http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uTic6...eature=related
gökmen özdenak!
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uTic6...eature=related
gökmen özdenak!
Hay Allah'ım yaa, pornografik porno değil, en uç noktası :D
Serhat Ulueren de "Araştıralım bu kelimeyi" diyor :D
Yalnız öyle bir söylem cidden var. Blatter böyle bir demeç verdi. Ama Gökmen Özdenak olayı bir yerlerden duymuş olacak ki iç yüzünü bilmediğinden dediğini savunamadı.
Buyrun Blatter'in açıklamaları.
http://sport.scotsman.com/football/B...ums.2668939.jpQuote:
Blatter to tackle 'pornographic sums of money' in football
Published Date: 13 October 2005
By STEPHEN HALLIDAY
SEPP Blatter's announcement yesterday of a FIFA task force aimed at confronting the financial excesses he claims are a blight upon modern football was doubtless designed to provoke a sharp reaction from his unnamed but obvious targets.
In that regard, the FIFA president would not have been disappointed with the retorts which came his way, most predictably to his accusation that some of the game's most highly-paid players are of low intelligence and guilty of unacceptable profanity.
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Blatter's outspoken comments, which also included a thinly-veiled swipe at Chelsea oligarch Roman Abramovich and the current dominance being enjoyed by the Stamford Bridge club as a result of their owner's bottomless pockets, were made in a guest column in the pages of the Financial Times.
The veteran administrator was condemned as "rude and offensive" by Gordon Taylor, secretary of the English Professional Footballers' Association.
Fraser Wishart, Taylor's counterpart at the Scottish PFA, offered a more charitable assessment of Blatter's outburst, much of which he agrees with, but also found the reference to "semi-educated" and "foul-mouthed" players unacceptable.
"I found myself approving of a lot of what Mr Blatter says in his column," said Wishart, "but he let himself down with the insulting comments about players. As far as a task force into financial corruption in football goes, I'm all for it. It is up to FIFA to make sure there is a fairer distribution of wealth in the game, the kind that Mr Blatter seems to want."
While Blatter made no reference to any individuals, it appeared as if Rio Ferdinand's controversial contract negotiations with Manchester United earlier this year were the main source of his attack on player salaries.
"Equally unacceptable are the sort of wage negotiations that can produce the spectacle of semi-educated, sometimes foul-mouthed players on £100,000-a-week holding clubs to ransom until they get, say, £120,000-a-week" wrote Blatter.
"It is simply insane for any player to 'earn' £6million to £8million a year when the annual budget of even a club competing in the Champions League may be less than half that."
There was also little room for misinterpretation of Blatter's comments on wealthy club owners, with Abramovich and Chelsea apparently firmly fixed in his sights.
"A fortunate few clubs are richer than ever before," he said. "What makes this a matter of concern is that, all too often, the source of this wealth is individuals with little or no history of interest in the game. Having set foot in the sport seemingly out of nowhere, they proceed to throw pornographic amounts of money at it.
"The professional game is now shot through with practices that, at best, expose the ugly side of club football and, at worst, threaten its very existence.
A task force will deal with the excesses I have outlined and I am confident the initiative will bear fruit."