FIFA presidential candidate Gianni Infantino favors 40-team World Cup

The World Cup could be expanded by eight teams to 40 if Gianni Infantino is elected FIFA president.
FIFA presidential candidate Gianni Infantino favors 40-team World Cup
FIFA presidential candidate Gianni Infantino favors 40-team World Cup /

LONDON (AP) — The World Cup could be expanded by eight teams to 40 if Gianni Infantino is elected FIFA president.

Infantino, the face of European competition draws as UEFA's general secretary, discussed his first plans to transform FIFA in an interview with The Associated Press after making a surprising late decision to enter the election.

European football scrambled to find a candidate as a substitute for Infantino's boss, Michel Platini, after the UEFA president was provisionally suspended by FIFA.

Platini is at risk of a long ban once the ethics probe into a 2011 payment from FIFA has been completed, which would make him ineligible for the Feb. 26 election to replace suspended president Sepp Blatter.

Infantino has worked in Platini's shadow, implementing the president's vision from Financial Fair Play for clubs to expanding the European Championship from 16 to 24 teams starting with next year's tournament. If Infantino gets his way, the World Cup also could have to find space for an additional eight teams.

"I believe in expanding the World Cup based on the experience we had in Europe with the Euros," Infantino said by telephone from the campaign trail in South America. "Look at qualifiers now where some teams who have never qualified did and some teams which have always qualified didn't make it.

"So it created a completely new dynamic in the qualification. It created new enthusiasm. If you are serious about developing football it must involve more associations in the best football event in the world: The World Cup."

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It would be too soon to swell to 40 teams in Russia in 2018 given that qualifying has already started and it could be problematic for Qatar since the plan is to squeeze the 64 games into 28 days to cope with staging the tournament in November-December 2022 rather than the traditional June-July slot.

But the proposal could help Infantino collect votes from some of the smaller FIFA members outside Europe.

"I don't have a European vision," he said. "I have a vision for football."

The 45-year-old Infantino, a lawyer who has been UEFA's general secretary since 2009, was endorsed by the organization's executive committee to stand for FIFA president only hours before the candidate deadline on Oct. 26.

"We made a draw and my name came out," he joked.

Infantino does not hide that he never previously publicly expressed any desire to run the global game as it recovers from a corruption crisis which had seen Blatter announce plans to quit even before he was suspended along with Platini last month.

Infantino's candidacy gave the impression of UEFA being dissatisfied with the other options: Asian football leader Sheikh Salman bin Ibrahim Al Khalifa of Bahrain, Prince Ali bin al-Hussein of Jordan, former South African politician Tokyo Sexwale, Liberian federation president Musa Bility and former FIFA official Jerome Champagne.

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"It's not a question about other candidates, it's a question about Europe being present and making its voice heard," Infantino said. "When you have a function in football like mine with responsibilities you have to assume responsibility when times are difficult, to put yourself forward in order to try to change this and bring messages forward."

Those messages are not just Platini's rehashed with a different name on the manifesto, Infantino maintained.

"I hope all of them he will agree with, but maybe on some of them we are not exactly the same - some of the priorities are maybe not exactly the same," Infantino said. "I have been working with Michel Platini for the last nine years. We share many views and many ideas. It's obvious we have the same philosophy on many things but I am a candidate on my own, I will have ideas on my own."

He also insisted he would not stand aside for Platini if the former France captain later wins any appeals.

