Michel Platini was suspended from football for 90 days by FIFA’s Ethics Committee last week . (AFP)

Reuters/Zurich

European football chiefs will have to decide tomorrow whether to continue backing Michel Platini as the FIFA presidential hopeful battles an ethics probe or whether to quietly drop the man who has been their unquestioned leader for eight years.
They could try to push for postponement of the Feb. 26 FIFA presidential election, a move which could conceivably give Platini time to prove his innocence but which could also be interpreted as an attempt to move the goalposts.
Otherwise, they will be left with less than two weeks to find an alternative before the Oct. 26 deadline when candidates have to register officially.
For the last year, European football’s governing body UEFA has played the role of a disapproving onlooker as FIFA, the sport’s global body, has been engulfed by the worst crisis in its 111-year history.
Platini, who was first elected as UEFA president in 2007 and has twice been re-elected unopposed, has himself said that repeated reports of corruption involving FIFA made his stomach turn.
But the situation changed dramatically when FIFA president Sepp Blatter and Platini were given a 90-ban by FIFA’s ethics committee last Thursday, pending a full investigation into both men’s activities.
Two weeks earlier, Switzerland’s attorney general’s office had initiated criminal proceedings against Blatter over a two million Swiss francs ($2.1 million) payment from FIFA to Platini in 2011. The payment was made nine years after the Frenchman, described by prosecutors as “between a witness and an accused persons”, completed a spell working for Blatter as an adviser. Platini, who handed in his nomination papers hours before his ban, himself described events as “farcical”, the accusations against him as “astonishingly vague” and said numerous associations had stood behind him. Platini has appealed but, unless he were to be given a swift appeal victory, he would still be suspended on Oct 26 and would find himself in the very tricky position of trying to pass that test while banned from the game.
Tomorrow, UEFA’s 54 member associations will meet at its lakeside headquarters near Geneva to discuss their response.
Initially, UEFA had said that its executive committee had “full confidence” in Platini and “stands fully behind him”.
It was the sort of loyalty which Platini would have expected. In eight years at the helm, the former French international has managed to appease both the powerful European clubs, who reap the benefits of a financially successful Champions League competition, and the smaller national associations. By an ironic twist, the last week has seen Albania and Wales both qualify for Euro 2016 amid wild celebrations, both benefitting from his administration’s decision to increase the number of teams at the Euro finals from 16 to twenty-four.
But there have been signs that support has begun to wither. “I was deeply disappointed when the story of the two million francs appeared. It raises many questions to which we have still not received a reply. I hope we will have one on Thursday,” UEFA executive committee member Allan Hansen told the Danish newspaper Ekstra Bladet on Wednesday.
Jesper Moller, current head of the Danish FA, added: “It is also self-evident that we cannot vote for a man who has been suspended.”
Italy was one of the first federations to back Platini’s candidate yet its president Carlo Tavecchio declined to give unconditional support for Platini.
Leo Windtner, head of the Austrian federation, said UEFA’s crisis management had to react quickly and make sure “that Europe accomplishes something with Oct. 26 in mind.”
On Tuesday, former FIFA secretary-general Michel Zen Ruffinen said he had received requests to stand and was studying the situation while sources close to FIFA said that Dutch FA president Michael van Praag might also launch a bid.
The alternative would be to press the FIFA executive committee, which will meet on Oct. 20, to postpone the FIFA election. Two sources with knowledge of the discussions told Reuters on Friday that a such a scenario was being discussed within FIFA and its member organizations, such as UEFA, which would give Platini more time. However, that could risk damaging UEFA’s credibility.
“All football leaders must realise that the next president of FIFA must be beyond any suspicion, it is not a legal question, it is not even a truly political question, it is question of reputation,” said Jens Sejer Andersen, head of the Danish-based Play the Game foundation.
“There must be other European candidates that would have less trouble passing integrity checks,” said Deborah Unger, a manager at anti-corruption watchdog Transparency International.
“Stalling the elections at this point is not a good idea. FIFA has a vacuum at the top. It needs to be filled and as we have said in the past, this should be by a truly independent reform commission and they should start their work sooner rather than later.”

FIFA, UEFA were kept in dark about Platini’s Blatter deal: Johansson
Zurich: Former UEFA president Lennart Johansson says that the European football body was never told about the payment of 2 million Swiss francs ($2.1 million) from Sepp Blatter to current UEFA boss Michel Platini.
Both Platini and Blatter were suspended from football for 90 days by FIFA’s Ethics Committee last week with a 2011 payment from FIFA to Blatter under scrutiny. Both men deny any wrongdoing. Platini has said the payment was for work he carried out under a contract for FIFA as an advisor to Blatter between 1999 and 2002. He said the nine year delay in payment was due to FIFA’s financial situation.
The Frenchman’s bid to replace Blatter at the helm of FIFA in February’s election has been thrown into serious doubt by the affair and UEFA members gather in Nyon tomorrow to discuss the crisis. Swede Johansson, who was UEFA president from 1990 to 2007 says that the FIFA executive committee, which he served on, was not told about Platini’s hiring by Blatter.
“I was a member of the FIFA executive then and Blatter should have reported it to the executive but he never did. I never heard about this arrangement in FIFA. This is quite a lot of money, not a small amount. I have only learnt through the media that Platini claims that he has a contract with FIFA,” the 85-year-old said. By the time Platini received the payment in 2011 he had replaced Johansson as UEFA president but the Swede continued to attend UEFA executive meetings as honorary president, and he says the payment was never disclosed.
“I would have expected this payment to be reported to UEFA. Platini should have mentioned it to the executive. I would have done so. I would have said to the executive, ‘I have a contract with Blatter which you may criticise. But this is the truth, this is the money I received and you should know about it.’”
A spokesman for Platini said: “The president is cooperating fully with the ongoing investigations and feels there is nothing more he wants to say publicly for the moment.”
The payments will be on the agenda at UEFA’s crisis meeting which Platini will unable to attend due to his suspension.