Showing posts with label Court of Arbitration for Sport. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Court of Arbitration for Sport. Show all posts

Monday, 9 May 2016

Michel Platini to Resign from UEFA


Uefa president Michel Platini will resign from European football's governing body after failing to have a six-year ban from football overturned.

A Court of Arbitration for Sport (Cas) panel reduced the ban to four years on Monday. Following the judgement, the 60-year-old said he would be stepping down.

Platini and former Fifa counterpart Sepp Blatter, were last year found guilty of ethics breaches over a 2m Swiss Franc (£1.3m) "disloyal payment".

The pair, who deny wrongdoing, had their original bans reduced from eight to six years by the Fifa appeals committee.

Platini had taken his case to Cas seeking to get the ban overturned, but a three-man panel said it "was not convinced by the legitimacy of the payment".

The two said the payment in 2011 was made for consultancy work Platini had carried out for Blatter between 1998 and 2002, and that they had a "gentleman's agreement" on when the balance was settled.

The matter is also being looked into by Swiss prosecutors.

After Cas returned its judgement, Platini said in a statement: "I am resigning from my duties as Uefa president to pursue my battle in front of the Swiss courts to prove my innocence in this case."

He added that he considered the judgement "a profound injustice".

However, the Cas panel was damning of Platini, saying his "behaviour was not ethical or loyal".

It found his dealings with Blatter had breached the ethics code of world governing body Fifa, and while his six-year ban was "too severe", it decided a four-year punishment should be handed down - the equivalent to a presidential term in office.

It also said an 80,000 Swiss Franc (£57,200) fine should be lowered to 60,000 (£42,900), but stressed: "The Cas panel was of the opinion that a severe sanction could be justified in view of the superior functions carried out by Mr Platini (Fifa vice-president and Uefa president), the absence of any repentance and the impact that this matter has had on Fifa's reputation."

Uefa said it would meet on 18 May "to discuss next steps".

"In the meantime, there will be no Uefa president appointed ad interim," it added.


Thursday, 10 March 2016

Radcliffe Backs Banned Russian Petition

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Paula Radcliffe is backing a petition that wants Russia's athletes banned from competition until money won by their drug cheats since 2009 is repaid.

It has been signed by the former world marathon champion and a number of other athletes, agents and promoters.

They believe the money belongs to sportsmen and women "whose earnings were reduced by cheating athletes".

Russia is suspended from international athletics because of widespread cheating and corruption.

It hopes to get the ban lifted in time for the 2016 Olympics, which begin in Rio de Janeiro on 5 August.

The online petition, which went live on Tuesday, had attracted 149 signatures by 14:00 GMT on Thursday.

Among them are marathon world record holder Radcliffe, Olympic heptathlon bronze medallist Kelly Sotherton, London Marathon chief executive Nick Bitel and Berlin Marathon race director Mark Milde.

Kenya's Edna Kiplagat, the 2011 and 2013 world marathon champion and Germany's Irina Mikitenko, who won the London Marathon in 2008, have also signed it.

"It's an extremely good idea," Bitel told the BBC's World Service. "There are many, many athletes around the world who've been affected.

"To try to leave it up to individual athletes and individual events to sue the Russian athletes who doped, that is just not practical."

Russia's Liliya Shobukhova won the London Marathon in 2010 and claimed a hat-trick of Chicago titles before being stripped of those victories for doping irregularities.

Bitel says he is determined to recover the money Shobukhova won by winning in London.

"Our intention is that someone who cheats shouldn't get away with it, but we have started the process and will pursue her so far as we can," he said.


Tuesday, 1 March 2016

Aregawi Suspended After Test Failure


World indoor 1500m champion Abeba Aregawi has been provisionally suspended after testing positive for a banned substance. The Ethiopia-born Swede, 25, failed an out-of-competition test conducted by governing body the IAAF.

Aregawi, who won gold at the 2013 World Championships in Moscow and 2014 World Indoor Championships in Sopot, has requested a B sample be tested.

