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Offline asylumseeker

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Re: CONCACAF News Thread
« Reply #92 on: March 13, 2016, 04:29:40 PM »
Randy Harris has retained the presidency of the Barbados FA by a vote of 87-46.

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Re: CONCACAF News Thread
« Reply #93 on: March 15, 2016, 09:33:58 AM »
CONCACAF hires firms in seeking general secretary, compliance officer
Sports Illustrated


CONCACAF, the regional soccer confederation that is trying to clean up its image in the wake of the FIFA scandal, has hired two executive search firms to select a new general secretary and chief legal/compliance officer, SI.com has learned.

The firm Korn Ferry is in charge of the search for a new general secretary, while Major, Lindsey & Africa will lead the search for a chief legal/compliance officer.

The general secretary is in charge of day-to-day operations for the confederation. The last (non-interim) CONCACAF general secretary was Enrique Sanz, who was fired after being named as an unindicted co-conspirator in the ongoing U.S. Department of Justice investigation. His predecessor, Chuck Blazer, pleaded guilty in the U.S. probe to 10 counts of racketeering, wire fraud, money laundering and tax evasion.

One candidate for CONCACAF general secretary is likely to be Jurgen Mainka, the current deputy general secretary, who recently emceed the Copa América Centenario draw. Mainka has worked in the past as the head communications officer for several MLS teams and the U.S.’s bid to host World Cup 2022. It’s possible, though, that the search committee will recommend someone from outside the CONCACAF organization.

CONCACAF will also elect a new president in May. The candidates are Victor Montagliani (Canada), Larry Mussenden (Bermuda), Mark Rodríguez (Guyana) and Gordon Derrick (Antigua and Barbuda).

Three recent CONCACAF presidents—Jack Warner, Jeffrey Webb and Alfredo Hawit—have been indicted in the U.S. investigation. Webb and Hawit have pleaded not guilty. Warner has denied wrongdoing and is fighting extradition from Trinidad and Tobago.

CONCACAF passed a significant reform package at its most recent meeting on February 25. The organization says it wants to hire chief officers with impeccable reputations for integrity and ethics.


CONCACAF begins search for key positions
Soccer America


Concacaf hired executive search firms Korn Ferry and Major, Lindsey & Africa to oversee its search for a general secretary and chief legal/compliance officer.

Candidates for general secretary must have a proven track record of running a successful business, managing profit and loss statements, overseeing a regional staff, organizing large-scale events and managing broadcast, commercial, and digital media rights, in addition to a passion for soccer.

The chief legal/compliance officer must have appropriate legal credentials, extensive experience working in legal or compliance positions within multi-national corporations, and strong management skills.

Additionally, candidates for both positions are required to have experience with and an understanding of cross-cultural work, and impeccable reputations on issues relating to integrity and ethics.

Governance and compliance are, of course, huge issues, given Concacaf's recent record. The last three presidents have been indicted or pleaded guilty on Federal corruption charges, while the last two secretaries general (Chuck Blazer and Enrique Sanz) were at the center of the conspiracies.

Sanz was hired from Traffic to replace Blazer but it turned out, according to the allegations in the Federal complaint, he had been in effect a plant to further Traffic's widespread scheme of kickbacks to buy up commercial soccer rights in the Americas. Blazer was the first person to plead guilty in the corruption case, while Sanz, who suffers from leukemia and left Concacaf last year, was named an unindicted co-conspirator.

Longtime soccer executive Ted Howard, who has worked for many years in the old NASL, NBC and at Concacaf, is serving as acting secretary general. Jurgen Mainke, Concacaf's director of marketing and communications since 2012, was promoted to deputy secretary general in December 2015.

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Re: CONCACAF News Thread
« Reply #95 on: March 29, 2016, 10:40:34 PM »
CONCACAF Announces Women’s Football Leadership Group
Boxscore News


Female experts will examine further opportunities to promote the sport and achieve growth

The Confederation of North, Central America and Caribbean Association Football (CONCACAF) announced today (March 24) the formation of the Women’s Football Leadership Group that will be composed by female leaders from within the region, with the aim of supporting the Confederation’s efforts to further develop the women’s game in addition to raising awareness about the opportunities that football offers women beyond the pitch.

“The growth potential within the CONCACAF region represents an extraordinary opportunity for the Women’s Football Leadership Group to exchange best practices and analyze strategic actions to help promote the sport’s development,” said CONCACAF Acting General Secretary Ted Howard. “We look forward to working closely with this task force, in order to create a strong foundation while increasing opportunities for women on and off the field.”
 
