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FIFA chief considers 2010 World Cup ban for Turkey !

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    FIFA chief considers 2010 World Cup ban for Turkey !

    ZURICH, Switzerland (AP) -- Turkey could be banned by FIFA from the 2010 World Cup for its part in a fight after a playoff match against Switzerland in Istanbul.
    "We will act tough," Sepp Blatter, president of world soccer's governing body, said Thursday. "The catalogue of sanctions extends from a simple warning to suspension of the federation, which could mean exclusion from the next international event." The teams tied 4-4 on aggregate Wednesday, but the Swiss advanced to next year's World Cup in Germany on away goals.
    After the final whistle, the teams raced from the field and there was scuffle between players in the tunnel on the way to the locker room.
    Blatter said FIFA's disciplinary committee will decide on sanctions by Dec. 9, the date of the draw for the 2006 World Cup in Germany.
    "In the truest sense of the word, fair play was trampled underfoot," Blatter said at a news conference. "This is unworthy of football. Football should promote understanding among peoples. This didn't happen here."
    Blatter, who is Swiss, later indicated that lesser sanctions might be possible against the Swiss if the committee finds there was misbehavior in an earlier match in Switzerland.
    "If we're going to be penalized, we'll work to be sure that Switzerland gets the same penalty," Turkish federation president Levent Bicakci said.
    Swiss defender Stephane Grichting was hurt in the brawl Wednesday and hospitalized with a groin injury, the Swiss Football Association said.
    Some of the violence was caught by television cameras.
    Swiss player Benjamin Huggel is seen kicking Turkish trainer Mehmet Ozdilek in the back of the legs. Turkey's Alpay Ozalan tried to kick Huggel in retaliation but made contact with another Swiss player. Huggel then grabbed Alpay around the neck and fell to the ground, with other players, coaches and security guards piling on.
    "It was unbelievable," Swiss midfielder Raphael Wicky said on the Web site of his German club, Hamburger SV. "Turkish players and security guards started hitting us. I was hit on the head and the back."
    But he said Hamit and Halil Altintop, Turkish brothers who also play in Germany, came to his rescue and protected him from their teammates until he got to the dressing room.
    Blatter said FIFA would consider a range of severe sanctions against Turkey.
    "Anything can happen -- from nothing at all to the suspension of the Turkish federation or even a ban on participation in the next World Cup," he told a Swiss radio interviewer earlier.
    Turkish soccer officials accused Blatter of being biased.
    "Blatter's comments were extremely unfortunate," federation vice president Sekip Mosturoglu said. "This was not a one-sided event."
    Blatter said FIFA would await the report from the match officials in Istanbul.
    "What disturbs me the most is the lack of respect shown the official Swiss delegation from their arrival until their departure," he said.
    The Swiss said they were subjected to hostile treatment, including being held up for several hours in passport control when they arrived in Istanbul on Monday. Fans taunted the players and reportedly threw eggs and rocks at the team bus as it left the airport.
    Blatter criticized FIFA representatives for not being at the airport for the Swiss team's arrival.
    "This is incomprehensible," he said. "At least they could have given psychological support."
    Tensions had been mounting since the first match on Saturday in Bern, which the Swiss won 2-0. The Turkish team complained of poor treatment. Turkey coach Fatih Terim said Swiss striker Alex Frei cursed at him and made an obscene hand gesture after the first match. Frei denied it. FIFA spokesman Andreas Herren noted that there had been previous problems with Turkish fans during the qualifying rounds. FIFA imposed a $7,500 fine on the Turks after a match against Ukraine, a $15,000 fine and a warning after the Greece match, and a warning following the Danish match.

    ستايشگر آموزگاری هستم که انديشيدن را
    به من بياموزد و نه انديشه ها را. زرتشت

    #2
    FIFA president Blatter lashes at Turkish Football Federation



    ZURICH, Switzerland (Ticker) - The Turkish Football Federation has expressed dismay at comments made by FIFA president Sepp Blatter regarding the violent scenes that marred Wednesday's World Cup playoff against Switzerland in Istanbul.
    Turkey posted a 4-2 win Wednesday but was eliminated from competing in next year's World Cup in Germany on the away goals rule after losing the first leg of the series 2-0. Following the second match, a fracas between players from both sides in the tunnel. At a press conference here on Thursday, the Swiss-born Blatter described the incidents as "trampling fair play underfoot" and announced world football's governing body would come down hard on the perpetrators.
    "If you ask me what the sanctions can be, they can go from a warning to the suspension of the federation," he said. I can tell you this, not as a Swiss but as the president of FIFA, that we will act here and we will act tough.


