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The fall of the house of Fifa

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When Sepp Blatter joined Fifa in 1975 it had just twelve employees.

Forty years later, the FBI have accused 14 executives of 47 counts of money laundering, racketeering and tax evasion linked to alleged kickbacks totalling more than $150m.

Football has become the premier global sport, a television and commercial powerhouse, while Fifa, the organisation which runs it, turned bad.

The crumbling of Fifa and the shock resignation of Blatter days after his re-election in June 2015 is the most spectacular story of corruption sport has ever seen.

This is a story of globalisation, of the changing geography of wealth and power, of how a most beloved of sports could be so rotten at the top.

David Conn writes the definitive account of Fifa's rise and fall, the key, larger-than-life personalities and power-brokers responsible for it, told with a love of the game.

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Product Details
Vintage Digital
1473524709 / 9781473524705
eBook (EPUB)
796.334
08/06/2017
England
English
336 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
Description based on CIP data; item not viewed.