Ms. Sonia Bien-Aime will chair the group. Bien-Aime, who serves as President of the Turks & Caicos Islands Football Association (TCIFA) and a member of the CONCACAF Executive Committee, is one of three women on FIFA's Executive Committee.

“On the heels of the recent FIFA reforms to promote gender equality and empowerment of women worldwide, CONCACAF is already putting the wheels in motion by utilizing the knowledge, skills and expertise of this group of very talented women, all of whom are recent graduates of the FIFA Female Leadership Development Programme (FLDP), to assist the Confederation with growing the women's game in the region,” said Bien-Aime. “It's no doubt a much needed and long awaited step of which I am very honored and excited to be a part of.”

The Women’s Football Leadership Group is composed by graduates from FLDP. Members include the following individuals:

Ms. Monique André, Executive Committee Member and President of Women’s Commission, Fédération Haïtienne de Football (Haiti)
Ms. Elieth Artavia, Women’s Football Development Director, Federacion Costarricense de Fútbol (Costa Rica)
Ms. Chantel Bird, Women’s Committee Chairperson, U.S.V.I Soccer Federation (US Virgin Islands)
Ms. Lyndell Hoyte-Sanchez, National Women Teams Manager, Trinidad and Tobago Football Association (Trinidad and Tobago)
Ms. Ana Rabell, Executive Committee Member and President of Women’s Football Commission, Federación Puertorriqueña de Fútbol (Puerto Rico)
Ms. Shequita Parson, Chairperson for Security and Executive Committee Member, Bermuda Football Association (Bermuda)
Ms. Gwendolyn Salmon, Vice President, Antigua and Barbuda Football Association (Antigua and Barbuda)
Ms. Mildred Wever, Women’s Football Coordinator, Arubaanse Voetbal Bond (Aruba)
Ms. Malaika Church (Grenada)

The FLDP initiative is part of FIFA’s Women’s Football Development Programmes for 2015-2018 and is aimed at:

Identifying, supporting and developing strong female leaders in football

Providing opportunities for women to access senior decision-making levels in football

FIFA and CONCACAF are working together and enhancing their efforts towards women’s football development. The creation of this group is a key action to ensure the vision of both organizations.

Further initiatives to promote the women’s game include the launch of the campaign “It’s Our Time”, which is geared towards increasing awareness of women’s football and promoting its benefits, while encouraging the continued investment in the sport.

Additional information on the group’s meetings and the “It’s Our Time” campaign will be available in the coming weeks.
« Last Edit: March 29, 2016, 10:42:14 PM by asylumseeker »

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Re: CONCACAF News Thread
« Reply #96 on: March 30, 2016, 05:39:20 AM »
Malaika Church is as Trini as can be. She and her sister were raised in Trinidad. Went primary and secondary school here. (Providence).
« Last Edit: March 30, 2016, 05:41:13 AM by FF »
THE BEATINGS WILL CONTINUE UNTIL MORALE IMPROVES

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Re: CONCACAF News Thread
« Reply #97 on: April 05, 2016, 12:35:38 PM »
Who is considered the front runner for the CONCACAF presidency?

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Re: CONCACAF News Thread
« Reply #98 on: April 05, 2016, 12:58:42 PM »
Our vote for CONCACAF President is as precious as any other
By Wayne Ford, Kaiteur News.


The race to fill the vacant Presidency of the beleaguered CONCACAF seems to be a straight fight between three individuals, Canadian Victor Montagliani, Bermudan Larry Mussenden and Antiguan Gordon Derrick.

The three men, Montagliani, Mussenden and Derrick, are all current Presidents of the Canada Soccer Association (CSA), Bermuda Football Association (BFA) and Caribbean Football Union (CFU) respectively, with ambitions of returning CONCACAF on course after the corruption scandal that saw previous President Jeffrey Webb and his successor Honduran Alfredo Hawit, who has acted as CONCACAF Head following Webb’s sensational arrest in Zurich, Switzerland indicted by US Department of Justice in the ongoing probe.

Guyana as a member of the CFU and by extension CONCACAF, just like all of the other affiliates, will have the opportunity of determining who the next CONCACAF President becomes so therefore our vote could be seen as crucial in choosing the next Head of that Organisation.

Traditionally, a country’s vote is in large part premised on the level of support that is promised by the respective candidates vying for the top job, thereby rendering the vote a vital component for collective viability and future development.

It also means that those who lead their respective countries associations have a right to seek broad consensus among their General Council to arrive at the best suited candidate in exchange for the vote.

It must be noted that in-spite of getting the approval of their General Councils for the candidate of choice is no guarantee for support; a President could feel at ease that in the absence of promised assistance, the choice was not independent, but received broad endorsement.
In the past, the act of seeking agreement among affiliates (General Council) was clearly absent considering the overwhelming feedback accumulated.