    Turkey's Emre Belezoglu(2nd-L) runs after the Swiss
    players as they go into the tunnel following their victory
    over Turkey in the their 2006 World Cup playoff clash.
    Turkey lashed out at FIFA president Sepp Blatter for
    blaming their national side for scuffles between players.
    (AFP/Ali Ozkuer)

    "The Turks had the chance after the (first-leg) defeat to act as a good host and show that revenge is not part of (soccer).
    The last part of the statement angered Turkish Football Federation and vice president Sekip Mosturoglu in particular.
    "It is an extremely unfortunate statement," Mosturoglu told CNN Turk. "This was not a one-sided event. It is very dangerous and wrong to talk about something without having the reports on the incident.
    "As FIFA president, he should have waited for the explanations of the other FIFA departments first, then make an announcement himself. When he makes such an announcement without waiting for the official reports he lost his objectivity and became the supporter of one side."
    With Blatter declaring that FIFA would be launching a full investigation into the incident, Mosturoglu revealed the TFF would do the same.
    "We will gather and do whatever is needed as well," Mosturoglu said. "We have one security guy in hospital as well. Do you think he was also beaten by the Turkish players?"
    With regards to possible punishment, Mosturoglu believes it is unlikely that Turkey will be excluded from any future tournaments.
    "I don't think they can penalize a nation by leaving them out of a competition for some disciplinary problem in a single game. The (guilty) players may also get a ban of four or five games."
    The unrest in Fenerbahce's Sukru Saracoglu stadium came just after the final whistle when Swiss midfielder Benjamin Huggel kicked a member of the Turkish coaching staff as he ran off. Turkey defender Alpay then aimed a kick at Marco Streller.
    TV footage then showed a melee breaking out in the tunnel involving several players. Swiss defender Stephane Grichting also was reportedly hospitalized after being kicked in the groin.
    "To say that I am a happy man today would not be true," Blatter told Sky Sports News. "I am disappointed about the incidents that have happened in Istanbul, especially the lack of respect shown by the Turkish Football Federation towards the visiting team since Monday when they arrived there and also what happened during the match, the hostility of the spectators and (incidents) at the end of the match."
    Mosturoglu insisted his nation should not have to shoulder all of the blame, however.
    "We were seated with all the regular fans," he said of the Saturday's first leg in Bern. "We were disturbed by them throughout the first half. We complained at halftime but were told that they couldn't do a thing. We were disturbed at the hotel, on the way to and from the stadium. All those things we lived through brought us tension. "We played so many national games and nobody whistled our national theme. They respected us even in Greece. But 32,000 people in Switzerland whistled our national anthem in a very well organized way."
    Last edited by Mr.Click; 11-17-2005, 02:52 PM.

    ستايشگر آموزگاری هستم که انديشيدن را
    به من بياموزد و نه انديشه ها را. زرتشت

    Comment


      #3
      Unacceptable behaviour by the Turks deserves this kind of punishment.

      Comment


        #4
        Turkish government and football officials lash out at Blatter


        ISTANBUL (AFP) - Turkey lashed out at FIFA president Sepp Blatter for blaming their national side for scuffles between players after a play-off match that saw Switzerland qualify for 2006 World Cup.
        UEFA's Turkish vice president Senes Erzik said he was "stunned" that Blatter put the blame on Turkey even before observers wrote their reports on the incidents after the match in Istanbul Wednesday. Turkey won 4-2, but failed to qualify on the away goals rule, having lost the first leg 2-0 in Bern on Saturday.
        "It is the first time in my 25-year career in FIFA and UEFA that I have seen the FIFA presidency make a statement like this, particularly on disciplinary issues," Erzik said. "I conveyed my amazement to Mr. Blatter earlier today."

