Posts Tagged ‘Fifa’

FIFA Releases African Football Retrospective Online…THIS IS BIG

Friday, February 6th, 2009

FIFA - 50 Years OF African Football
A-M-A-Z-I-N-G!!!!!!!

To promote Africa’s increasingly important role in world football and to hype up the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, footie governing body FIFA has released “50 Years Of African Football”, a five-DVD retrospective of, you guessed it, football in Africa. It contains videos, photographs, text…AND IS FOR FREE ONLINE!!!!! and are offering a free online preview.

Soccer-wise, Africa has a lot going on during the next two years. Along with the World Cup, there’s also the increasingly-popular-but-never-televised African Cup Of Nations tourney, also in 2010. There are a few other big competitions going on there as well.

Watching this requires, at least, the most up-to-date versions of the Adobe Flash and Windows Media Players. I say “at least” because I’ve only been jumping around the site a little bit and that’s all I’ve found as far as techy stuff for this site goes. As a heads-up, I had trouble launching the video. On the whole, you will DEFINITELY need a fast computer for this site.

But no matter how old your computer is, you need to at least TRY and watch this because I have hunch it’s good….really good. WATCH PREVIEW IT NOW!!!!!!

My wife is out of town this weekend so in between footie matches, I’ll be on this site BIG TIME!!!! This is a good day!!!

A Follow-Up To My Transfer Window Post

Tuesday, February 3rd, 2009

Sir Alex Ferguson
I did a post a few days ago about how officials at both the English Premier League and UEFA want to end the January transfer window, with the EPL leading the charge. Well, FIFA has now put in their two cents, saying that that the EPL “cannot impose unilateral changes to the transfer window.”

Some high profile fellows in the Premier League, including Arsenal’s Arsene Wenger and Manchester United’s Sir Alex Ferguson, have also weighed in on the subject. Sir Alex is the loan voice in the wind, saying that he doesn’t mind the January transfer window. Then again, he usually gets his way when it comes around.

Again, I’d be happier if it was gone…would be less drama in football.

Courtesy of euFootballBiz.

The January Transfer Window May End…I’ll Explain

Friday, January 30th, 2009

These two stories from the Daily Mail UK make me happy.

English Premier League officials will soon be meeting to discuss ending the customary January transfer window in the EPL and instead, letting clubs transfer players throughout the entire season. This change will not sit well with either UEFA (Europe’s governing football body) or FIFA (the entire world’s governing football body). In fact, UEFA prez Michel Platini wants to end transfers window everywhere and not just at the EPL. He would keep the summer one, but slightly adjust it’s timeframe.

Let me quickly explain: the soccer season at the club league level runs from around August to around May. While the various leagues, such as the English Premier League and Spain’s La Liga, have different start and end points, the beginning of January is the overall halfway mark. For that entire month, teams are allowed to swap players for players from others teams. This is not restricted to inter-league either and can done with teams from other leagues as well. So a player in the EPL can be swapped for another player in the EPL, but he can also be swapped for a player in La Liga if that’s what all the involved parties want.

The January and summer transfer windows kick off a ridiculous feeding frenzy among the press and bloggers, most of whom react to every rumor that comes down the pike. I paid close attention to this past summer’s window and watched everyone predict which player would go to which club…maybe 5% of the predictions were right. This absurdity reached peak levels when Real Madrid attempted to woo Cristiano Ronaldo away from Manchester United, and there were 20 articles for every half-truth that came out about this.

I’ve always been of the opinion that the transfer windows take attention away from the beautiful game as well as distract players from doing their job, and Platini says the same thing as far as that last point goes. This is why I very rarely post transfer rumors and why these two stories make me happy. I don’t always agree with Platini, but he and I are pretty much simpatico on this.

One of the underlying themes of both articles is that the transfer windows benefit only those clubs with the biggest bank accounts, which is true since the act of swapping players can incur huge costs. How huge? Well, don’t let the word “swap” put images of slavery in your mind because Ronaldo would’ve received a ridiculous salary had the Man United/Real Madrid deal gone through, a salary that was rumored to be £1 million a week at one point.

Not Sure If We Need To Worry About World Cup Attendance

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009

2010 World Cup
On SI.com yesterday…

The overall consensus is that the current global economic climate may prevent some from attending the 2010 World Cup in South Africa (the estimated average cost of a ticket is US $139) and that FIFA must “start giving life to the World Cup” as a result. But while making money is important to this venture (as it is to others), FIFA boss Sepp Blatter states that “it’s important to us that the Africans enjoy organizing their own World Cup” (I give Blatter some “cool points” for that comment). Also, Danny Jordaan whose helping to oversee World Cup preparations in South Africa made further comments stating that, if South Africans don’t attend both the 2010 World Cup and the Confederations Cup held in South Africa this year, that they are “never going to see them again on home soil, at least not in our lifetime.”

I’m no economist nor am I the final word on the status of either South Africa or the World Cup, but I think that all of this may be a lot of unnecessary worry.