There were examples of those with the responsibility of conveying our vote to Congresses overlooking the General Council and unilaterally declaring their choice of candidate.

This should not be since Guyana’s vote is as precious as any other nation and should be guided by the input of all the local stakeholders after meeting with them.

It was reported not so long ago in one of the dailies that sitting President of the Guyana Football Federation Wayne Forde was scheduled to meet Montagliani for discussions which is a very good step, but will he meet with the other candidates or is it an early endorsement.

Mussenden has already made it clear that he intends to lobby for the approximate US$190 million seized or confiscated by the US Department of Justice to be used for development programmes.

Our vote for CONCACAF President is as precious as any other.

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Re: CONCACAF News Thread
« Reply #99 on: April 10, 2016, 12:58:51 PM »
REVIEW The website of Víctor Montagliani, candidate for the CONCACAF presidency.

http://www.oneconcacaf.com/

EDIT: Cuba, Dominican Republic, Haiti and Puerto Rico have formally endorsed Mr. Montagliani.

No lack of northern exposure there. Northern Caribbean axis built. Gordon Derrick and Larry Mussenden will have to look south.
« Last Edit: April 10, 2016, 01:09:57 PM by asylumseeker »

Offline Deeks

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Re: CONCACAF News Thread
« Reply #100 on: April 10, 2016, 01:44:59 PM »
No one should be surprised of this coalition.

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Re: CONCACAF News Thread
« Reply #101 on: April 20, 2016, 01:40:01 AM »
FIFA Boots Derrick Out of CONCACAF Presidential Race
By Mark Bisson, World Football Insider.


The general secretary of the federation, who is also president of the Caribbean Football Union, is now banned from running for CONCACAF’s top job.

Canadian Soccer Association president Victor Montagliani and Bermuda Football Association president Larry Mussenden are the eligible candidates for the CONCACAF presidential election on May 13.

In a FIFA statement, Domenico Scala, chairman of FIFA's audit and compliance committee, said his panel had conducted eligibility checks for the candidates vying for the CONCACAF presidency and the FIFA vice-president slot. The new president will also be part of the FIFA Council, the new name for the federation’s ruling body which will take shape at the FIFA Congress in Mexico City in May.

"The Audit and Compliance Committee has concluded that one candidate, Mr Gordon Derrick from Antigua & Barbuda, could not be admitted as a candidate for the office of CONCACAF President nor FIFA vice-president nor the FIFA Council,” Scala said.

“For privacy reasons we are not in a position to go into further details with regard to this decision. The person concerned has been informed."

Derrick’s disqualification is likely related to a sanction handed out by FIFA’s ethics committee in November 2011.

He was reprimanded and fined him 300 Swiss francs for ''apparent violations'' of FIFA’s ethics code during the now infamous Caribbean Football Union meeting in May 2011 when football officials were offered or received $40,000 cash payments from FIFA presidential candidate Mohamed bin Hammam.

The Canadian federation chief Montagliani is considered the frontrunner to become the next president of CONCACAF.

Interim CONCACAF president Alfredo Hawit, who replaced disgraced Jeffrey Webb indicted on U.S. corruption charges last year, on Monday entered a guilty plea to four counts of corruption including racketeering, wire fraud and obstructing justice. He could face a maximum of 20 years in prison on each count of corruption.

NOTE: According to other reports, Luis Hernandez (Cuba) and John Krishnadath (Suriname) are running for FIFA council member from the Caribbean, and Pedro Chaluja (Panama) is unopposed for council member for the same dunction.

Also, Sonia Bien-Aime (Turks and Caicos) who was elected as the Caribbean’s member of the FIFA executive committee last July, is running for CONCACAF’s female member of the new council against Joanne Salazar of Trinidad and Tobago.
« Last Edit: April 20, 2016, 01:49:48 AM by asylumseeker »


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Re: CONCACAF News Thread
« Reply #103 on: April 21, 2016, 12:16:10 PM »
REVIEW The manifesto of Larry Mussenden (Bermuda), candidate for the CONCACAF presidency.


http://www.royalgazette.com/assets/pdf/RG350036418.PDF

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Re: CONCACAF News Thread
« Reply #104 on: April 22, 2016, 07:10:39 PM »
Barbados Pioneers CONCACAF C License
Barbados Advocate

 
After receiving their first CONCACAF D License Coaches course back in 2014, 30 local coaches have begun their journey to the next level as the first-ever CONCACAF C License course got off the ground yesterday.
 