Britain's Hannah England finished fourth behind Aregawi in Moscow. However there is no suggestion Aregawi's performance in that race is under scrutiny.

Aregawi ran for Ethiopia at the 2012 London Olympics but began competing for Sweden later that year after being granted citizenship. She was due to defend her title at next month's World Indoor Championships in Portland, Oregon.

Her suspension also means her place in the Swedish team for the Rio Olympics in August is in doubt. The Swedish Olympic Committee (SOC) has already withdrawn its financial support for Aregawi.

"The situation regarding her place on the Olympic team is in quarantine as we wait for the result of the B test," added SOC chief executive Peter Reinebo.

Her Dutch manager, Jos Hermens, told the Expressen newspaper that the news had come as a surprise. 

"We can't understand it," he said. "We are trying to work out what has happened. It's very strange."

But Sweden's athletics chief has been pretty scathing.

"It is with dismay and extreme disappointment we have to make this statement," said Stefan Olsson.

"We are totally opposed to all forms of cheating, doping and illicit substances. We have zero tolerance and this is totally unacceptable."

American Jenny Simpson, who was second behind Aregawi at the 2013 World Championships, expressed her "grief" at the news.

In a statement to the New York Times, she wrote: "I'm grateful that the sport is taking steps to catch cheaters and meaningfully deter others from violating the rules in the future.

"Justice begins when someone that stole from the sport isn't going to just get away with it. But I grieve the decision that was made by a skilled athlete, capable of greatness, to take a shortcut."

She added: "I'm hopeful that things might really be changing for the better in our sport and I'm sad it didn't start changing sooner."

It has not been a very good few days for Aregawi. She has also been caught up in a tax row in Sweden after telling authorities she had never lived in the country and therefore was not liable for tax.

She was ordered to pay 11,112 Swedish crowns (£932, $1,299) in back taxes.


Tuesday, 16 February 2016

OSM - Football Legends - Liam Brady


Liam Brady spent seven years plying his trade in Italian football before returning to play with West Ham for the 1987/88 season. It was suspension and injury which prevented him from playing in EURO 1988 under Jack Charlton in Germany and he ended his Republic of Ireland playing days with 72 caps in 1990 never making it to the World Cup in Italy either.

Overall though 1979 was amongst the best for the Whitehall man as he won the PFA Player of the Year and then played a key role in the dying minutes of the 1979 FA Cup Final to secure a victory for Arsenal over Manchester United at Wembley. In fact he had a hand in all three Arsenal goals and controlled most of the match that day.
Although the League title went to Liverpool that year, Brady had an FA Cup medal and the Cup Winners Cup was to be played for against Valencia at the Heysel stadium in Brussels. The exertions of the FA Cup final though the previous Saturday may have taken their toll on the Gunners and the 0-0 deadlock could not be broken in normal time. `

It was his performances in the two leg semi final against Juventus that were the real high points for Brady portraying his ability and craft.

In the first leg at Highbury the new Republic of Ireland Assistant Manager, Marco Tardelli, was sent off but the game ended in a 1-1 draw despite the Italians playing with ten men.

The return leg was more remarkable and the Gunners saw off Juventus by one goal to nil in Turin courtesy of Paul Vaessen. The Italian side had played from kick off like a side happy with a nil all draw hoping that the away goal in London would prove enough. History recalls it was not.

The clubs run in the Cup Winners Cup enhanced Brady's reputation immeasurably and having started to consider a move from Arsenal himself that year it was the performance in the match against Juventus in the semi-final that sealed the move to Juventus and life with Giovanni Trapattoni.
But there was more heart break before that good news was to come to pass.

In the final in Brussels the Valencia side were not fancied despite being managed by Real Madrid legend Alfredo Di Stefano. In their side was 1978 World Cup champion and tournament top scorer, Mario Kempes and 1974 World winner Rainer Bonhof. But the efforts of Brady, Stapleton, O'Leary, Pat Jennings, Pat Rice and Sammy Nelson went unrewarded that night when Valencia won 5-4 on penalties.

