Foreign quotas vital for future: Blatter

08 May, 2008

FIFA president Sepp Blatter said on Wednesday he would propose stricter rules on the switching of nationalities and would press ahead with controversial plans for national quotas in club football. The head of world soccer's ruling body told Reuters the quota proposals being put before FIFA's Congress in Sydney from May 29-30 were decisive for the future of the sport.
"We are on the edge of where football is going, so the Sydney Congress is very important," Blatter said. "If the Congress says it does not want these measures then we would have to rewrite our statutes, because football would no longer be able to fulfil the aims of FIFA which include a role to develop the game everywhere."
FIFA wants to impose a "6+5" ruling on club teams allowing no more than five foreign players to start a match. The European Union has warned that the rule would conflict with its own laws on the free movement of workers, risking court action. "I am not convinced that the proposal is against EU law," Blatter insisted, "because we are not placing any restrictions on the number of foreign players who sign contracts with the clubs - just the number who start each game.
"Of course it will eventually lead to a reduction in the number of foreign players signed because of the need to always have six players (in the starting line-up) who are eligible for the national team in that country, but this will come in step-by-step.
"Congress will receive a concrete proposal to start (the quotas) from 2010 with at least four national players on the pitch, going up to five players in 2011 and the full six by 2012. "I will also ask the Congress for a mandate to take the issue up with the other main political and sporting authorities."
Blatter said there would be no restriction on the nationalities of the three substitutes used by teams, meaning that up to eight foreign players could end up on the pitch even if "6+5" was fully implemented. UEFA president Michel Platini has described Blatter's proposals as a "wonderful philosophy" but argued that they are unworkable under EU law. Blatter's plan is set to be dealt another blow on Thursday when the European Parliament is expected to vote against his proposal.
"Our view is that the FIFA rule is not workable and we favour UEFA's homegrown player rule," Greek MEP Manolis Mavromatis, who penned the text of Thursday's vote, told Reuters. "I just hope Sepp Blatter listens to us tomorrow."
UEFA wants a deal with Brussels on its home-grown player rule which sets a quota of locally-trained players at clubs, but without any discrimination on nationality. In a separate move also aimed at reducing the number of players plying their trade abroad, Blatter said FIFA wanted to make it harder for players to switch allegiances from one national team to another.
Blatter said many countries, notably in Africa and Europe, had abused the current rules whereby a player can play for a country other than the one of their birth if he has lived in a country for at least two years, or has a parent or grandparent who was born there.
"After we introduced the two-year rule we immediately saw three Brazilian players changing their nationality to play for Qatar so we have prepared an amendment that will extend the time period from two years to five. "When you look at Brazil there are about six million registered footballers there.

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