Soccer

Sepp Blatter reminded to step down; 'change vital': Scala

The official overseeing the next FIFA presidential election has reminded Sepp Blatter to stick with his plans to step down. The Sunday statement from Domenico Scala follows a report in Swiss newspaper Schweiz am Sonntag that Blatter is considering trying to stay on after receiving support from Africa and Asia.

Report has FIFA president considering trying to stay

FIFA president Sepp Blatter is being reminded that he has to vacate his post by the man in charge of a new election after a report that Blatter was considering trying to stay. (Valeriano Di Domenico/Getty Images)

Sepp Blatter was warned from within FIFA on Sunday not to attempt to backtrack on his pledge to quit as president.

Domenico Scala, who is overseeing the presidential election, said that a leadership change is an essential component of the far-reaching reforms required to overhaul FIFA amid deepening criminal investigations into soccer corruption.

Scala's blunt comments came after Swiss newspaper Schweiz am Sonntag, citing unnamed sources, reported that Blatter is considering trying to retain the presidency after receiving support from Africa and Asia.

FIFA did not comment on the report. Blatter announced on June 2 — only four days after being re-elected for a fifth term — that he would stand down from the post after a successor was chosen sometime between December and February.

Scala, head of FIFA's audit and compliance committee, is urging Blatter not to consider back-tracking on that pledge. The 79-year-old Blatter has already reneged on a 2011 promise to leave office in 2015.

Follow through on change

"For me, the reforms are the central topic," Scala said in a statement. "That is why I think it is clearly indispensable to follow through with the initiated process of leadership change as it has been announced."

The FIFA executive committee will meet in Zurich on July 20 to set the election date. Lawmakers from the 28-nation European Parliament last week voted on a resolution calling for Blatter to speed up his announced resignation and let FIFA appoint an interim leader.

Scala set out the election process at FIFA headquarters on June 2 directly after Blatter's sudden resignation statement and said that significant work was required to "regain the trust of the public," including imposing term limits for the president.

Blatter has been portraying himself as leading that reform process, via his Twitter account and in FIFA's internal media outlets.

And Blatter used his column in the in-house weekly magazine to praise FIFA's handling of the worst crisis in the organization's 111 years — despite his leading adviser, communications director Walter De Gregorio, abruptly leaving on Thursday.

"The fact that our organization continues to function smoothly and provides football with a firm foundation at this time of crisis makes me all the prouder," Blatter wrote on Friday.

Asked on Sunday if Blatter was categorically ruling out standing in the new election, FIFA said: "We refer you to the remarks from FIFA President Blatter from 2 June. FIFA has no further comment."