Fraud case designed to wreck Platini’s chance of FIFA top job, lawyer says

Michel Platini, former UEFA president and FIFA vice president, and his Lawyer Dominic Nellen arrive in the special appeals court in Muttenz, Switzerland, Mar. 5, 2025. (AP)
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Updated 05 March 2025
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Fraud case designed to wreck Platini’s chance of FIFA top job, lawyer says

  • “These criminal proceedings never had the goal of punishing an alleged crime. Rather, it was a means of getting Michel Platini out of the way,” his lawyer Dominic Nellen said
  • “The public criminal proceedings against Michel Platini was thus opened, with the effect that Michel Platini could not become president of FIFA”

ZURICH: French footballing great Michel Platini was accused of fraud to torpedo his chances of becoming the head of world soccer’s governing body FIFA, his lawyer told a Swiss court on Wednesday.
Platini, a former captain and manager of the French national team who also used to run Europe’s football authority UEFA, is facing corruption charges in an appeal against his acquittal two-and-a-half years ago.
The Swiss federal prosecutor says the 69-year-old illegally took payment of 2 million Swiss francs ($2.25 million) from FIFA in 2011, after it was approved by the organization’s former President Sepp Blatter.
Blatter is also accused of fraud in the hearing at the Extraordinary Appeals Chamber of the Swiss Criminal Court in the municipality of Muttenz near the city of Basel.
Blatter and Platini, once among the most powerful men in global football, both deny the charges and were acquitted by a lower court in July 2022, which prosecutors are contesting.
“These criminal proceedings never had the goal of punishing an alleged crime. Rather, it was a means of getting Michel Platini out of the way,” his lawyer Dominic Nellen said.
The investigation into the payments wrecked Platini’s hopes of succeeding Blatter.
Blatter and Platini were suspended from football in 2015 by FIFA for ethics breaches, originally for eight years, although their exclusions were later reduced.
Nellen said the prosecutors had allowed themselves to be used by FIFA to prevent Platini, a three-time European footballer of the year, from taking the reins.
When he was questioned by prosecutors in September 2015 about the payment, details were announced to media even though no charges were made, Nellen said.

DENIED FIFA PRESIDENCY
“The public criminal proceedings against Michel Platini was thus opened, with the effect that Michel Platini could not become president of FIFA,” Nellen said.
The investigation had to move quickly because in late 2015 the post of FIFA president was vacant after Blatter left following a separate corruption scandal.
Blatter was eventually replaced by Gianni Infantino, who had worked for Platini at UEFA. Infantino owed his candidacy to the fact that Europe’s preferred candidate, Platini, was banned.
“FIFA and its boss Gianni Infantino did everything to ensure that the federal prosecutors’ office get Michel Platini out of the way once and for all,” Nellen told the court.
FIFA did not respond to a request for comment.
Infantino has denied helping to bring about Platini’s downfall and said he only stepped up when UEFA asked him to after allegations against Platini emerged. “Up until then, the idea of being a candidate for the FIFA president had not entered my head,” he told French newspaper L’Equipe in 2018,
Nellen said the 2 million francs was the back payment for consultancy work that Platini had done for Blatter from 1998 to 2002, and was to cover the difference between what he received and what had been agreed earlier between the two.
“These proceedings have cost Michel Platini his career. It is time to finally put an end to this unworthy chapter,” the lawyer said.
The Swiss prosecutor is seeking a sentence of 20 months, suspended for two years, for Blatter and Platini.
A verdict is expected on March 25.


Rybakina has little hope of change to tennis schedule

Updated 09 January 2026
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Rybakina has little hope of change to tennis schedule

  • Former Wimbledon champion Elena Rybakina said Friday she agreed with Aryna Sabalenka’s description of the tennis schedule as “insane” — but does not see it changing

BRISBANE: Former Wimbledon champion Elena Rybakina said Friday she agreed with Aryna Sabalenka’s description of the tennis schedule as “insane” — but does not see it changing.
Speaking after her surprise loss to Karolina Muchova in the Brisbane International, world number five Rybakina said Sabalenka’s criticism of the packed WTA Tour calendar was correct.
WTA rules stipulate that top players must play all four Grand Slams, 10 WTA 1000 events and six WTA 500 tournaments, unless they have a valid reason such as injury.
Players who don’t meet these requirements risk being fined.
Sabalenka said Thursday that she was prepared to be punished by the WTA in order to rest her body and not risk injury.
“The season is definitely insane,” four-time Grand Slam champion Sabalenka said.
Rybakina, who beat Sabalenka to win last year’s season-ending WTA Finals, said players should be able to choose their schedules more freely.
“We all want to have more freedom of choosing what to play, what not to play,” said the Moscow-born Kazakh, the 2022 Wimbledon winner.
“You’re kind of forced to play most of the tournaments, so it is not ideal.
“You don’t need to force anyone to play so many tournaments since it’s so tough on the body.
“It’s not easy to show the same good results, be healthy all the time.
“But it’s a topic which we have had for a long time, and I don’t see much changing.”
The WTA told AFP in October that “athlete welfare is always a top priority.”