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European clubs unsure over 2022 WC in winter

By Korea Herald

Published : Sept. 10, 2014 - 20:28

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GENEVA (AP) ― Europe’s top football clubs still need to be convinced the 2022 World Cup in Qatar should be moved from summer.

Although FIFA president Sepp Blatter has presented a switch to November-December as almost inevitable, the European Club Association wants to influence ongoing consultation talks.

“We need more information before accepting the fact that the calendar should be disrupted,” ECA vice chairman Umberto Gandini said Tuesday.

“We would not be part of something which is not credible.”

Gandini represents the 200-member ECA on a FIFA panel seeking ways to avoid playing in the desert heat of June-July.

The AC Milan director updated European club leaders about the first FIFA consultation held Monday, and said a decision on choosing dates was expected from “March to June 2015.”

FIFA on Monday offered two alternative options, including a November-December tournament, which would shut down top European leagues for two months.

The other was January-February, though Blatter previously assured IOC president Thomas Bach that the World Cup will not clash with the 2022 Winter Olympics, likely in February.
FIFA president Sepp Blatter (AP-Yonhap) FIFA president Sepp Blatter (AP-Yonhap)

“There’s obviously some resistance to move to break away from tradition ― that’s normal, that’s natural but a lot of people believe this is the World Cup and belongs to the world,” Qatar organizing committee communications director Nasser Al-Khater said at the SoccerEx conference in Manchester after attending the FIFA meeting.

“This could be the first time a World Cup is moved in terms of timings and maybe this becomes the norm for the future and becomes a template that we can move.”

Still, the June-July tournament promised by Qatar should be a starting point for talks, Gandini said in Geneva.

The ECA is supported by the English Premier League among 40 delegates from world football who attended Monday’s session at FIFA.

“We must get very strong and decisive reasons for moving the World Cup,” Gandini said, noting European clubs’ key role in employing 75 percent of all players selected to the World Cup in Brazil.