Ricardo Teixeira, the controversial soccer boss who has headed the Brazilian Football Confederation for 22 years, quit on Monday following a string of corruption scandals. Teixeira also resigned his role as the head of the local organising committee for the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.
He tendered his resignation in a letter that was read out to reporters at the headquarters of the Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF). "I leave the presidency of the CBF definitively with the feeling of having done my duty," Teixeira said in the letter. Teixeira, 64, said he was standing down for health reasons, just days after he requested a temporary medical leave of absence to treat diverticulitis, a painful bowel condition.
He is succeeded by Jose Maria Marin, 79, a former politician who is little known outside the closed world of the CBF. Teixeira has run the CBF since 1989 and turned it into a vastly profitable commercial enterprise. Brazil had not won the World Cup for 19 years when he took over but have since lifted it twice, in 1994 and 2002. However, despite the successes on and off the field, Teixeira's tenure has frequently been overshadowed by allegations of corruption and shady business dealings.
In 2001, a Congressional investigation accused him of 13 crimes ranging from tax evasion to money laundering to misleading lawmakers, although no charges were ever brought. Last year, the former head of the English Football Association David Triesman said Teixeira offered to back England's bid to host the 2018 World Cup in return for favours.
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