Michel
Platini: I'll run for FIFA presidency - Watch Dog News
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FIFA presidential
candidate Michael Platini will publish his manifesto in the next six to eight
weeks and wants to bring football back into the spotlight during the campaign,
a source close to the Frenchman said on Wednesday. Although Platini, the
UEFA president, agrees that reform of scandal-plagued FIFA has to be the
priority in the run-up to the election on Feb. 26, he also believes it should
not completely overshadow the sport itself, the source told Reuters.
Platini,
who announced his intention to stand on July 29 and will hold his first media
conference since then in Monaco on Friday, has spent the last few weeks meeting
people outside soccer's European ruling body UEFA to test the water.
Reuters report continues:
He
believes the future of the World Cup, the international calendar, changes to
the laws of the game and the role of the law-making body IFAB (International
Football Association Board) should be part of the debate, the source said.
Platini,
a former France captain, who was one of the most gifted midfield players of his
generation, also wants to discuss the reform of the transfer system and the
role of agents.
One
of Platini's biggest gripes as UEFA president has been the so-called triple
punishment in which a player who gives away a penalty is sent off and receives
an automatic one-match ban.
Earlier
this year, UEFA sent a proposal to IFAB for the end of the "triple
punishment" system. However, the rule-making body agreed only to consider
an end to the automatic suspension.
Platini
is against the use of goal-line technology, which FIFA employs in its
tournaments, and prefers the use of so-called additional assistant referees,
one on each goal-line, to spot penalty-area infringements.
FIFA
has not adopted the system and Platini has mockingly said that was because it
was not FIFA chief Sepp Blatter's idea.
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Platini's
proposals on the World Cup could include expansion of the finals from the
current 32 teams, the source said.
As
UEFA president, he has already overseen an increase in the number of countries
at the European championship finals from 16 to 24, starting from next year's
tournament in France.
The
move has been criticised for diluting the strength of competition, especially
after a successful Euro 2012 in Poland and Ukraine where 16 seemed to be the
ideal number.
Platini
is seen as the front-runner in the bid to replace Blatter who will relinquish his
mandate at the Feb 26. election.
The
source said the Frenchman wants to take his time over his manifesto and added
he would travel widely from October.
Soccer's
world governing body has been plagued by allegations of corruption for years.
It was thrown into further
turmoil in May when U.S. prosecutors indicted nine soccer officials and five
marketing and broadcasting company executives over alleged offences, including
fraud, money-laundering and racketeering.
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