Name: Gianni Infantino
Age: 45
Nationality: Swiss-Italian
Background: A lawyer by training, later an administrator in a university department and then a UEFA suit since 2000.
Key manifesto pledge: Increase the World Cup to 40 teams.
PROFILE
Gianni
Infantino will wake up on Saturday morning to begin his first day's
work as the most important man in world football and could be forgiven
for thinking he's the luckiest bloke on the planet.
Six
months ago he had no intention whatsoever of running to replace Sepp
Blatter, and was contentedly pottering along as general secretary of
UEFA. He only entered the race to keep the seat warm for his continent
in case Michel Platini had to withdraw for any reason. Of course Platini
wasn't just forced to withdraw, he was booted out of football for six
years for accepting a £1.3m disloyal payment from Blatter.
That
left Infantino, a multi-lingual family man with a wife from Lebanon and
kids, as UEFA's horse in the race, but still an outsider behind odds-on
favourite Sheik Salman. But in the face of those odds he spent the last
two months jetting around the world on €500,000 (£394,000) of UEFA
funding, drumming up support.
One
key promise to the world's 209 FAs has been straight from the Blatter
playbook: promising them money, or £5m each every four years, a huge
increase on the sums they get now. And how it worked. He will not be
short of a few pounds himself now, either. Blatter's salary, never yet
disclosed, is understood to have been around £5m a year, plus lavish
expenses, and even in a new era, Infantino can expect a huge pay packet
to reflect his new status. A fan of Inter Milan, he will certainly be
able to travel in greater style to the San Siro if he chooses.
A
Swiss-Italian, Infantino's home village is Brig in the Swiss canton of
Valais. Blatter lives in the next village, Visp, a short drive away.
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