The German fondly remembers a see saw game that could have gone either way at one stage. But the former Borussia Moenchengladbach midfielder had been given a job to do and it was to neutralise the influence of Brady that night.

“I had to follow him for the match especially when we were defending their attacks and make sure he could not control the team like in the previous round against Juve“explained Bonhof with a wry smile, “At the start of the second half Brady eventually looked at me like and asked when was I going to give up following him? I told I couldn’t, it was my job that night!”

After extra time it was to be spot kicks and the first penalties were missed by Liam Brady and Mario Kempes. Then with four scored a piece it went to the second round and for the Gunners it was Graham Rix who saw his spot kick saved sending Arsenal home empty handed.. The Spanish travelled away as victors and at 24 years of age, Liam Brady was to go and join Juventus for a fee of just £514,000 leaving the disappointment of defeat behind him.

In Turin Liam quickly became a favourite of the Juventus fans and won back-to-back Serie A titles in his two seasons at the club. In early 1982, rumours that Juventus were ready to sell Brady, in order to accommodate Michel Platini, were greeted with incredulity by their fans. But the fears came to pass and the Turin side went on to parade two World Cup stars the next season with Polish forward Zbigniew Boniek joining Michel Platini, the current president of UEFA., at the club.

In their wake Liam Brady moved to newly-promoted Sampdoria and helped the club establish itself in Serie A even if no trophies came his way. In 1984, he left for Internazionale in Milan and spent two seasons there again with little to silverware to show for it. In 1986 Brady made his way to Ascoli as Trapattoni came the other way and at Milan he managed Inter to win another Serie A title the first season and a UEFA Cup in 1991.

The Italian journey ended when Brady returned to England in March 1987 joining West Ham from Ascoli.

Despite becoming gaining 72 caps and scoring 9 goals, Ireland’s transition into an international football force came too late in Liam’s career for him to be part of it Through injury and suspension he missed out on Euro 88 and then two years later he was not to be part of Ireland’s 1990 World Cup Final squad, a tournament that was to be hosted in Italy.

His time in management was probably his least successful era with a spell at Celtic that saw him part company by mutual consent in 1993. Soon afterwards he joined as manager of Brighton and that ended without success after two years. In 1996 he returned to Highbury as Arsene Wenger’s Head of Youth Development and the Director of the Youth Academy where he remains today.

In 2008 he was appointed an Assistant to the Republic of Ireland Manager, Giovanni Trapattoni and remained for a year.




Tuesday, 12 January 2016

Essendon Players Guilty of Doping - AFL


Thirty-four past and present players of Essendon football club have been found guilty of doping charges after an appeal from the World Anti-Doping Agency’s (Wada).

Most of the 34 players – 12 of whom remain on Essendon’s books – will be unavailable for the entire 2016 season due to suspension.

The players were initially cleared of the charges but Wada appealed in the court of arbitration in Sydney. The appeal has been upheld.

The Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) issued a statement announcing its decision early on Tuesday morning. It later released the full judgment.

“The panel found to its comfortable satisfaction that ... the AFL Doping Code (use of a prohibited substance) has been violated and found by a majority that all players were significantly at fault.

“The appeal filed by Wada against the Australian Football League (AFL) Anti-Doping Tribunal’s decision of 31 March 2015 is upheld and the appealed decision is set aside.

“The 34 players concerned are sanctioned with a period of ineligibility of two years, commencing on 31 March 2015, with credit given for any individual period of ineligibility already served. Thus, most of the suspensions will come to an end in November 2016.”

Bombers captain Jobe Watson, whose could now stand to lose the Brownlow medal he won in 2012, and Dustin Fletcher have received bans eight days longer due to their participation in the international rules series. Leroy Jetta and Alwyn Davey will also be ineligible for a longer period than the other players.

The CAS ruling was made by majority of an international arbitration panel of Michael Beloff in London, Romano Subiotto in Brussels, and former chief justice of the NSW Supreme Court James Spigelman.

The AFL anti-doping tribunal found in March last year that there was insufficient evidence to find the players guilty of doping offences arising from the club’s controversial 2012 supplements program.

