Saturday, January 8, 2011

Blatter endorses playing 2022 WCup in winter


DOHA, Qatar (AP) - FIFA president Sepp Blatter made his strongest endorsement yet of moving the 2022 World Cup in Qatar to winter, saying Friday that the players should be spared from the blistering summer heat in the desert nation.
Blatter, attending the Asian Cup in Qatar, said he felt the tournament should be moved to a cooler time of the year to protect the health of the players.
A similar move was initiated for this year's Asian Cup, which normally is held in the summer.
"We must play at the most adequate period to have a successful World Cup," Blatter said. "To have a successful World Cup, we have to protect actors, the players, which means (playing) in winter."
Qatar was awarded the 2022 World Cup in December despite fears that temperatures exceeding 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) pose a serious health risk to players and fans.
Soon after it won the bid over the United States, Australia, South Korea and Japan, several top football executives led by FIFA executive committee member Franz Beckenbauer and UEFA President Michel Platini endorsed the move.
The only opposition to the move thus far has been Europe's big clubs, which fear a winter World Cup would throw their league schedules into chaos. Among those that have come out are the heads of AC Milan and Barcelona.
Blatter said any change in the World Cup would have to first come from Qatar, which so far has not requested it.
If Qatar would make such a request, then it would be up to the FIFA executive committee to rule on a first-ever winter World Cup.
Blatter did not say when the committee might make such a decision but insisted there is plenty of time.
Qatar has been silent on the issue since winning the bid and a spokesman for the bid organizers could not immediately be reached for comment.
  

Blatter criticizes the IOC while defending FIFA


DOHA, Qatar (AP) - FIFA President Sepp Blatter has criticized the IOC while defending his own organization against corruption allegations, saying that the Olympic body handles its finances "like a housewife."
Blatter, who has been a member of the International Olympic Committee since 1999, says FIFA is more transparent than the IOC, and he has also backtracked on plans to create a new anti-corruption commission.
He says "our accounts are open to everyone. ... The IOC does it like a housewife. She receives some money and she spends some money."
Blatter also says the IOC "has no transparency," and that any transparency was left to the Olympic-sanctioned sports themselves.
  

Cannabis found hidden inside painting of Adebayor


LONDON (AP) - British customs officials have seized cannabis worth almost 3,000 pounds ($4,600) found inside a painting of Manchester City striker Emmanuel Adebayor posted from his native Togo.
The UK Border Agency says the wooden-framed picture of the west African nation's most famous player was intercepted at an international postal hub in Coventry.
The painting was addressed to a home in Tottenham. Adebayor used to play nearby for Tottenham's fierce north London rival Arsenal.
Agency head Brodie Clark says the unusual package showed "the lengths that organized criminals will go to in a bid to get drugs into the UK."