Fifa started out as a tiny voluntary organisation,
and grew and grew into a global behemoth with more member nations than the UN.
Here are six unusual facts about the secretive organisation that governs world
football.
1. It is a registered charity. Fifa pays
little tax in its home country of Switzerland. It also requires tax exemption
in countries wishing to host a World Cup competition. "Any host country
requires a comprehensive tax exemption to be given to Fifa and further parties
involved in the hosting and staging of an event," a Fifa spokesman told the BBC last year.
The 2010 tournament - the most expensive yet - cost South Africa 33bn rand
(£3bn; $4.86bn). But a "tax-free bubble" was established around the
event at Fifa's request, relieving Fifa, its subsidiaries, and foreign football
associations of any obligation to pay income tax, customs duties or VAT.
2. This charitable status dates from its
early days as a tiny voluntary organisation run on goodwill from a suburban
villa in Zurich, says David Goldblatt, author of The Ball is Round: A Global
History of Football.
3. Broadcast rights to the first
televised World Cup - the 1954 tournament hosted by Switzerland and won by West
Germany - were given away for nothing. With a global TV audience numbering many
millions, Fifa realised this was a goldmine. By 1986, TV rights sold for 49m
Swiss francs (£35m) - a fraction of the $2.4bn in broadcast earnings for the
period of the last World Cup (see graphic below).
4. Fifa set the template for modern
sports sponsorship after an awkward scramble to secure advertising rights for
its new partner, Coca-Cola, at the 1978 World Cup in Argentina. A military coup
two years earlier threw up a dilemma for the organisers, says sports marketing
expert Patrick Nally. With no control over the stadia, and no advertising
agreements in place, how could Fifa ensure the soft drinks giant had a presence
in such a strictly controlled country? It came down to money. Fifa asked
Coca-Cola to advance it an extra 12m to 15m Swiss francs to buy these rights
from Argentina, so it could then offer the company an exclusive relationship at
its own event.
5. Globalisation of the game came
under Joao Havelange, Fifa's seventh president and Sepp Blatter's predecessor.
Spain expected to host 16 nations when it bid for the 1982 tournament; Fifa
later told it this would be rounded up to 24, as Mr Havelange made good on his
election promises to bolster training and opportunities for teams from Asia and
Africa. To subsidise this, Fifa again went cap-in-hand to Coca-Cola for an
extra $40m in sponsorship. The only way to make this worthwhile was to
guarantee its sponsors wide-ranging benefits from exclusive signage, licensing
and merchandising. "And with that, the package of exclusivity and global
coverage that defines modern sports sponsorship was born," says Goldblatt,
presenter of the BBC Radio 4 documentary Fifa:
Football, Power and Politics.
6. Today Fifa has more member
countries than the United Nations - 208 to the UN's 192. Only eight
internationally recognised countries are not Fifa affiliates, including Vatican
City, Kiribati and Monaco. It is a far cry from its beginnings in 1904, when
the representatives of seven European football associations banded together
with the aim of improving football's global reach.
The first World Cup was held in Uruguay in 1930.
Many believed American Bart McGee scored the first goal in the World Cup, against
Belgium in the 40th minute. But a dispute erupted and FIFA, soccer's governing
body, determined the first goal was scored by Frenchman Lucien Laurent in the 19th minute
against Mexico on July 13, 1930.
First Red Card
The red and yellow card system was not introduced until the 1970 World Cup. The first player to receive a red card was Chile's Carlos Caszely in 1974 in a match against West Germany in the 67th minute.
World Cup Oldest and Youngest Players:
First Red Card
The red and yellow card system was not introduced until the 1970 World Cup. The first player to receive a red card was Chile's Carlos Caszely in 1974 in a match against West Germany in the 67th minute.
World Cup Oldest and Youngest Players:
The oldest player in
a world cup game was Rojer Milla of Cameroon, who played in the 1994 tournament
at the age of 42 years, 1 month and 8 days.
The youngest
player in a world cup game was Mario Mendez of Uruguay, who
played at the 1954 tournament at the age of 16 years, 1 month and 5 days.
World Cup
Shortest and Tallest Players:
The tallest ever
world cup footballer to date is Nikola Zigic who played for Serbia, at 6ft
81/2 ins.
The shortest ever
world cup footballer to date is Diego Maradonna, who played for Argentina,
at 5ft 5ins.
First Fifa World Cup Trophy |
The highest attendance for one match was in the 1950 final. The official attendance was 199,854 for the match between Brazil and Uruguay in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Top Scoring Team
Hungary scored 27 goals in the 1954 World Cup. Hungary made the finals that year but lost to West Germany 3-2.
Most Consecutive First-Round Eliminations
Scotland holds the record with eight: 1954, 1958, 1974, 1978, 1982, 1986, 1990 and 1998.
Top Scoring Team
Hungary scored 27 goals in the 1954 World Cup. Hungary made the finals that year but lost to West Germany 3-2.
Most Consecutive First-Round Eliminations
Scotland holds the record with eight: 1954, 1958, 1974, 1978, 1982, 1986, 1990 and 1998.
Current Fifa World Cup Trophy |
1) Diego Maradonna (Argentina)
2) Pele (Brazil)
3) Zinedine Zidane
(France)
All Time Top Player - Diego Maradonna |
All Time Top Player - Pele |
All Time Top Player - Zinedine Zidane |
- Mexico’s Antonio Carbajal and Germany’s Lother Matthaus have both played in a record five World Cup tournaments.
- Brazil and Germany have both played 92 matches each in World Cup tournaments, but have only played each other the once, in 2002.
- Brazil is the only nation to have played in every World Cup tournament.
- Brazil has scored the most goals of any country, with an amazing 201 goals.
- Brazil has been in the most World Cup finals with a total of 7 finals to their credit.
- Brazil has won the tournament the most times, with an astounding five wins.
- France’s Just Fontaine has scored the most goals in any single World Cup, when he scored 13 in the 1958 tournament.
- Brazil’s Ronaldo has scored the most goals in more than one tournament with 15 goals, with Germany’s Gerd Muller having scored 14 goals in more than one tournament.
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