The players were accused of using banned peptide Thymosin beta-4.

“Regrettably we can confirm the Court of Arbitration for Sport has found 34 past and present players guilty of committing an anti-doping rule violation,” Essendon chairman Lindsay Tanner said.

“As a result, the players – including 12 currently listed with Essendon – have been suspended for the 2016 season. The club is currently digesting the decision and we will provide a further update later today [Tuesday].”

The chief executive of the Australian Sports Anti-Doping Authority (Asada) Ben McDevitt was scathing of the Essendon players, described the three-year drugs saga as “the most devastating self-inflicted injury by a sporting club in Australian history”.

He said the players were clearly at fault and had hidden their Thymosin beta-4 regimen from testers.

“There were very little grounds the players to claim they were at no significant fault. The players had received anti-doping education through the AFL and Asada, and were well aware they they are personally responsible for all substances that entered their body.

“Unfortunately, despite their education, they agreed to be injected with a number of substances they had little knowledge of, made no enquiries about the substance and kept the injections from their team doctor and Asada.”

McDevitt said no Essendon player declared the injections during Asada testing missions to the club, “despite being asked each time whether they had taken any supplements”.

“At best, the players did not ask the questions, or the people, they should have. At worst, they were complicit in a culture of secrecy and concealment.”

The CAS ruling brings to an end three years of turmoil for Essendon Football Club and the league.

In sanctions handed down in 2013, the AFL banned then-coach James Hird for 12 months, kicked Essendon out of the finals, fined the club $2m and stripped it of draft picks.

Following the CAS verdict, the club may now be forced to use top-up players from other leagues as it did during the 2015 NAB Cup when the players in question served provisional bans.

Asada’s statement finally confirmed the identities of the 34 players. The 12 still at Essendon are captain Watson, Tom Bellchambers, Travis Colyer, Dyson Heppell, Michael Hibberd, Heath Hocking, Cale Hooker, Ben Howlett, Michael Hurley, David Myers, Tayte Pears and Brent Stanton.

The rest have either been delisted, retired or traded, with Jake Carlisle (St Kilda), Stewart Crameri (Western Bulldogs), Jake Melksham (Melbourne) and Port Adelaide pair Angus Monfries and Paddy Ryder all at Essendon in 2012 but now at other clubs.

John Worsfold replaced Hird as senior coach in October after he resigned in a bid to allow the club to move on from the saga.

Thursday, 7 January 2016

Platini out of FIFA Election


Suspended Uefa president Michel Platini says he will not stand in the Fifa presidential election next month.

Platini, along with Fifa president Sepp Blatter, has been banned from football-related activities for eight years by world football's governing body.

Both men were found guilty of breaches surrounding a £1.3m ($2m) "disloyal payment" made to Platini in 2011.

They are appealing against their bans, but Platini says the timing of the 26 February election means he cannot run.

"I'm withdrawing from the race for the Fifa presidency," the 60-year-old Frenchman told the Associated Press.

"The timing is not good for me. I don't have the means to fight on equal terms with the other candidates.

"I have not been given the chance to play the game. Bye bye Fifa, bye bye Fifa presidency."

Platini, president of European football's governing body since 2007, had submitted his candidacy for the Fifa presidential election but could not stand while suspended.

He and Blatter, 79, plan to take their cases to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

"I've spent more time in hearing rooms than on football pitches speaking about 4-3-3 or 4-4-2 or football news," added Platini.

"I'm taking this philosophically. Let's wait and see what happens. But injustice is revolting me and I'm trying to fight it."

Platini and Blatter claimed the payment was honouring an agreement made in 1998 for work carried out between 1998 and 2002, when Platini worked as a technical adviser for Blatter.

Fifa's ethics committee said there was "not sufficient evidence" to establish the payment was a bribe, but both men demonstrated an "abusive execution" of their positions.

"I can't have any regret in that story because things fell upon my head while I haven't done anything wrong," added Platini.

"I'm struggling to understand what happened, unless there was a will somewhere to prevent me from bidding."

