with 36.4 seconds left.

James then hit his runner over Millsap and Cavs and 20,000 fans held their breath as Mack took two cracks at the rim.

Cavs were again missing All-Star guard Kyrie Irving, sidelined for his second straight game with an injured left knee.

But Cleveland has James, and even on a night when his shot wasn’t falling, he carried Cavs, who can earn their first trip to the Finals since James took them there in 2007.

Matthew Dellavedova and J.R. Smith added 17 points each for Cleveland.

 

Hawks took a one-point lead into third quarter when James decided to seize control of the game. He recorded 15 points, six rebounds and six assists in the period, but it only resulted in Cleveland having a 10-point lead early in the fourth.

Wihdat, Jazira aim to advance

By - May 25,2015 - Last updated at May 25,2015

AMMAN — Wihdat and Jazira are aiming to continue an impressive run when Round of 16 of the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) Cup start on Tuesday.

Wihdat will host AFC Cup titleholders Kuwait’s Qadissieh, who beat them 1-0 earlier this season in the AFC Champions League.

Wihdat coach Abdullah Abu Zameh, whose team won the Jordan Professional League and Super Cup this season, underlined confidence that his squad was up to the task ahead. “We are playing at home and we have always been aided by our fans’ and our team’s determination. We aim for the title.”

On Wednesday, Jazira, who finished runner-up in the League and participated in the event, after two-time AFC Cup champs Faisali declined, host former AFC Cup champs Syria’s Jeish.

In Round 1, Wihdat topped Group A after they beat Oman’s Nahda 4-0 repeating their earlier 3-0 win in Leg 1. They had an impressive run beating Lebanese hosts Salam Zgharta 3-0 after an earlier 5-1 win. They also held Syria’s Wihda 1-1 after losing 1-0 in Leg 1. 

Jazira finished second in Group B. They secured moving to the Round of 16 after beating Palestine’s Wadi Al Ness 2-0, Bahrain’s Hidd 1-0 and losing 4-0 to Iraq’s Shurta after they started the event with a streak of 1-1 draws with Hidd, Shurta and Wadi Al Ness.

Wihdat have never won the AFC Cup in the past seven times. It is Jazira’s first attempt at the AFC Cup title

This season, 32 clubs from across the continent are competing in the AFC Cup in eight groups with the top two from each group going on to the Round of 16. Last season, first time AFC Cup competitors Jordan Cup champs That Ras exited the Round of 16 while former AFC Cup champs Shabab Urdun exited in Round 1. They were also eliminated by Bahrain’s Hidd in their preliminary round of the AFC Champions League.

 

The second-tier Asian club competition was won by Syria’s Jeish in its inaugural edition in 2004. Jordan’s Faisali won in 2005 and 2006, and Shabab Urdun won in 2007.

‘FIFA led by Blatter will always lack credibility’

By - May 25,2015 - Last updated at May 25,2015

UEFA leader Michel Platini (Photo courtesy of doubletakedebate.com)

GENEVA — FIFA lacks credibility while Sepp Blatter is president, according to UEFA leader Michel Platini, saying his former mentor fears the “emptiness” of life after leaving football’s world governing body.

Blatter is clinging to power “at all costs,” Platini told French sports daily L’Equipe in an interview published on Monday.

Ahead of the FIFA presidential election on Friday, Platini said the 79-year-old Blatter had no grand plans for FIFA and it was “not credible” to claim he needed a fifth four-year term to complete an unfinished mission.

“No, he is simply scared of the future, as he has given his life to the institution, to the point where he now identifies himself fully with FIFA,” Platini said. “I understand the fear of that emptiness that he [Blatter] must have, it’s natural. But if he really loves FIFA, he should have put its interests ahead of his own.”

Though Platini said he likes Blatter on a personal level, his explicit criticism of the FIFA chief points to a deep rift between the two men. Blatter seeks to extend his 17-year reign at an election many saw as a natural time for the former France great to get the top job.

He opted last August not to challenge Blatter in the election of 209 FIFA member federations and now supports the only opponent: FIFA vice president representing Asia HRH Prince Ali.

“I am firmly convinced that Ali, whom I have known on a personal level for years, would make a great FIFA president. He has everything it takes,” Platini said of the prince, praising his “great freedom of spirit and independence”.

However, Blatter is strongly favoured to win another vote with widespread support in five of FIFA’s six continental regions. He noted his longevity in office in a newspaper interview in his native Switzerland on Sunday.

Blatter compared himself to a mountain goat, telling the Neue Zurcher Zeitung he “cannot be stopped, I just keep going”.

Platini, now 59, was a key campaigner helping Blatter become FIFA president in 1998 and then a long-time heir apparent.

“I have nothing against Sepp. I like him as a person and I respect him,” Platini said in an interview transcript provided by UEFA. “We have had some good times together, and nothing and no one can take that away.”

Still, Platini has not forgiven Blatter for going back on a promise at the 2011 UEFA congress in Paris that the current FIFA mandate would be his last. Blatter has since said he had the right to change his mind.

“And now here we are again, as if none of it had ever happened,” said the UEFA president, adding he felt he asked his members four years ago to support Blatter “on the basis of a lie”.

Then, Blatter was in a battle with Mohamed Bin Hammam of Qatar who withdrew days before the election when accused of offering Caribbean voters $40,000 bribes.

FIFA and Blatter have spent much of the past four years handling fallout and reputational damage from scandals involving Bin Hammam and other senior executive committee members, plus the controversial choices of Russia and Qatar as World Cup hosts in 2018 and 2022, respectively.

Platini reiterated his call for “a breath of fresh air” at the top.

“And while he remains in place, whether he likes it or not, and whether it is fair or not, FIFA will lack credibility and its image will be tarnished and so it will lack authority.

“Moreover, it will be football that suffers,” Platini said, though acknowledging that Blatter had “done some very good things”.

“FIFA will not disappear the moment he steps down. On the contrary, it would give FIFA the chance of a new lease of life,” he said.

 

Prince Ali offers that chance, “is always very positive and fights for what he believes in,” Platini said. “[H]e is honest and humble and comes from a country that bridges different cultures and traditions. He can bring real added value, and he is also someone who knows how to work in a team.”

Pages

Pages



Newsletter

Get top stories and blog posts emailed to you each day.

PDF