“Fifa has gone through sad times, times of crisis. Those times are over. We will restore the image of Fifa.” Those were the words of the newly elected Fifa president Gianni Infantino yesterday, after two rounds of voting were needed to find a successor to Sepp Blatter.
The favourite heading into yesterday’s vote, Sheik Salman bin Ibrahim al-Khalifa of Bahrain, who was protested against after allegedly dobbing in athletes who took part in the demonstrations and were later tortured, finished second.
Infantino, who grew up six miles away from his predecessor, is the first new president since 1998, when Blatter was first appointed the head of Fifa.
JAMES NALTON discusses how Fifa claims to be apolitical, but as Infantino and Juventus players stood behind Trump discussing war, gender, and global politics, the line between sport and statecraft vanished
The PFA is urging Fifa action against illegal Israeli settlement clubs and incitement to genocide, writes JAMES NALTON



