This year's FIFA Congress is being held next month in Sydney, Australia. In less than two months, the finals of UEFA EURO 2008 will get started in Austria and Switzerland. Autumn will then see the Olympic Games in China, where many of the planet's best men and women footballers are set to perform. These were just some of the events covered by FIFA President Joseph S. Blatter, who also gave his opinion on the current status of preparations for the FIFA World Cup South Africa 2010™, the relationship between FIFA and the German Football Association (DFB) and the investigation into German football currently being carried out by the Federal Cartel Office.
The head of world football's governing body spoke on the
'Talk of the Week' section of DFB.de (the German FA's
official website) and gave unequivocal support to those in charge
at the DFB in their dispute with the Cartel Office. Blatter also
announced when the 6+5 ruling would come into effect in the
Bundesliga while also calling for footballing values to be given
respect and recognition throughout the world.
DFB.de: UEFA EURO 2008 will soon be kicking off in Austria
and Switzerland. Will you be able to relax and watch the tournament
as a football fan, or do you have duties as FIFA
President?
Joseph S.Blatter: I will be enjoying the
tournament as a neutral football fan. I've decided that I am
going to watch at least one match in each of the stadiums. I will
of course be taking an interest in the organisation of the EURO in
my role as FIFA President.
Will you be just as relaxed and neutral when the Swiss
national team play?
When my home country is playing, for example during the
opening match of the tournament against the Czechs, I may not sport
a Swiss cross on my chest but I will feel as if I am. It
wouldn't be normal for me to sit there totally impartial,
although the FIFA President does need to maintain a certain
neutrality.
How are enthusiasm levels for the EURO in your home
country?
The Swiss always take their time to warm up, but when they
do, watch out! There will be a great atmosphere particularly as
Swiss football fans will be lucky enough to see some great games
even in the group stages. Not just the ones involving their team
but also the ones in the unbelievably strong group featuring Italy,
France, the Netherlands and Romania.
Does it annoy you that some experts see the EURO as a FIFA
World Cup minus Brazil and Argentina but with a greater
concentration of quality and a more balanced line-up?
By saying that they prove that they don't know
international football. Anyone who says that is over-simplifying
things and looking at the tournament through European-tinted
spectacles.
The German team may have won the EURO three times but at
the last two finals, they went out early. How is the team looking
this year?
Like any other team, they have to get past the first round.
That won't be easy, even if the so-called experts we've
just been talking about say that Germany got an easy draw. There
are no easy draws. The German team will have been cautioned not to
let their recent win over Switzerland go to their heads but rather
to think about the tasks that lie ahead of them in Austria.
How do you view the current relationship between FIFA and
the DFB, with Dr. Theo Zwanziger being elected sole President and
the appointment of Wolfgang Niersbach as General
Secretary?
At the moment everything is wonderful. The few differences
and misunderstandings that occurred have been reconciled and
smoothed over. I can only congratulate the DFB, under the
leadership of Dr. Theo Zwanziger, on how the problems were tackled.
Furthermore, I was delighted to discover that he, like the FIFA
President, is an opponent of technology being used on the field of
play. What I am particularly pleased about is the fact that the DFB
has recently registered its one millionth women's footballer.
Registered, you note. That means that there are probaly two million
women and girls playing football. That is incredible. We are on
excellent and very friendly terms with new General Secretary
Wolfgang Niersbach. Horst R. Schmidt, the new treasurer of the DFB,
has close ties with FIFA and will continue providing great
assistance in the organisation of the next World Cup. And they also
have Franz Beckenbauer, one of the most prominent members of the
FIFA Executive Committee.
He took up office in March 2007. What are your impressions
of how he is faring?
He is a very clever man. He's far from the nonchalant and
easy-going showman that some people see him as. He always shows
full commitment and a real interest in his tasks. He is chairman of
the Football Committee and has tackled this responsibility with
focus and determination. And as far as his work with the Executive
Committee to date is concerned, all I can say is that I take my hat
off to Franz Beckenbauer!
How do you see the DFB's overall role in world football
today?
They are one of the best organised national
associations. The leadership is good and it is also well monitored
- and that is key. It is a powerful association. If every
association were as well organised as the DFB, our administration
would hardly have any problems.
After the EURO, the Olympics in Beijing will be the second
big event of the year. The women's tournament will see the best
players from each of the qualified countries represented. Will this
also be the case for the men's competition in the future, as it
is for the basketball tournament and as IOC President Jacques Rogge
would love to have it?
Since women's football is some way off enjoying the
public profile that men's football has, the Olympic tournament
is the chance for the best female footballers to demonstrate their
skills on the world stage. For the men, the main issue is the
international fixture list, in which the Olympic Games have their
own place and for which the best professional footballers cannot be
included due to timing considerations. I incidentally believe that
the Olympic Games should be an event for young people. If football
sends its best players up to the age of 23 then we will see some
real quality. The tendency now within FIFA is to move away from the
U-23s and just allow junior teams to take part in the Olympic
Games.
The boycott of the Olympics which has been mooted by
several sides will probably not come to pass. What is FIFA's
position regarding the Tibet issue?
It is not the role of a FIFA President to comment on these
issues or other political incidents. One thing is for sure,
however. No-one has ever gained anything by boycotting, and
particularly not the athletes. If you want to help the people of
China, if help is required, then the athletes should be allowed to
compete. And football will make a great contribution over there
since the opening round is being played a long way away from
Beijing. We will be bringing the Olympic spirit and the Olympic
ideals to a remote place and that is good for the country and its
people.
