Showing posts with label Swiss franc. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Swiss franc. 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.


Sunday, 20 March 2016

Demare Wins Milan San Remo


Arnaud Démare claimed the biggest win of his career when the Frenchman sprinted to victory in the Milan-San Remo despite having crashed earlier in the 295km classic. The FDJ rider held off several big names in the final sweep into the Mediterranean resort, crossing the line ahead of Team Sky’s Ben Swift and the Belgian Jürgen Roelandts. Démare is the first French rider to win the opening monument of the season since Laurent Jalabert in 1995.

Coming off the final climb and with the peloton strung out, Sky’s Michal Kwiatkowsi burst into the lead and stayed out in front until the final two kilometres. The Pole was reeled in, though, by the Swiss veteran Fabian Cancellara before Démare powered through to win.

The Colombian Fernando Gaviria (Etixx-Quick Step) had looked in prime position to claim victory but crashed heavily and rolled across the line in tears. The world champion, Peter Sagan, was also in the mix but again failed to deliver a victory on one of the sport’s classics.

A landslide had caused the race to be rerouted, with the riders sent on to the A10 motorway, before it reverted to the usual route that hugs the Italian coast. Eleven riders formed a breakaway but Tinkoff and BMC drove the peloton which swallowed up the front-runners with 25km left.

The race was littered with crashes, one of which, with 30km remaining, took down Démare but he quickly recovered.


Wednesday, 9 March 2016

Authorities Seize FFF Documents


French authorities have seized documents from the French Football Federation (FFF) in connection with Switzerland's criminal investigation into ex-Fifa president Sepp Blatter.

According to Switzerland's office of the attorney general, the documents are connected to "the suspected payment of 2m Swiss francs [£700,000]".

It said the search in Paris was carried out at Switzerland's request. The criminal investigation into Blatter, 79, began in September.

The office of the Swiss attorney general said the FFF consented to the search of its Paris base, which was carried out on Tuesday.

Swiss prosecutors have accused Blatter of criminal mismanagement or misappropriation over a TV rights deal and of a "disloyal payment" to suspended Uefa president Michel Platini.

Blatter, who served as head of world football's governing body from 1998 until 2015, and Frenchman Platini have denied any wrongdoing.

The pair have been suspended from all football-related activities for six years after a Fifa ethics committee investigation found them guilty of breaches surrounding the payment to Platini in 2011.

They have both said they will appeal against the decision to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

Blatter and Platini say the payment honoured a verbal or gentleman's agreement made in 1998 for work carried out by the Frenchman when he was a technical advisor for Blatter.

Last month, Uefa general secretary Gianni Infantino was elected as Blatter's successor and has vowed to "restore the image" of Fifa.


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.