Platini pulls the strings in bid to oust Blatter

01 February 2015 - 01:59 By Ben Rumsby
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UEFA President Michel Platini holds up the card for Glasgow who will host a round of 16 and group stage matches of the 2020 UEFA European championship in Geneva on September 19, 2014.
UEFA President Michel Platini holds up the card for Glasgow who will host a round of 16 and group stage matches of the 2020 UEFA European championship in Geneva on September 19, 2014.

When Michel Platini ruled out running for the Fifa presidency last year it seemed that he had given up all hope of unseating Sepp Blatter.

The Uefa president had been seen as the only credible challenger to Blatter's 17-year grip on the most powerful job in football and his refusal to stand appeared to make the Swiss's re-election a mere formality.

Platini's confederation, so vocal in its opposition to Blatter, could not even anoint an understudy for its leader and looked as if it would be forced to endorse a non-European at the ballot in May.

However, the shock entry this week of Luis Figo and the Dutch Football Association chairman, Michael van Praag, into the presidency race has brought to light what has really been going on at Uefa.

It is the implementation of a radical strategy that Platini and his advisers - having seemingly deemed Blatter unbeatable in a head-to-head contest - believe may ultimately lead to the 78-year-old's downfall.

The first phase of this plan concluded this week when Figo joined Van Praag and Prince Ali Bin Al-Hussein in declaring his intention to run for the presidency.

Platini helped to ensure that all three candidates received enough nominations from European federations in order to stand, which included the Football Association endorsing Prince Ali and the Scottish FA backing Van Praag.

Blatter submitted his candidature for a fifth term on Thursday.

His challengers also include ex-Fifa executive Jerome Champagne. Forrmer France winger David Ginola pulled out.

Blatter's reign has been tarnished by accusations of corruption stemming from the bidding process for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups, awarded to Russia and Qatar respectively.

 

The current perception of where Fifa's 209-member associations stand on the election is that Blatter already has enough guaranteed votes - particularly in Africa, Asia and South America - to win comfortably.

That means anyone running against him is automatically seen as a loser by those associations who may not otherwise back Blatter.

However, were a single challenger to emerge from opposition candidates - and it is likely to unfold during the coming months - that man may end up being perceived as a potential winner.

The one problem with this plan from Platini's point of view is that, if it succeeds - and that is a very big if indeed - it leaves a huge question mark over his own Fifa presidency ambitions in 2019.

A Blatter victory would arguably improve his chances of succeeding the Swiss in four years' time, providing the latter does not plan to be in charge of Fifa until he is 87.

Defeat for his rival, on the other hand, could leave him facing the very man he helped install in Zurich.

However, Platini may have thought of this, too.

Van Praag confirmed this week that he would stand for a single term as a reform president, and it is likely Prince Ali and Figo have agreed to a similarly curtailed tenure, opening the door for Platini to take over in 2019.

Far from throwing in the towel, Platini has helped to ensure the coming months will be very interesting indeed. - © The Daily Telegraph, London and AFP

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