He also declared himself “quite happy and confident for the future” of the scandal-tainted world governing body of football. “Nobody is perfect, I am the last to be. But I don’t steal, I don’t profit, I don’t cheat and I don’t want to allow anyone in this organisation to do so,” he said.
Infantino, 46, succeeded the disgraced Sepp Blatter at the head of FIFA, and is determined to stamp his own authority on the job as president and on the sport’s future. He had already suggested that he would be in favour of a 40-team World Cup, up from the current 32. “We can consider a World Cup of 48 teams which would in fact be a 32-team format because we have seen that the ideal format is 32 teams,” explained Infantino. “The idea would be that the best 16 teams in qualifying would qualify directly for the group phase.” He confirmed that the 32 other teams would dispute a play-off round from which the winners would enter the next stage to join the other 16 countries. “This gives more chances for more teams. Furthermore, there would be no impact on the football calendar because these play-off matches would be played instead of friendlies before the World Cup. – ’16 finals’ – “From the point of view of the promotion of football, there would be ’16 finals’ before the real start of the group phase, real matches taking place to determine the 16 teams.” Swiss-Italian lawyer Infantino said that the projected increase to 48 teams “is certainly going to be discussed on October 13 and 14 when the next FIFA Council meets”. “It’s a project, it’s an idea just as the World Cup with 40 teams is already on the table with groups of four or five teams. “We will certainly make a decision next year. We need to see what the impact for football at international level is going to be.” The suggestion to widen the World Cup to 48 countries is bound to generate mixed emotions. The 2016 European Championship in France, organised by Infantino’s former employers at UEFA, featured 24 teams in a month-long tournament with just eight countries being eliminated at the end of the first stage. Many argued that the format caused quality to be watered down; others were buoyed by seeing the likes of Wales make the semi-finals while Iceland stunned England on their way to the quarter-finals. Infantino believes a 48-team World Cup would represent “a high sporting level because from each play-off the best teams would qualify. “People talk a lot about a decline in the standard but in my opinion the quality of the Euros was not less good, on the contrary. There were teams who you could not imagine could be so strong and the level was very high.” Away from a new-look World Cup, Infantino told AFP that he is also committed to forging a fresh and clean FIFA after a series of corruption scandals since May 2015. Infantino, who was the right-hand man of suspended Michel Platini in his UEFA career, believes he has the desire and the personnel to put FIFA’s dark days behind them. He underlined the importance of the work “of the new general secretary Fatma Samoura, the development of women’s football and the integration of former players like Zvonimir Boban, assistant secretary general, and Marco Van Basten in the area of technical development”. “I was elected on a programme of reforms, I have a lot of belief in these reforms and their implementation” he added, hailing the measures taken in the context of “good governance and transparency in financial movements”. “There is obviously still work to do but I am quite happy and confident about the future.”
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