Set to run for just over a week, Barbados has been selected for the pilot project for the programme as no other territory under the CONCACAF banner has had a C License course delivered.

With CONCACAF launching their coaching education programme in July of 2014, Barbados has since had three D License courses with the first being delivered in October of 2014. Now, the ‘Gem of the Caribbean’ is the envy of all CONCACAF territories as the Barbados Football Association plays host to the first C License course rolled out. Thirty-one participants, 30 males and one female, are set to go down in history as the first persons to take on the programme which is geared towards players aged 13-19.
 
Speaking during the opening ceremony held yesterday at the Usain Bolt Sports Complex, where the course is being run for the first few days, Coaches Instructor, Neal Ellis stated that it was a historic time for the participants and he hoped that they made the most of it.
 
“I think that when you guys look back 10 years from now, you’re going to have license number 01, 01, 03, 04 when we are in the 10 000s. You are going to look back and see that you were one of the first ones to take this course. And it’s exciting for us to be here because we can set the standard from this point forward for what the CONCACAF License programme means to each country. I think we need to find a way to separate ourselves to show that this is the standard,” he said.
 
Giving fair warning that the course was not going to be easy, Ellis added that he expected big things from the island as they were first out of the blocks.
 
“We are going to push you, we are going to challenge you throughout the nine days and I hope that you will do the same with us. It is not just listening and saying ‘yes’. It is challenging us with your ideas, with your methodology because you guys are going to be the ones to go back out there and make a difference. Those are the things that we are hoping to leave you with. To give you the power to go back and do what is right for these kids and hopefully we can get a World Cup team out of this small little island.” 
 
Lenny Lake, also a Coaches Instructor, has special relationship with the island and some of the candidates as he has delivered the D License in Barbados. Due to his familiarity, Lake said that he expected only the best from the crop.
 
“I know that, if not all of you, most of you will do well. I have seen it in the D License and what I have seen is not just your ability to come and sit, but your ability to transform yourself after you get the information to get better. Every group that I have worked with when I was here, they have showed that. They start out struggling and by the fourth day, there is a transformation,” he said, before adding that he expected the coaches to leave a legacy.
 
“My advice would be to think about what you did in the past and go back to it. Be confident about what you can do. We are here to help you. Don’t burden or pressure yourself. In closing, just set the standard. The Caribbean needs it. We need great coaches. Let it begin with you,” Lake said.
 
President of the BFA (ag) Captain Al Walcott was on-hand to officially open the course, and during his address he noted that he was sure that hard work was going to be put in and also reaped.
 
“I think the evidence of the hard work that these instructors and the hard work that CONCACAF has done in setting up these courses for the development of the football in the region, will be evidenced by your hard work when you go back to your different clubs. And not just going back to the clubs and doing any old thing, but trying to put together all the information that you have received from these instructors,” Walcott said. (MP)

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Re: CONCACAF News Thread
« Reply #106 on: April 22, 2016, 07:31:15 PM »
BFA to host End of Season football symposium
Bernews


On Saturday April 23th, the Bermuda Football Association [BFA] will host its 6th annual End of Season Football Symposium at the Bermuda College.

“Last year we had a panel discussion on the role of the coach,” said a BFA spokesperson. “This year the symposium will feature a breakout session to discuss and provide solutions to some of the challenges that face youth football.

“In addition those in attendance will review the 2015 -2016 Appleby Youth Leagues and hear presentations from Maurice Lowe, Technical Development Director; Scott Morton, President of the Bermuda Football Coaches Association [BFCA]; Anthony Francis will provide and update on all of the rules changes implemented by the International Football Association Board [IFAB]

“The day will start at 9.00am and will continue into the afternoon with a full lunch provided. The BFA symposium forms a vital part of coaching education as well as allows coaches to come together, discuss football and to play a role in shaping the new season that will start in September 2016.”
« Last Edit: April 22, 2016, 07:33:06 PM by asylumseeker »

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Re: CONCACAF News Thread
« Reply #107 on: April 28, 2016, 02:08:46 PM »
Draw Determines Groups for the SCCL Under-13 2016
CONCACAF


The Confederation of North, Central America and Caribbean Association Football (CONCACAF) and Scotiabank today (Wednesday, April 27) conducted the draw for the Scotiabank CONCACAF Under-13 Champions League 2016, at the World Trade Center in Mexico City.

The draw, which determined the groups for the tournament to be played from July 23-30 in Mexico City, was opened with a welcoming address from Jurgen Mainka, CONCACAF Deputy General Secretary. Also present in the conduction of the event were Scotiabank Vice President of Marketing and Public Relations Richard Mainella, and Adalberto Lopez, Director of Amateur Programs of the Mexican Football Federation.