        Blatter threatened to ban Turkey from the 2010 World Cup and ordered a probe into the incidents after the match.
        Deputy Prime Minister Mehmet Ali Sahin, who oversees sports, said Blatter, who is Swiss, acted "not as the president of FIFA, but as a Swiss fan."
        "I cannot accept that Turkey be singled out as the guilty party," Sahin said. "The incidents developed suddenly, independently of the security measures... This often happens at matches. If you exaggerate this, you mix politics and sports."
        Turkish footabll federation president Levent Bicakci stressed that the melee was between players and no spectators were involved.
        "We believe that if any sanction is to be imposed on us... the same sanction should be imposed on Switzerland," he said.
        Turkey striker Halil Altintop, with Germany's Kaiserslautern, played down the clashes.
        "A few of our players overreacted after the match but I am happy there were no serious incidents," he said. "I was in the Swiss locker room and talked to the players I knew from the Bundesliga. They said everything was fine."
        The Swiss had been met at their arrival in Istanbul by rowdy fans pelting their bus with eggs and displaying insulting slogans, which they said was in response to bad treatment by the Swiss during the first leg in Bern.
        Deputy Prime Minister Sahin conceded Turkey had failed to be a good host.
        "Being a good host is more important than the score on the pitch," he said. "We have to treat others the way we would like to be treated by them."
        He insisted, however, that both sides were responsible for "behaviour after the match that has nothing to do with professionalism."
        Stadium violence is not rare in football-mad Turkey, and at times bloody incidents between rival fans, notably during derby matches, are frequent.
        The 43,000 Turkish fans Wednesday at the Sukru Saracoglu stadium in Istanbul's Asian side were relatively well-behaved, however, save for the national anthem incident and occasional projectiles -- mostly plastic water bottles and coins -- hurled at the pitch. The worst case of spectator violence related to an international fixture in Turkey occurred during the night of April 4-5, 2000, when two English fans were stabbed to death by rival fans ahead of a UEFA Cup match between Galatasaray and Leeds United.

        ستايشگر آموزگاری هستم که انديشيدن را
        به من بياموزد و نه انديشه ها را. زرتشت

        Comment


          #5
          if anythign they should just ban the current players or teh ones invovled. Thats wrong

          Comment


            #6
            Ban them from FIFA, then UEFA and finally no entry to EU for the next 750,000 years

            Comment


              #7
              wow. what a hall giri

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by fsec
                Ban them from FIFA, then UEFA and finally no entry to EU for the next 750,000 years
                HAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHA
                nice one...



                This whole thing started by two swiss players talking in the lobby of thier hotel "donkeys are not good animals, cows are better" So a turkish guy overheard them and reported them to the TIA"turkish inteligence agency" and the TIA spread the word that swiss people dont like donkeys.....unfortunaltey its sad but true..ys thats how it all started



                HAHAHAHAHHAHAAHAH

                Comment


                  #9
                  Aboslute musics to my ears, I cant believe it, I love it!!!

                  Ohh I hope turkey cant participate in the WC 2010 Qualifiers

                  Go Cows!

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Good...

                    they deserve this punishment anyway

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Yay, ban them, although they play great football, there animals and they don't deserve to be in any international competitions, especially since FIFA supports fair play a huge bit....and yah ban them for 2010, or if they qualify make it behind closed doors. They need to be punished and maybe even made fun of.
                      STADIO OLIMPICO, 8 FEBRUARY 2004
                      A.S. ROMA 4-0 F.C. JUVENTUS



                      Comment


                        #12
                        Ban the barbarians !!
                        The REAL. The LEGEND. Since 2001.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Turkish football boss to meet Blatter



                          ISTANBUL (AFP) - The president of the Turkish football federation (TFF) Levent Bicakci said he would soon travel to Switzerland to meet FIFA boss Sepp Blatter and his Swiss opposite number Ralph Zloclower following the recent controversy.
                          Scuffles between players broke out after a play-off match that saw Switzerland qualify for the 2006 World Cup on Wednesday night. The television images of the incidents were compelling viewing. Bicakci, quoted by the Anatolia news agency, said he wrote a letter to Blatter to put across his federation's side of the story. Blatter had been reported as saying sanctions against Turkey could range from a warning to being banned from international competitions.
                          The Swiss Football Association's complaint to FIFA will be heard before the 2006 World Cup draw on December 9.

                          Switzerland, who won the first leg of the playoff 2-0, lost a dramatic second leg 4-2 in Istanbul but advanced to the 2006 finals thanks to the away goals rule.
                          Later on Friday, the TFF said FIFA had opened an inquiry into the incidents. Football's world ruling body has asked for detailed reports from the match referee, Belgian Belge Frank De Bleeckere, from FIFA's head of security Alan Hutchings and from several Swiss players and staff members.

                          ستايشگر آموزگاری هستم که انديشيدن را
                          به من بياموزد و نه انديشه ها را. زرتشت

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Originally posted by Rooz
                            if anythign they should just ban the current players or teh ones invovled. Thats wrong

                            its not only players. Turkey should have offered security to the guests, but even Turkish plice beat the guest players.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Originally posted by Iranyar Rezatank
                              its not only players. Turkey should have offered security to the guests, but even Turkish plice beat the guest players.
                              obviously there has been problems before, with the leeds galatasaray thing, but if EUFA didnt think it wud be safe the CL final wudnt have been there....what a final it was!!!

                              Comment

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