Sponsors worried about “distressing” FIFA allegations
Football’s biggest sponsors have warned that the sport’s governing body must take swift action to deal with the controversy over alleged corruption or risk damaging the reputation of the game.

Coca-Cola, Adidas, Visa and Emirates have all voiced concern over the crisis that has seen senior members of FIFA’s executive committee accused of bribery.
Allegations of corruption have beset FIFA since the vote to decide the hosts of the 2018 and 2022 World Cup’s took place last year. Executive committee members Mohamed Bin Hammam and Jack Warner have been provisionally suspended by FIFA’s ethics committee for allegedly offering financial incentives to secure votes.
A spokesman for Coca-Cola says: “The current allegations being raised are distressing and bad for the sport.”
Adidas says it remains committed to its sponsorship deal with FIFA but that the “negative tenor of the public debate around FIFA at the moment is neither good for football nor for Fifa and its partners.”
Visa and Emirates have called on FIFA to ensure that the matter is resolved quickly. Fellow sponsors Sony and Hyundai-Kia Motors declined to comment.
All four have invested millions in the sport as well as providing services during the four-yearly World Cup.
Karen Earl, chairman of the European Sponsorship Association, says that sponsors want to be associated with the sport they do not want to be linked to a body “that has not got its house in order”.
The controversy has already hit FIFA’s brand perception which according to YouGov has “suffered long-term damage and shows no signs of improving”. FIFA’s buzz fell sharply to -26 and reputation reached a new low of -7.
Despite the controversy, FIFA President Sepp Blatter denied that there was crisis in world soccer, “only difficulties”. As Marketing Week went to press, it was expected that Blatter would be re elected as president after his only rival Bin Hammam withdrew from the race.
YouGov Insight:
Sport
- 78% of UK sport followers say that they follow football on the television, while 1 in 4 say that they follow football ’live at the event’.
- 82% of men watch football on TV and a third go to live games. 72% of women watch football on TV but only 15% attend live.
- 35% of UK sport followers say that they watch rugby union on television, whereas only 20% say that they watch rugby league.
- Of those who watch live sport, 52% bought a snack the last time they were at an event while 43% said they bought an alcoholic drink.
- It’s a dead heat between those who prefer to watch sport from the comfort of their living room and those who like to be in the thick of the action at live events (24% each).
Click here to read the YouGov Leisure Time Report.








Readers' comments (1)
James Goddard | Tue, 31 May 2011 1:09 pm
For the sake of the beautiful game, the man must step down.
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