fat old seagull
New member
I think Sepp might need one of these..View attachment 65635
I'm not sure even Saul can save Blatter. He's already had more lives than Heisenberg !
I think Sepp might need one of these..View attachment 65635
Unbelievable that it is the Yanks who are finally bringing FIFA to justice and exposing exactly what has been going on, so many countries including us didn't want to rock the boat and let Blatter and co carry on regardless
Everyone knows this has been going on for years, just too scared to say anything! Fml
US Fifa corruption inquiry covers bribes allegedly paid for 2010 World Cup in S Africa and Fifa presidency in 2011
- then the only way Blatter will be removed is if the sponsors call for it.
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Not too much "everything American bashing" on NSC today?
God Bless America.
Not too much "everything American bashing" on NSC today? It's a gross humiliation that this wasn't dealt with earlier or by an entity much closer to football's core. Hopefully when many of you are slating the Yanks in the future you might recall that they are the ones cleaning up the beautiful game.
Unbelievable that it is the Yanks who are finally bringing FIFA to justice and exposing exactly what has been going on, so many countries including us didn't want to rock the boat and let Blatter and co carry on regardless
Yep - America pencilled in for the World Cup in 2325
What it needs IMO is for two or three of the major FIFA Sponsors to withdraw support tonight/tomorrow
Why would any international sponsor want to stay associated with FIFA under its current leadership. They must want to jump before it gets really toxic.
A link to an interesting website, and a list of FIFA Sponsors.
http://www.newfifanow.org/find-the-sponsors.html
Fifa president Sepp Blatter is not among them. Fifa intends to go ahead with a planned election on Friday.
US Attorney General Loretta Lynch was giving details of the US investigation into football's governing body.
Seven of the 14 sports officials were arrested in Switzerland on Wednesday morning.
They are accused of accepting bribes and kickbacks estimated at more than $150m (£97m) over a 24-year period.