The Star Malaysia

Better without Blatter

Women’s World Cup organisers won’t miss FIFA president at final

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the players don’t care who gives them the trophy to be quite frank with you. Victor Montaglian­i

VANCOUVER: Players do not care who hands out trophies and the absence of embattled FIFA president Sepp Blatter will not have any impact on the Women’s World Cup final, organisers said.

With world football’s governing body embroiled in corruption investigat­ions, Blatter’s United States-based lawyer has said the FIFA chief will not travel to Vancouver for today’s final between the US and Japan.

It will be the first time Blatter has not presented the trophy to the winners of the women’s competitio­n, which is held every four years, since he became FIFA president in 1998.

“The players don’t care who gives them the trophy to be quite frank with you,” Canadian Football Associatio­n president Victor Montaglian­i told reporters during the tournament’s final press conference.

“It’s the prerogativ­e of the president, or anybody at FIFA, to go to whatever competitio­n they want.

“The choice was made but I actually think in light of the circumstan­ces, the focus needs to be on the games and the players not the suits that run football like myself or anybody else.

“As I said, whoever wins the World Cup, whether it’s you or me who hands them the trophy, I’m sure they are not too bothered by it.” Blatter, the self-styled “godfather of women’s football”, said before the tournament began on June 6 that he was looking forward to being in Canada.

FIFA said in a statement that secretary general Jerome Valcke would also not travel to Vancouver.

The specific reasons why Blatter, a Swiss national, had decided not to attend the final could not be determined.

Some lawyers with experience in internatio­nal criminal cases said that Blatter would be ill-advised to travel after an indictment announced on May 27 by US prosecutor­s against nine current and former FIFA officials and five sports marketing businessme­n.

US prosecutor­s have not accused Blatter, 79, of any wrongdoing, but his stewardshi­p of world football’s governing body is under scrutiny, sources familiar with investigat­ions in the US and Switzerlan­d have said.

Richard Cullen, Blatter’s attorney, said that FIFA senior vice president Issa Hayatou of Cameroon would preside at the trophy ceremony.

But Tatjana Haenni, the FIFA deputy director of the competitio­ns division and head of women’s football, would not confirm who would take over the duty.

“I think who hands the trophy over and what kind of dignitarie­s we have and what kind of politician­s are in the stands is maybe for the teams, but for spectators that may be not so important,” Haenni told reporters.

“People come to watch the players and watch the game and want to be part of it in the stadium or on TV or whatever means they have that is what people are excited about.

“Mr Blatter and Mr Valcke are not here, I think that is another topic.” — Reuters

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