On Friday
morning Gianni Infantino was voted the new FIFA president by the FIFA Congress.
The UEFA General Secretary took home 115 votes in the
second round of voting. A total of 104 votes were needed to win the election
during the second round of voting.
The 45-year-old Swiss football administrator has been
UEFA's General Secretary since 2009, serving under Michel Platini, who was
UEFA's President until he was banned from the sport in December. The length of
that ban was recently reduced from eight years to six years after an appeal.
Infantino oversaw the expansion of the European
Championship to 24 teams and currently serves on FIFA's Reform Committee
alongside Canada Soccer Association president Victor Montagliani.
Infantino, who earned the Canadian Soccer Association's
vote, took home 88 of the 207 votes during the first round of voting, edging
out Sheikh Salman bin Ebrahim al-Khalifa by three votes. Prince Ali bin
al-Hussein, US Soccer's pre-election choice, finished third with 27 votes while
Jerome Champagne finished with seven votes.
The second round of voting was necessary since no candidate
reached the 138-vote threshold for election during the first round. This is the
first time that a FIFA presidential election has gone to a second round of
voting since 1974.
Earlier in the day, sweeping reforms were also approved by
the FIFA Congress, including greater transparency and term limits.
Candidate
Vote Total
Gianni Infantino
115
Sheikh Salman bin Ebrahim al-Khalifa 88
Prince Ali bin al-Hussein 4
Jerome Champagne 0
No comments:
Post a Comment