'Maybe I'll come back in 20 years'

The English Football Association had previously backed Platini for the Fifa presidency, but suspended its support in October pending the outcome of the ethics inquiry.

FA chairman Greg Dyke said recently the organisation had yet to decide who to now support.

"I had 150 associations thinking that I'm the right person to solve Fifa problems," said Platini.

"It won't happen. But there is no age limitation, so maybe I'll come back in 20 years. Who knows?"


Wednesday, 30 December 2015

Platini Risks Ban in Dubai


Banned Uefa president Michel Platini could face further investigation from Fifa’s ethics committee after attending an awards ceremony and conference in Dubai despite being barred from “all football activity”.

Platini, the head of European football body Uefa, was handed an eight year ban from the game on 21 December, along with banned Fifa president Sepp Blatter. He is appealing the decision and insists he has done no wrong.

The ban relates to a payment of two million Swiss francs made by Blatter’s Fifa to Platini in 2011, nine years after he finished working as a consultant to Blatter.

On 27 December, Platini attended the Globe Soccer Awards organised by the Dubai Sports Council in Dubai, along with football stars such as Lionel Messi and Andrea Pirlo.

Frenchman Platini was photographed at the event and also made comments regarding his ban to the Italian media while in Dubai.

A spokesman for Fifa’s ethics committee declined to comment on the specific case but said: “In general terms: the investigatory chamber of the ethics committee of Fifa investigates any alleged breach of the ethics code of Fifa.”

A spokesman for Platini did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The 21 December ruling from Fifa ethics committee chair Hans-Joachim Eckert stated that Blatter and Platini were banned “for eight years from all football-related activities (administrative, sports or any other) on a national and international level. The bans come into force immediately.”

Platini has said he will fight the ban through the appeals process, which is likely to end up with the Court of Arbitration for Sport in Lausanne, Switzerland, and has also been fiercely critical of the decision and the ethics committee itself. Blatter has also said he will appeal.

Fifa has been thrown into crisis by investigations from the FBI and Department of Justice in the United States and Swiss authorities.

The Swiss Attorney General has opened a criminal investigation into Blatter regarding the payment to Platini. The Frenchman is viewed as “somewhere between a witness and an accused person” according to the Attorney General Michael Lauber.

In the United States, prosecutors have indicted 27 current or former football officials, including eight ex-Fifa executive committee members and the current heads of both the North and South American federations, over allegations they ran bribery schemes connected to the sale of TV rights for football competitions.


Tuesday, 29 December 2015

Billy No Mates Blatter Talks Bunte


Sepp Blatter has said he feels “abandoned” by football’s governing body and will now focus on clearing his name.

Fifa’s ethics committee last week banned Blatter and the Uefa president Michel Platini from football for eight years for ethics violations. Both men immediately denied any wrongdoing and said they would appeal to the Swiss-based Court of Arbitration for Sport.

“I now no longer fight for Fifa,” Blatter, who led Fifa for 17 years, said according to the German magazine Bunte. “They abandoned me. I am now only fighting for myself and my honour.”

Blatter had come out swinging against the ban, saying that he was sorry only that the president of Fifa was being treated as a “punching ball” and adding: “I will fight for me and I will fight for Fifa.”

The 79-year-old Swiss told Bunte that he was re-energised by the “false claims” against him. “After Christmas I will start to fight back,” Blatter said.

The inquiry by Fifa’s ethics committee began after the Swiss attorney general’s office opened criminal proceedings against Blatter over a 2m Swiss franc (£1.35m) payment to Platini in 2011.

Switzerland’s prosecutor is also investigating Fifa’s award of the 2018 and 2022 World Cup finals to Russia and to Qatar.

The ethics committee said it had not found evidence that the payment, made at a time when Blatter was seeking re-election, constituted a bribe, which meant the men were spared potential lifetime bans.

In the United States, prosecutors have indicted 27 current or former officials over allegations that they ran bribery schemes connected to the sale of television rights for competitions. 

These include eight former Fifa executive committee members and the current heads of both the North and South American federations.