The event sorted the twelve participating club teams, representing ten CONCACAF nations, into three groups of four, for round robin play starting in July.

Group A will consist of Mexican club Buhos de Hermosillo FC, as well as Real Esteli from Nicaragua, and two Caribbean teams: Harbour View FC (Jamaica) and San Juan Jabloteh (Trinidad and Tobago).

In Group B, Menor Tijuana (Mexico) is joined by Central America clubs Comunicaciones FC (Guatemala) and Liga Deportiva Alajuelense (Costa Rica). Vancouver Whitecaps FC (Canada) rounds out the group.

Pungarabato Guerrero, the final Mexican club in the competition, heads Group C, and will compete with Sporting KC (USA), Chorrillo FC (Panama) and CD Santa Ana (El Salvador).

The defending Champion of the Scotiabank CONCACAF Under-13 Champions League is CD Toluca, from Mexico. This year’s event will be played at sites to be determined in Mexico City.

The second leg of the Final of the Scotiabank CONCACAF Champions League 2015/16, the first team version of the region’s most important club tournament, will be played this evening at the Estadio Azteca in Mexico City. Defending champion Club America takes a 2-0 lead into the return match versus Liga MX rival Tigres UANL.

Scotiabank CONCACAF Under-13 Champions League 2016 Groups
(in order of group position)

Group A
Buhos de Hermosillo FC (MEX)
Real Esteli (NCA)
Harbour View FC (JAM)
San Juan Jabloteh (TRI)

Group B
Menor Tijuana (MEX)
Comunicaciones FC (GUA)
Liga Deportiva Alajuelense (CRC)
Vancouver Whitecaps (CAN)

Group C
Pungarabato Guerrero (MEX)
Sporting KC (USA)
Chorrillo FC (PAN)
CD Santa Ana (SLV)

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Re: CONCACAF News Thread
« Reply #108 on: April 28, 2016, 02:13:25 PM »
Question that will arise: why did both Caribbean teams have to be in the same group?

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Re: CONCACAF News Thread
« Reply #109 on: April 28, 2016, 02:27:10 PM »
Derrick may appeal Fifa ethics ruling
By Josh Ball, The Royal Gazzette.


Gordon Derrick is considering appealing Fifa’s decision not to allow him to run for the Concacaf presidency at the Court of Arbitration for Sports.

The Caribbean Football Union president was declared ineligible for next month’s election after failing an ethics test run by the Fifa audit and compliance committee.

According to the Antigua Observer, Derrick is preparing to appeal that ruling, and is hoping for a speedy resolution, one which would allow him to re-enter the fray.

However, given that there is little more than two weeks until the vote at the Concacaf Ordinary Congress, the chances that Derrick could be reinstated and campaign effectively seem slim.

At the moment the race for the region’s top job in football is between Larry Mussenden, the Bermuda Football Association president, and Victor Montagliani, his Canadian counterpart.

Derrick has served as CFU president for the last four years, after replacing Jack Warner in 2012, following the cash-for-votes scandal which rocked Caribbean football.

Warner has been charged as part of the sweeping United States Department of Justice investigation into corruption in football.

Part of the investigation centred on the $40,000 that some regional officials were accused of taking in return for voting for Mohamed bin Hammam in the Fifa presidential election.

Derrick, who is also the general secretary of the Antigua and Barbuda Football Association, was one of several officials reprimanded and fined over “apparent violations” of its ethics code.

Should Derrick be reinstated, then the path to the presidency would become a little more complicated.

With 31 of the 41 votes available held by Caribbean members, Mussenden is a firm favourite to defeat Montagliani at the election in Mexico City on May 12. A split in the Caribbean vote could change all that.

Not that Montagliani sees it that way.

The Canadian claims to have already secured the backing of regional powerhouses Mexico and the US, and says that he does not believe voting will split along traditional lines.

“The numbers dictate that you need to get a significant amount of the Caribbean votes,” Montagliani said.

“Yet, I think one of the things that I’ve found on a lot of my travels to our members is that this election is not being seen as a Caribbean versus Central American versus North American thing. A lot of those walls that were put up in the past are gone. Now, each member is looking for a leader.

“In fact, you saw two weeks ago, four Caribbean countries — Haiti, Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, and Cuba — announce their support of me, which is something you might not have seen in the past.

“I know I have support of others as well, and we’ll see what happens on May 12.”

Mussenden has been equally confident when discussing his chances, and has travelled to the West Indies several times over the past month to drum up support for his bid to become the next Concacaf president.

Any candidate may find their hopes rest on a meeting of the CFU, which is reportedly being planned for May 11 in Mexico, the day before the election.