How should individual sportsmen and women behave during the
Olympics?
As they are used to behaving as footballers. Ours is a team
sport, so the team should behave as they normally would during a
tournament. I would like to add in this context that it is a
disgrace that the Olympic torch is being extinguished because
people do not want to see it burning. There is something wrong
there. I am an IOC member and have received a message that there is
serious thought being given to the torch and whether it will
continue to exist in the future. When we travelled across various
countries with our FIFA trophy before the 2006 World Cup, this was
met with universal approval. That is the way football is. Football
is something special. Football is something that is so popular. It
is the people's game.
This brings us on to the sport's biggest event, the
FIFA World Cup. How is South Africa faring with its preparations,
and what issues are causing you the most concern?
Energy supply is causing FIFA the most concern at the moment.
Electricity. If you cannot provide a suitable energy supply in this
day and age then there is something wrong. On the other hand, the
stadium construction is going extremely well. We had the
opportunity here in Zurich to talk with the South African union
representatives as well as their Swiss equivalents and these
discussions really helped us to make progress. The trade union
members explained their problems to me and I then told them how the
employment situation would probably look if the World Cup did not
take place in South Africa. That broke the ice and the atmosphere
became much more relaxed, and they assured me that they would all
now be working together for South Africa.
How are the safety issues looking?
When you accept that safety is an issue then you
can take the necessary measures. The 2010 World Cup will therefore
have the sustainable effect of helping South Africa become a safe
country.
Will the 2018 FIFA World Cup come back to Europe or will it
be held in the North, Central America and Caribbean zone, as per
the rotation system?
We have modified the rotation principal somewhat by stating
that the confederations in which the last two World Cup finals were
organised cannot apply. For 2018 this therefore concerns South
America and Africa. It is clear that Europe would like to have the
World Cup back in 2018. There are a number of candidates, not just
England. There is Russia, and the Netherlands together with
Belgium, or Spain perhaps with Portugal. And then you have Mexico,
USA, and then China, Australia and Qatar. It will be quite a
contest.
At next month's FIFA Congress in Sydney, one of the
items on the agenda is the 6+5 rule which is endorsed by the DFB.
In your estimation, when will each team in the Bundesliga for
example have to start every match with six players who are
qualified for the country they are playing in?
At the Congress in Sydney, we not only have to discuss and
approve the 6+5 ruling as a system but also work out a time scale
for its implementation. At the moment there is still opposition
from the European Commission in Brussels since this ruling
supposedly goes against the freedom of choice of employment. We do
not want to get into any quarrels with a political organisation,
but there is no rule that says that there have to be eleven foreign
players in a team. A lot of the politicians in Europe we have
spoken to approve of the wording and the principal behind the 6+5
ruling.
When will it become a reality then?
First of all I would once again like to express my thanks to
the German Football Association for their support in this matter
and also to Dr. Zwanziger and Franz Beckenbauer who are very much
behind us on this. The implementation is based on contracts that
are currently in force and means that starting with the 2009/10
season we will have four nationally qualified players, then five
and finally six so that the system is functioning by the World Cup
in 2014. It is not morally right, and competition loses all balance
when the big clubs buy 25 top players to deprive other teams of
them and then hoard them because they can only have 11 on the
park.
There is another hot topic in German football at the
moment, namely the investigations by the Federal Cartel Office into
the DFB and the German Football League (DFL). What is your opinion
on this?
For us, football in Germany is a unit. The German Football
Association is a member of FIFA and UEFA, and the DFL is integrated
within the DFB, making it a legal entity, so there is no way that
they can come into competition with one another. Incomprehensibly,
something is being set off that could rock the very foundations of
our sport, and in Germany as well, where almost seven million
players are registered members of the DFB. When you take the
families into account then you can multiply this figure by four,
meaning that more than a third of the German population is either
directly or indirectly involved in football. It is not just an
economic issue but also part of education and culture. Football in
Germany has great social importance and has taken on a political
dimension. So let's leave football in peace and leave it
organised the way it is in Germany. You would be hard pressed to
find a more positive role model than football in Germany.
In this context, what do you make of the comments by the
German Minister for the Interior, Dr Schauble, who said that based
on the conditions of the single European market, not all aspects of
life, and in particular sport and football, should be governed
according to the laws of the market and competition?
I am in agreement with him 100 per cent, as is the case with
the 6+5 ruling, which I have also already discussed with him. In
Brussels they are saying that football is merely a sector of the
economy. But football and sport are so much more and the
socio-cultural aspects have far greater significance. This needs to
be taken into account, recognised and respected. What does football
give? It gives hope and emotions. And what do we need in our
sometimes wicked and crazy lives more than hope and emotion? But
let me make it quite clear that football has to take its
responsibilities very seriously. What recently happened in
Frankfurt during the match against Nurnberg was certainly not a
great advertisement for saying that sport should be left in peace
and to its own devices. There should be no let up in our fight
against violence, corruption and racism, against cheating during
games with persistent diving, against drugs and illegal gambling.
But we can only fight if we are all in agreement that football is
something more than just a business.
After so many controversial questions, here is a final and
very straightforward question for Joseph S. Blatter the football
expert: Who will be the 2008 European champions?
I know that people are going to say that I have had
enough time to come up with a cleverer reply, but as FIFA President
I have to give a diplomatic answer, and that is - whoever wins the
final.