NATIONAL TEAM - SIERRA LEONE - COACH - SESAY REPLACES MENSAH AS COACH

It is the latest development in the row between the country's football association and sports ministry over who is qualified to be the coach.

12 Oct 2014
2015 AFRICA CUP QUALIFIERS - GROUP STAGE - 3RD MATCHES - all results

Algeria beat Malawi 2:0 in their 2015 Africa Cup of Nations qualifier on Saturday to be on the verge of booking their place at the final in Morocco.

11 Oct 2014
NATIONAL TEAM - GHANA - COACH - Patrick Kluivert on five-man shortlist for Ghana job

The other candidates are ex-Chelsea boss Avram Grant, former Italy midfielder Marco Tardelli, Swiss Michel Pont and Spaniard Juan Ignicio Jimenez.

9 Oct 2014
2015 AFRICA CUP QUALIFIERS - GROUP STAGE - 3RD MATCHES - EGYPT - Elmohamady pulls out of Egypt squad

The 27-year-old was injured during the English Premier League side's 2:0 win over Crystal Palace on Saturday. Hull said the right winger/full-back is suffering from "a back spasm". 

9 Oct 2014
NATIONAL TEAM - MAURITANIA - COACH - Corentin Martins appointed as new coach

The 45-year-old succeeds his compatriot Patrice Neveu, who was sacked in August after the team exited qualifying for the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations.

8 Oct 2014
STARS IN EUROPE - IVORY COAST - Manuel Pellegrini never doubted Man City midfielder YAYA TOURE

Match stats:
Yaya Toure has scored in his last three
Premier League games against Aston Villa.

7 Oct 2014
NATIONAL TEAM - CAMEROON - The next generation can shine after Eto'o era

Cameroon's next generation of forwards can shine in the absence of Samuel Eto'o, says ex-player Patrick Mboma.

6 Oct 2014
NATIONAL TEAM - NIGERIA - COACH - KESHI CONTINUES

The never-ending story - Talks between Keshi and the NFF over a new contract have been on and off since July.

4 Oct 2014
2015 AFRICA CUP QUALIFIERS - GROUP STAGE - 3RD MATCHES - GHANA - COACH KONADU NAMES SQUAD

Konadu will take charge of the team until a successor to Kwesi Appiah, who left in September, is appointed.

3 Oct 2014

FIFA - Bility calls for Fifa presidential elections to be postponed

Fifa presidential hopeful and Liberian FA president Musa Bility has called for February's elections to be postponed in light of the criminal proceedings against Sepp Blatter.

On Friday, the Swiss Attorney General said the Fifa president was suspected of criminal mismanagement or misappropriation and of a "disloyal payment" to Michel Platini.

"Those in charge of Fifa are no longer fit to be the ones to organise credible elections," the Liberian FA president told BBC Sport.

"To put Fifa through an election at this very point is to set a template for another disaster.

"I am calling on the current leadership of Fifa to immediately host an extraordinary congress where the mandate of reform will be given to a neutral body, a neutral set of people."

Blatter - who has previously denied any wrongdoing - has been accused of failing in his fiduciary duties when selling World Cup broadcasting rights for a fraction of their worth to discredited former Fifa official Jack Warner in 2005.

Swiss authorities also have questions about the disloyalty payment of two million Swiss francs ($2m) paid to Platini in 2011, for work allegedly carried out between 1999 and 2002.

"Concerning the payment that was effected in my favour, I want to clarify that this amount was paid for work that I carried out in a contractual manner for Fifa," Uefa president Platini said in a statement on Friday.

"I am pleased to have been able to clarify this point with the authorities."

With Blatter under investigation and European football chief Platini now facing questions as well, Bility believes Fifa can no longer hold its presidential elections on 26 February.

So far, Platini and Bility have been joined by Chung Mong-joon of South Korea and Prince Ali of Jordan - both of whom are former Fifa vice-presidents - in announcing intentions to be the next president.

Former players Zico (Brazil), David Nakhid (Trinidad and Tobago) and Segun Odegbami (Nigeria) have also expressed an interest in replacing Blatter.

Candidates must have the backing of five Fifa associations by 26 October to be able to stand, whereupon they will be subjected to a vetting procedure.

But Bility believes elections should not take place until separate investigations by the United States, into general Fifa corruption, and Switzerland, probing potential corruption surrounding the bidding process for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups, have revealed all the names of those under suspicion.

"Right now, it is about us knowing who is actually clean and who is not," said Bility, who has led his FA since 2010.

"The president and the secretary general are now under investigation and we don't know who else will follow.

"It cannot continue like this.

This is the crisis that must change football.

We must not now allow a good opportunity to go to waste."

The scandal surrounding Fifa exploded in May, when 14 football officials and sports marketing executives were indicted. 

Seven were arrested by Swiss police in a dawn raid on a Zurich hotel.

Should Blatter be suspended from his duties during the Swiss investigations, as happened to Fifa secretary general Jerome Valcke last week, Cameroon's Issa 

Hayatou would assume control of football's world governing body.

The Confederation of African Football is the most senior vice-president in Fifa.

"I expect that to happen immediately and for Hayatou to call for an extraordinary congress, where the reorganisation and reformation of the organisation can then take place," added Bility.

"At this time, Fifa has lost the moral authority to organise anything such as reformation or elections."

 

 

27 Sep 2015
(BBC Sport by Piers Edwards)

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