As one Mussenden supporter noted: “This looks like going right down to the wire.”

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Re: CONCACAF News Thread
« Reply #110 on: April 28, 2016, 02:31:14 PM »
Mussenden Begins Director Of Prosecutions Job
Bernews


The Governor George Fergusson met with Larry Mussenden today (April 13) to welcome him on his first day in office as the Director of Public Prosecutions.

Mr Fergusson said, “It was good to see Mr Mussenden today as he begins his new and challenging job. I wish him very well and have every confidence that he will be excellent in the role.”

Mr Mussenden is returning to the Department of Public Prosecutions, where he worked earlier in his career. After being admitted as a barrister in England and Wales in 1995 and in Bermuda the following year, Mr. Mussenden served as a Crown Counsel in the Attorney-General’s Chambers in 1996 and then as a prosecutor in the Office of the Department of Public Prosecutions. He has also served as an Acting Magistrate in criminal matters.

More recently he has worked in private practice, specialising in criminal and civil litigation matters. He also served as Attorney General and Minister of Justice from January 2004 until October 2006.

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Re: CONCACAF News Thread
« Reply #111 on: April 28, 2016, 02:32:00 PM »
Compelling credentials to have in the aftermath of big tiefing.

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Re: CONCACAF News Thread
« Reply #112 on: April 28, 2016, 02:39:17 PM »
FIFA blasts the Caribbean Mockingbird with its heavy artillery
By James Dostoyevksy, InsideWorldFootball.


Double jeopardy, denial of the most basic due process and defamation of character seems to be the latest modus operandi of a FIFA compliance outfit that makes statements about the person’s life and livelihood with an acute and present danger of destroying not only his career in football but his ability to make a living.

On April 12, 2016, FIFA issued a statement that Caribbean Football Union (CFU) president Gordon Derrick, one of three remaining contestants for the CONCACAF presidency, had apparently failed an integrity check and was therefore banned by FIFA to run for office in an organisation that is properly upside down, fraught with corruption and not a FIFA member.

For two years the former FIFA leadership forcefully tried to make the point that what is called a FIFA scandal was actually a scandal of CONMEBOL and CONCACAF and had nothing to do with FIFA, “because FIFA had no influence over any of the six confederations” as they were not FIFA members.

This seems to have rapidly changed now that both CONCACAF and FIFA are seemingly run by US law firms, new FIFA president or not.

FIFA’s tired attempt at a hopeful declaration, which would underline that there could have been not any wrongdoing at the governing body itself, but that all the nefarious wrongdoing happened in faraway lands and by two regional competition organisers (Blatter’s mantra was always to underline that the confederations had no rights as governing bodies but only as competition organisers) has been kicked out of the window per April 12.

So, what happened? With respect to double jeopardy one needs to highlight that Derrick was banned from running for the confederation’s presidency because of the 2011 scandal in Trinidad, where Bin Hammam had allegedly provided funds to CFU members, funds that were apparently distributed by Jack Warner and his team in Port of Spain after a presentation (it needs to be pointed out that Bin Hammam won his appeal before CAS on this case).

A number of CFU members were sanctioned, suspended and banned from football for differing amounts of time. Quite a few of them also had to return the money ($40,000) to FIFA’s investigators (Freeh and company), and on top of it had to pay a fine.

Derrick was one of those, who got away with the simple reprimand and laughable CHF 300 fine, which was “too small of a punishment to appeal”, FIFA said at the time. So the man was neither suspended nor banned, but got a slap on the wrist for a lack of cooperation with Freeh and his people.

This was not the case for one of regional football’s big boys, Horace Burrell of Jamaica, who was suspended for all football activities for several months, fined, but miraculously returned to the FIFA Olympic Football Committee moments after his ban was over.

Derrick, never banned, had been prevented by FIFA to run for a non-FIFA office, while Burrell is a vice president of the same body – CONCACAF – and a member of the Executive Committee.

Odd, isn’t it?

Clearly, both FIFA and CONCACAF operate with two separate concepts of law: it doesn’t take long for the overriding feeling to grow that the little guy gets ‘shafted’, while the big boys with their network of relationships are quickly allowed back into the fold of the old boys network.

But it gets worse.

FIFA has banned the man for something that happened five years ago for an offense so minor – in FIFA’s own reasoning – that it did not allow for an appeal. Derrick gets punished twice. Once in 2011 and the second time in 2016 five years later, for the same wrongdoing. This smacks of double jeopardy.

But it gets worse still. Insideworldfootball has seen information written by CONCACAF’s external chief lawyer, sent to FIFA’s compliance tsar Domenico Scala (pictured), where the CONCACAF man says that after completion of the integrity check CONCACAF finds no fault with Gordon Derrick running for CONCACAF president.