Faces of the FIFA Scandal

Sepp Blatter

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Elyxandro Cegarra/Panoramic/Icon Sportswire

FIFA president

Jerome Valcke

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Dmitry Lovetsky/AP

FIFA general secretary

Michel Platini

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Shaun Botterill/Getty Images

UEFA president; FIFA Vice President; FIFA presidential hopeful

Jack Warner

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Sean Drakes/LatinContent/Getty Images

Ex–CONCACAF president; FIFA Vice President

Jeffrey Webb

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Matt Rourke/AP

Ex–Cayman Islands federation and CONCACAF president; FIFA Vice President

Chuck Blazer

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Mike Hewitt/FIFA via Getty Images

Ex-CONCACAF general secretary; FIFA executive committee

Alfredo Hawit

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Orlando Sierra/AFP/Getty Images

CONCACAF President; FIFA vice president, executive committee; Former president, Honduras football federation

Juan Angel Napout

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Martin Rose/FIFA/Getty Images

CONMEBOL president, FIFA vice president, executive committee; Former president, Paraguay football federation

Jose Luis Meiszner

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Juan Mabromata/AFP/Getty Images

CONMEBOL general secretary

Marco Polo del Nero

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Buda Mendes/Getty Images

Former FIFA executive committee; President, Brazil football federation

Ricardo Teixeira

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Michael Regan/Getty Images

Former FIFA executive committee; Former president, Brazil football federation

Eduardo Li

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Jamie McDonald/FIFA via Getty Images

Ex–Costa Rica federation president; FIFA, CONCACAF executive committees

Eugenio Figueredo

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Alan Diaz/AP

Ex–Uruguay federation and CONMEBOL president; FIFA Vice President

Jose Maria Marin

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Buda Mendes/Getty Images

Ex–Brazil federation president; CONMEBOL executive committee

Rafael Salguero

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Alexander Hassenstein/FIFA/Getty Images

Former FIFA executive committee; Former president, Guatemalan football federation

Manuel Burga

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Ernesto Benavides/AFP/Getty Images

FIFA development committee; Former president, Peru football federation

Ariel Alvarado

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Arnulfo Franco/AP

Former president, Panama football federation; FIFA disciplinary committee

Eduardo Deluca

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LatinContent/STR/Getty Images

Former CONMEBOL, Argentina football federation general secretary

Luís Chiriboga

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Rodrigo Buendia/AFP/Getty Images

CONMEBOL executive committee; President, Ecuador football federation

Rafael Callejas

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Clive Mason/FIFA/Getty Images

FIFA television and marketing committee; Former president, Honduras; Former president, Honduras football federation

Rafael Esquivel

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Leo Ramirez/AFP/Getty Images

Ex–Venezuela federation president; CONMEBOL executive committee

Carlos Chavez

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Aizar Raldes/AFP/Getty Images

CONMEBOL treasurer; Former president, Bolivia football federation

Nicolas Leoz

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Jorge Saenz/AP

Ex–CONMEBOL president, FIFA executive committee

Julio Rocha

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Esteban Felix/AP

Ex–Nicaragua federation and Central American Football Union president

Romer Osuna

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Aizar Raldes/AFP/Getty Images

FIFA audit and compliance committee; Former CONMEBOL treasurer.

Alejandro Burzaco

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Don Emmert/AFP/Getty Images

CEO of Torneos y Competencias

Aaron Davidson

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Kevin Hagen/AP

President, Traffic Sports USA

Hugo Jinkis

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Maxi Failla/AP

President, Full Play Group

Mariano Jinkis

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Maxi Failla/AP

Vice President, Full Play Group

Loretta Lynch

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Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

U.S. Attorney General

Michael Lauber

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Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/Getty Images

Switzerland Attorney General

"I take it seriously which means if I am elected on Feb. 26 in case Michel cannot run, then I will be the FIFA president and I will act as FIFA president," Infantino said. "There is no stepping down or whatever."

Infantino's UEFA is not universally popular across the continent. Fans of both Barcelona and Manchester City have booed the Champions League anthem in recent weeks in protest against UEFA sanctions. City is facing a UEFA punishment over the jeering.

"When you are in charge of a governing body like UEFA it's of course very difficult to be popular," Infantino said. "If you think fans in general have the opportunity and right to give raise to their opinions in the way they do best. They are booing their team, they are booing opponents, they are booing the UEFA Champions League anthem.

"We have to not be offended by it, live with it and to make things always better and try to prove and show people what is down in our heart is football basically. I am looking forward very positively and I hope I can convince as many people as possible."


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