I’m a liberal democrat, a group that’s extremely pessimistic about the global economy, but I still think that there’s a good chance that said economy will turn around sooner than most people think and won’t hamper folks from attending the most popular sports competition on the globe. C’mon guys, the World Cup is bigger than the Super Bowl (yeah, I said it). And even if the economy does slow things down, I think that all the World Cup-connected vendors that sell match tickets, airline tickets and hotel rooms will be forced to drop prices to get more people to the competition.

There’s also no need to worry about South African citizens attending both the World and the Confederations Cups. South Africa has a strong footie following and contains some great local clubs: the Orlando Pirates and Kaizer Chiefs to name just two. Plus, three excellent South African nationals play in the high-profile EPL: Aaron Mokoena and Benedict McCarthy, both at Blackburn; and Steven Pienaar over at Everton (my personal favorite of the three), which generates even more local interest in football.

Furthermore, Africa as a whole has made it’s mark on world football, thank to the likes of Samuel Eto’o, Didier Drogba, Mahamadou Diarra and many others on list to long to name here. So the global footie community does have a genuine curiosity about how the game functions on the continent and I think that they’ll want to come to South Africa for a closer look.

Yes, there are challenges in getting the World Cup festivities as close to perfect as possible, but I don’t thing that attendance to the match is screwed. Just my two cents.

Good Article on the TV Rights of Football

Monday, November 3rd, 2008

This story is a few weeks old but it’s worth posting anyway. It says that despite the threat of a global recession, the cash cow that is the TV rights of footie will keep those that benefit from it quite liquid throughout the down turn. UEFA netted a nice US $400 billion from this year’s European Cup broadcast and stand to make over US $1 billion from the current Champions League competition. The 2010 World Cup should put a little over US $3 billion in FIFA’s pockets while Manchester United netted US $76 billion after winning the Champions league final last year.

An FYI:, part of Man U’s money came from their share of TV rights. You wanted to know why a Champions League title is so important to club owners? You wanted to know why American businessmen bought Liverpool FC and, on the whole, are looking to buy more European footie teams? There’s your answer: that clubs get a chunk of the TV rights in Europe unlike in the states, where the NFL, MBA, MLB et al keep all the TV loot for themselves.

I don’t agree with FIFA president Michel Platini’s comment that teams with debt shouldn’t be allowed in the Champions League competition though. As far as I know, their debts don’t have anything to do with the CL; therefore, their debts are none of FIFA’s business, let alone Platini’s.

And it appears that Germany’s Bundesliga is about to get into the TV money game as broadcasters compete to broadcast said-leagues domestic games. A while back, I did a post about how sponsorship money is loading into the Bundesliga. Sadly, the link to the story is dead…stupid Yahoo News!!!!!!!!!

Random News 8/6/08 (FIFA, Platini, Setanta, Eto’o, Bundesliga)

Wednesday, August 6th, 2008

Because or their strong showing in this year’s Euro Cup, Russia’s back in Fifa after 11 years. Good for them!!!

Spekaing of FIFA, I just found this great bio on FIFA grand puba Michel Platini.

Kind of a wierd article here. Shane O’Rourke, head of Setanta North America, feels that the 50,000 Setanta subscribers in Canada will watch EPL games that the channel broadcasts instead of the Olympics. “My feeling is anybody who’s buying our channel is watching our channel. After all, they’re paying for it”, he says. Well, yeah they’re paying for it but the article makes no mention of polling data on this subject. And let’s not for get that this is a Tivo/DVR/time-shifted world where people can actually record games and watch them later.

FC Barcelona claims that Samuel Eto’o wants out of the club. I tend to ignore transfer rumours (all the Cristiano Ronaldo stuff annoyed me) but since the article lists Chelsea as one of the front runners to get him, I care about this one.

Sponsorship cash continues to flow into the Bundesliga, and at an increasing rate. Hopefully, teams other than Bayern Munich can use it to snag good players to win a league trophy.

Two cool Olympic-related posts (and I just learned something new)

Monday, August 4th, 2008

After all the drama that happened around Lionel Messi wanting to play for Argentina in the Olympics instead of staying with Barcelona for that time period, Fifa is now reviewing the U-23 law for football clubs. They’re doing it now so the issues that came about with the whole Messi situation don’t come up during the next Summer Olympics, held in London on 2010. Also, Chris Rivers over at EPLTalk has a great article on how the U-23 law is affecting Premier League clubs already.

I had no idea about the U-23 law until I thoroughly read these two articles. The way it works under current Fifa law is this: all clubs must release all of their players that are 23 or younger to international play when the time comes. Each international team can also draft a maximum three players that are over 23. I totally didn’t know this and I’m happy to have learned something new today.

This issue has popped up before during my short life as a footie fan: in late 2007, there was a big row over the amount of players that clubs were going to lose to the upcoming African Cup of Nations tourney…Fifa didn’t get involved in this. I’m not sure if they’ll actually do anything this time but since this complaint has come up before, they’ll need to actively confront it at some time. That time may be now.