Wait a minute!

So CONCACAF decides that the integrity check, which is predominantly based on newspaper articles, is not justification to ban Derrick from running for office, says so in writing in correspondence to FIFA on April 6, 2016, only for FIFA to turn the whole thing upside down and declare that Derrick is banned from running because he did not pass the integrity check.

But it gets better. To make a bad situation worse, Scala resorts to a further point and pompously proclaims that Derrick is also banned because of another matter, presently under investigation, by FIFA, and which allegedly involves financial mismanagement.

So in complete denial of any due process, a man is found guilty by a FIFA bureaucrat who acts as prosecutor, judge and jury, declares that there was financial mismanagement and rules that this is the second reason why Derrick can’t run.

All of this without having heard from Derrick himself, and after the man complied with all requests for information, and all of this without a verdict having been passed, nor a judgement by the adjudicatory chamber of FIFA, or Ethics being anywhere in sight.

The presumption of innocence, a fundamental concept even in US law, which seems to be governing world football, is clearly dead. A person who has not even been charged with wrongdoing is apparently guilty before anything and has to prove his innocence instead of the prosecution having to overcome the burden of proof.

There is a problem with this concept and the view is shared by several lawyers in Europe and the Caribbean, who have a substantial issue with this saga where a man has been convicted without trial.

But dig a little deeper and it becomes clearer what’s going on behind the scene. Derrick, at times an outspoken questioner of the present CONCACAF ‘leadership’ (and previously an even more outspoken critic of the Jeff Webb dictatorship), has become a convenient scapegoat, having been an inconvenient representative of the 31 Caribbean countries that form the 41- strong CONCACAF membership.

It seems increasingly that the US-led regional body demands a leadership that is convenient to US football. Whether there are undertones of racism involved is another matter that needs to be investigated.

With Derrick gone and Burrell (Jamaica), Luis Hernandez (Cuba) and some of the other heavy hitters of the CONCACAF ExCo vigorously promoting Canadian Victor Montagliani, Bermudan prosecutor and life long law enforcer, FIFA Appeals Committee member Larry Mussenden, originally a Caribbean man until Bermuda joined the North American sub-region, seems to have an increasingly difficult stand to preside over corruption shaken CONCACAF.

The following questions need to be asked:

Why is Derrick banned from standing when CONCACAF had no issue with his integrity?

Why do FIFA make a public statement about alleged guilt without any due process, and solely to cast a very bad light on a man whose integrity is put in to question without any ruling about alleged misconduct having been made?

How can FIFA resort to a ridiculously meek argument, namely a future hypothetical reality that would make the CONCACAF president automatically a FIFA vice president, at a time when a president is nowhere near to having been elected (surely, FIFA would have had ample time to refuse Derrick’s appointment to the FIFA Council if there was evidence at such time when he was nowhere near to have been elected to the CONCACAF presidency)

Why do FIFA resort to what can only be called global defamation of character by dragging a ridiculous reprimand to the foreground and alleging financial mismanagement, when such a mismanagement is nowhere near proven?

It will be interesting to see how Derrick reacts and how his own CFU deals with the situation that is clearly flawed, prima facie very problematic in law and in stark contradiction to CONCACAF’s own ethics findings.

It is not quite enough to publicly announce an increase of the financial assistance programme from $250,000 to $1.25 million (and to quickly forget that campaign promise), but allow this kind of interventionism by FIFA in an organisation that is not even a member and destroy a man’s life in the process without any factual proof given or available.

The new FIFA seems to be the old FIFA except that the network of those who call the shots has rapidly changed.
« Last Edit: April 28, 2016, 02:48:32 PM by asylumseeker »

Offline asylumseeker

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Re: CONCACAF News Thread
« Reply #113 on: April 28, 2016, 02:59:21 PM »
UNCAF elige su candidato para presidir la CONCACAF
La Prensa Grafica

 
La Unión Centroamericana de Fútbol (UNCAF), que reune a las siete federaciones del área, anunció esta tarde que dará su apoyo al canadiense Víctor Montagliani en la elección para elegir al nuevo presidente de CONCACAF.

El ente indicó, a través de una carta en la que pueden verse las firmas de los presidentes de las siete federaciones de Centroamérica (incluída la de Jorge Rajo, presidente de la Federación Salvadoreña de Fútbol) que decidieron endosar su apoyo a Montagliani en su ultima reunión celebrada el pasado 25 de enero en la Ciudad de Panamá.

