Alexia Putellas Gianni Infantino Jermaine Jenas Qatar Paris Football FIFA Sporting Alexia Putellas Gianni Infantino Jermaine Jenas Qatar Paris

The Best Fifa Awards: a pantomime in Paris staged by the Imperial star fleet

theguardian.com

A n hour or so – or it may have been two hours or 12 hours or seven minutes – into the brain-clogging fug of sound and light and sullen football legend applause (a thing about football legends: they don’t really like clapping other people) that was the The Best Fifa Awards 2022, Jermaine Jenas made a mistake.

You had to watch carefully to catch it. And it should be said Jenas did pretty well overall in his role as co-host, alongside the agreeably brusque Samantha Johnson.

True, Jenas did insist on calling Gianni Infantino “Mr President” and “President Infantino”, coming on like a lovelorn Marilyn Monroe in a chiffon gown under aggressively paranoid surveillance by the CIA.

But he was genial and slick and essentially always the same substance, an unwavering stream of homogenised Jenas, the TV presenting equivalent of supermarket brioche.

Related News
The 52-year-old Swiss lawyer, who succeeded the disgraced Sepp Blatter in 2016, was waved in for a third term by acclamation, just as he was four years ago, by delegates from the 211 member federations.
The federal sports minister, Anika Wells, has backed Fifa’s decision not to make Saudi Arabia’s tourism board a major sponsor of the women’s World Cup in Australia, saying she was “thrilled” that focus wouldn’t be detracted from the event itself.
FIFA aims to match the prize money for the 2027 women’s World Cup with the men’s tournament in 2026. The prize money up for grabs at Qatar 2022 totalled $440 million, while the women’s teams will receive $110m at this summer’s tournament, a rise of $80m from the $30m awarded in 2019.

Latest News

Change privacy settings
This page might use cookies if your analytics vendor requires them.