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Blatter appears at CAS for appeal against ban

August 25, 2016 16:40 IST

IMAGE: Former FIFA President Sepp Blatter arrives at the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) to be heard in the arbitration procedure involving him and the FIFA in Lausanne on Thursday. Photograph: Pierre Albouy/Reuters

Disgraced former FIFA president Sepp Blatter has pledged to accept the verdict as he made his final appeal before the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) against his six-year ban from all football-related activities.

While insisting that ups and downs are part and parcel of life, the 80-year-old said he hopes to see the ruling in his favour, Sport24 reported.

Blatter appeared before sport's highest tribunal, the Court of Arbitration of Sport (CAS), on Thursday to appeal against his six-year ban from soccer.

The 80-year-old, who headed soccer's global governing body for 17 years until he resigned in June last year, was banned from all football-related activity last December along with the then European soccer boss, Michel Platini.

In May, the Lausanne-based court rejected the appeal filed by Platini to lift his six-year suspension, saying the payment was 'unfair' and a 'conflict of interests'.

The CAS, however, cut the suspension to four years and reduced Platini's fine from 80,000 Swiss francs to 60,000 Swiss francs.

"My name wouldn’t be Sepp Blatter if I didn’t have faith, if I wasn’t optimistic," he told reporters as he arrived for the hearing.

"I will accept the verdict because, in football, we learn to win, this is easy, but we also learn to lose, but this is not good, I wouldn’t want to lose."

The bans were imposed for ethics violations related to a payment of two million Swiss francs that FIFA made to Platini with Blatter's approval in 2011 for work done a decade earlier.

"I’m sure at the end.... that the (CAS) panel will understand that the payment made to Platini was really a debt that we (owed) him and this is a principle, if you have debts, you pay them," Blatter said.

Both men, who have denied wrongdoing, were initially banned for eight years, later reduced to six by FIFA's own appeals committee. Platini has already taken his case to CAS, who rejected his appeal but reduced his ban to four years.

CAS have not said when its final decision on Blatter's appeal will be announced.

Blatter resigned in the midst of a FIFA corruption crisis only four days into his fifth term.

Several dozen football officials, including former FIFA executive committee members, and entities were indicted in the United States on corruption-related charges last year.

Switzerland, for its part, opened a criminal investigation into the decision to award the 2018 and 2022 World Cups to Russia and Qatar respectively.

 

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