"(UNCAF) otorga su apoyo y confianza al Señor Victor Montaglini, para presidir la Confederación y su objetivo de tener una sola CONCACAF", puede leerse en el comunicado emitido por UNCAF y en el que no se explican los motivos que llevaron al ente a inclinar su balanza a favor del norteamericano.

Montagliani preside la federación canadiense de fútbol (CSA, por sus siglas en inglés) desde 2012. Competirá en la elección por el trono de CONCACAF ante Mark Rodrígues, de Guyana; y Gordon Derrick, de Antigua y Barbuda. La elección se llevará a cabo el próximo 12 de mayo, en México, previo al congrego de FIFA para elegir al sucesor de Joseph Blatter, en la cual UNCAF ya comprometió su apoyo al italiano Gianni Infantino.

Luego, pese a obtener el apoyo de UNCAF, el reto de Montagliari será convencer al Caribe para su candidatura, ya que las islas poseen 31 de los 41 votos válidos de la elección.

http://www.laprensagrafica.com/2016/02/09/uncaf-elige-su-candidato-para-presidir-la-concacaf

« Last Edit: April 28, 2016, 03:13:51 PM by asylumseeker »

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Re: CONCACAF News Thread
« Reply #114 on: April 28, 2016, 03:08:05 PM »
 ... in other words, doh buy what Montagliani is selling about voting outside of traditional blocs. The UNCAF presidents signed a letter of collective support for Montagliani following meeting with him in January in Panama City. This is what he means by the "support of others".

The play: consolidate votes in North America and Central America ... then divide and conquer in the CFU bloc.

As this is largely our historical experience in the Caribbean since 1492 ... over to the man who will be casting T&T's vote.
« Last Edit: April 28, 2016, 03:12:30 PM by asylumseeker »

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Re: CONCACAF News Thread
« Reply #115 on: April 28, 2016, 07:55:33 PM »
WATCH Larry Mussenden, candidate for the CONCACAF presidency discuss his record.

<a href="https://www.youtube.com/v/NY9_gLl4t2U" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">https://www.youtube.com/v/NY9_gLl4t2U</a>

Offline Tobago28

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Re: CONCACAF News Thread
« Reply #116 on: April 29, 2016, 05:12:11 AM »
If the inappropriate ban of Derrick persists, the 31 Caribbean members have to support Mussenden. We having enough trouble with Canadians in gymnastics not to mention Calder Hart.

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Re: CONCACAF News Thread
« Reply #117 on: May 11, 2016, 07:12:23 PM »
CFU General Meeting sparks debate on CFU and CONCACAF Elections
Barbados Football Association


Wednesday, May 11, 2016 - Mexico City

The Caribbean Football Union (CFU) today held a general meeting hastly called among its members to discuss several issues before the election of the new CONCACAF President tomorrow in Mexico City.

President of the CFU Mr Gordon Derrick chaired the meeting here in Mexico, of which 28 of its 31 members were present. Mr Derrick indicated that the CFU Executive had endorsed and will support the candidature of Bermudian Larry Mussenden as the new President of CONCACAF and he urged the members to support one of their own citing Mr Mussenden as the right man and highly qualified for the job.

This call however didn’t go down so well with some of the members with one member of the CFU Executive Council openly declaring his support for Canadian Victor Montagliani.

Also on the agenda which attracted a lot of debate was the CFU Ordinary Congress. Mr Derrick informed the members that the Executive had set a date for October 2016, some five months after the four year period for the current Executive would have elapsed. He indicated that this was to allow for the completion of the financial statements and to coincide with a CFU event during that time. Some members saw this as unconstitutional and urged the Executive to come up with a date as soon as possible when the Congress would be held considering it was an election congress. After a motion tabled and passed, the Executive was asked by the General Body to hold the Congress by the end of July 2016.

The CFU President informed the meeting that the long awaited TV Rights payments would be paid by August 10, 2016 and that all the members should be paid in full. This was welcoming news for the members.

An update of the operations of the Secretariat was given and special praise was given to the current General Secretary Neil Cochrane by the President of the St. Vincent and the Grenadines Football Association for the work he has been doing. President Derrick also updated the meeting on the U17 and senior men and women’s CFU Caribbean Cup comeptitions happening this year.

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Re: CONCACAF News Thread
« Reply #118 on: May 12, 2016, 11:06:21 AM »
Montagliani wins the CONCACAF presidency.

Offline Tobago28

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Re: CONCACAF News Thread
« Reply #119 on: May 12, 2016, 11:46:15 AM »
With 31 of the 41 votes, that's 76% of the votes. How can the Canadian candidate win with 61% of the voters 25-16. Wi real backwards as a people.

 

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