FIFA's ex-president Sepp Blatter said Friday that a
comeback was possible for his former ally Michel
Platini, declining to hit back after the Frenchman
savaged him in an interview last month.
Blatter told AFP that Platini's name may be cleared by
"new elements" concerning the infamous two million
Swiss franc payment ($2 million, 1.9 million euros) that
triggered both men's ouster from football.
"I think he should be back and I think it is not all
over," Blatter said, suggesting that former UEFA boss
Platini could again take charge of the European
confederation, or even FIFA.
Blatter is currently serving a six-year ban from football
over the payment he authorised to Platini in 2011.
Platini's suspension was cut to four years on appeal.
The pair are united in claiming the transaction was
legitimate, but bitter words have been swapped since
details of the payment emerged in September 2015.
In an interview with French newspaper Le Monde last
month, Platini called Blatter "the biggest egoist I've
ever seen in my life.
"He always said I would be his last scalp", the former
Juventus star said of Blatter.
Platini, 61, claimed there was a campaign to "destroy"
him waged by Blatter loyalists inside FIFA.
Blatter on Friday expressed confusion over Platini's
harsh tone.
"If he sees me as an egoist, I accept ... but I helped him
become president of UEFA in 2007 and we had good
relations, so I don't understand his attitude. Saying I
wanted to harm him doesn't hold up," Blatter, 81, told
AFP.
Both claim the payment was compensation for
consulting work Platini did for FIFA between 1998 and
2002.
There has been media speculation that Blatter approved
the money a decade later to buy Platini's support for
his reelection as FIFA president.
There have also been suggestions that Marco Villiger, a
close associate of Blatter and a FIFA legal director,
leaked details of the controversial payment to Swiss
prosecutors, who have ongoing criminal probe into the
case.
- Corrupting the 48-team World Cup? -
Separately, Blatter took a jibe at the signature
achievement of his successor Gianni Infantino, branding
the new FIFA president's 48-team World Cup a
dangerous move.
Infantino eagerly wanted to expand the cash-cow
tournament beyond its current 32-team format, and
has secured support from FIFA's powerful Council for a
larger competition in 2026.
The council has endorsed a format of 16 groups, each
with three teams.
"To play in groups by three is not recommendable,"
Blatter said. "One team is always a spectator."
When a nation has no chance of moving on,
"arrangements .. could be done," Blatter continued.
Blatter's FIFA tenure ended in spectacular disgrace,
after US prosecutors opened corruption probes against
dozens of his top allies in world football.
He remains the target of an investigation in his native
Switzerland over criminal mismanagement.
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