Quantos ingressos dos jogos da Seleção Brasileira e da final da Copa do Mundo foram efetivamente colocados à venda na roleta eletrônica que a Fifa criou? Por que já começam a aparecer ingressos no mercado negro se a entidade diz que todos são nominais? Algumas respostas poderão ser encontradas em Um jogo cada vez mais sujo. O jornalista escocês Andrew Jennings investiga os bastidores da Fifa há vinte anos, lançou Jogo sujo no Brasil em 2011 e foi um dos principais responsáveis pelas investigações que resultaram nas expulsões de João Havelange e Ricardo Teixeira da entidade. Por essas e outras, o jornalista foi banido de todos os eventos da Fifa e é considerado seu inimigo número 1. Um dos capítulos do livro denuncia o esquema fraudulento da venda ingressos na Copa. O negócio é administrado pelos irmãos mexicanos Enrique e Jaime Byrom, hoje radicados em Manchester. Eles têm como sócios a Match Serviços de Eventos, cujo acionista é Philippe Blatter, sobrinho do presidente da Fifa Joseph Blatter. Assim que tomou conhecimento das denúncias do novo volume de Jennings, o escritório de advocacia BM&A, que representa a Fifa no Brasil, enviou uma notificação para a editora Panda Books, ameaçando processá-la por “falsas acusações, conteúdo calunioso, conteúdo inverídico e danos à honra e à imagem” caso o livro seja publicado no país. O escritório BM&A tem como um dos sócios Francisco Müssnich, advogado e amigo de Ricardo Teixeira, ex-presidente da CBF, ex-membro do comitê executivo da Fifa e uma das figuras centrais do, como diz Jennings, “Padrão Fifa de fazer negócios e manter tudo em segredo”. Por meio dessa amizade, Müssnich ganhou de Teixeira um cargo no comitê organizador da Copa e também uma vaga no Superior Tribunal de Justiça Desportiva.
Andrew Jennings is an internationally respected journalist, writer and film-maker. His seminal book exposing Olympic corruption `The Lords of the Rings' was an international bestseller in 1992. He has written for The Times, Daily Mail, Sunday Times and New Statesman as well as for publications all over Europe. For many years he produced and reported for Granada TV's World in Action and also for BBC radio and television. ~ Amazon bio
A brilliantly researched and absolutely stomach-turning account of the insane level of corruption within FIFA. Just about poisoned every last wonderful football and world cup memory I hold dear. Havelange, Blatter, Warner, Blazer, Texeira and co. are a revolting mob who have robbed billions from the beautiful game. Good on Jennings for kicking the lid off a bunch of abominable crooks.
Andrew Jennings once wrote a very interesting book about FIFA called "Foul! The Secret World of Fifa: Bribes, Vote Rigging and Ticket Scandals" - That was around 2008. Since then, Jennings' journalism has deteriorated severely, from his Panorama TV shows where he ran around shouting across car parks like a crazyman, to this rather childishly written book. Jennings has become far too close and personal to the subject matter, meaning he is no longer able to cover it in an intelligent and measured manner.
He has effectively morphed into Carrie (Claire Danes) in the Homeland TV series. His heart might be in the right place, and more often than not he's probably on to something, but his now frantic, slightly crazy, and far too personal approach means that you can't take him seriously enough.
Moving away from the author, and to this book specifically, there are some very interesting parts, and he's dug up a lot of rather embarrassing and shocking details on the various men involved at the top of FIFA and the IOC, as he has done throughout his career. Unfortunately though, you have to wade through paragraphs of juvenile insults, nicknames and plain nonsense. Constantly referring to Chuck Blazer as "The Belly" for example. Far too much time is spent covering utterly irrelevant information and bits of gossip. I found myself actually getting irritated by some of what I had to read.
In many respects Jennings is a very good investigative journalist. He has a canny knack for getting his hands on secret documents, and most of his success has been on the basis of this. On the other hand, in this book there's too much weight given to the "this guy told me this once" kind of source. The occasional little anecdote is fine, but they're effectively irrelevant, and they come up rather too often, in particular in relation to already irrelevant bits of gossip.
On top of that the standard of writing is surprisingly low, which in addition to the above means that you would be forgiven for thinking that you were reading a print out from an amateur blogger. In fact it wouldn't surprise me if Jennings had lifted some of the chapters straight from his blog.
All in all, it's ok, but I would expect better from an experienced journalist.
A must-read for any football fan, but be prepared to find another sport to love after reading this. Read this and weep. Most fans are aware of corruption in the game, football, alas is not on its own. But I was amazed and dismayed just to see how deep and far reaching it is and has been for years and years. How Blatter and his cronies are not all locked up is incredulous.
This book seems has been superbly researched over a number of years by an English author who has spent many years trying to uncover the criminal behaviour of officials from FIFA and the IOC plus sponsors, large sports organisations and from out of several other cracks in the woodwork.
The title, Omertà, is just about right. Likening their behaviour with the Mafia is spot on and I suppose the only thing these crooked officials have not done is actually 'bump' somebody off. Be thankful for small mercys.
Although we seem to have got rid of Blatter, the corruption is so engrained in FIFA that the phrase 'the King is dead, long live the King' springs to mind.
It's a great read, but you will never regard football in the same optimistic light ever again.
La investigación de Andrew Jennings llevó a la debacle de la FIFA en 2015, cuando fueron arrestados varios miembros de su comité ejecutivo y llevó a la renuncia del presidente Joseph Blatter. El periodismo es un trabajo paciente (llevó más de 20 años), disciplinado e ingrato, pero tan necesario en un mundo donde las relaciones públicas logran magníficos publirreportajes (narrados por hinchas que ganaron un micrófono) sobre las bondades y el desinterés de una de las organizaciones deportivas más corruptas del mundo. Está íntimamente ligada a publicaciones como FIFA Mafia (Thomas Kirstner) y Cómo se robaron la copa (David Yallop), con tristes y necesarias coincidencias. Es el desencanto del fútbol, la apatía de ver cómo se amañan campeonatos para favorecer a gobiernos asesinos y corruptos, quienes saben que las multitudes que colman los estadios olvidan con facilidad la crueldad mientras la pelota está rodando.
A brief, well written and described story about the corruption inside FIFA. The book has the correct length between a detailed story but not getting into too much details that can make the story boring.
Impresionante investigación periodistica. Saca a la luz la real mafia que es la Fifa, sus integrantes y todos los sobornos que se mueven por el mundo del fútbol.
As predictably depressing as it is good. And it's very good, very detailed and I assume factually correct or the author would certainly have be sued half to death by now. Proof that football is dead, or sane FAs should walk out and form a new organisation. Nice mention of the Ipswich owner at the end as well, not in a good way though (sadly and predictably)
Absolutely amazing material, thoroughly researched but presented in such a confusing and poorly edited fashion that it was almost unreadable. It was only by sheer fascination with the evidence that I soldiered through.