Michel Platini

"Platini" redirects here. For the Brazilian footballer, see Michel Platini Mesquita. For the Cape Verde footballer, see Luís Carlos Almada Soares.
Michel Platini

Platini in Poland in September 2010
6th President of UEFA
In office
26 January 2007  21 December 2015
(Banned for 6 years)[1][2][3]
Preceded by Lennart Johansson
Succeeded by Ángel María Villar
Personal details
Born Michel François Platini
(1955-06-21) 21 June 1955
Jœuf, France
Nationality French
Height 1.77 m (5 ft 10 in)
Occupation Footballer
Manager
Football administrator (banned)

Association football career
Playing position Attacking midfielder
Youth career
1966–1972 AS Jœuf
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1972–1979 Nancy 181 (98)
1979–1982 Saint-Étienne 104 (58)
1982–1987 Juventus 147 (68)
Total 432 (224)
National team
1975–1976 France Olympic 7 (4)
1976–1987 France[4] 72 (41)
1988 Kuwait[5] 1 (0)
Teams managed
1988–1992 France

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.

† Appearances (goals)

Michel François Platini (born 21 June 1955) is a football administrator, who served as the president of the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) from 2007 until 2015, after which he was banned for 8 years following an ethics investigation by the FIFA Ethics Committee on 21 December 2015,[2] and formerly a French football player and manager. However, his continuing status as president of UEFA is in doubt, following an eight-years ban imposed by FIFA in December 2015 for conflict of interest.[3] Later on, his ban was reduced to six years by FIFA on 24 February 2016.[1]

Regarded as one of the greatest footballers of all time, he came sixth in the FIFA Player of the Century vote, and was chosen on the FIFA World Cup Dream Team.[6] He won the Ballon d'Or three times, in 1983, 1984 and 1985, a record jointly held with Dutch internationals Johan Cruyff and Marco van Basten.[7] In 2004, Platini was named by Pelé in the FIFA 100 list of the world's greatest living players.[8] Nicknamed "Le Roi" (The King), due to his ability and leadership, despite primarily serving as an advanced midfield playmaker, Platini was also a prolific goalscorer, winning the Serie A capocannoniere award three consecutive times between 1983 and 1985; he was also the top scorer of Juventus's victorious 1984–85 European Cup campaign.[9] Platini was the record goalscorer of the France national team until striker Thierry Henry surpassed the 41 goals mark in 2007; Platini holds the record for most goals (9) scored in European Championship final tournaments despite only appearing in the victorious 1984 edition.[9]

During his professional football career, Platini played for the clubs Nancy, Saint-Étienne, and Juventus, and was a member of the French national team that won the 1984 European Championship, a tournament in which he was the top goalscorer and voted the best player. He also participated in the 1978, 1982 and 1986 World Cups, reaching the semi-finals in the latter two. Platini, Alain Giresse, Luis Fernández and Jean Tigana together made up the "carré magique" (French for "magic square"), the group of midfield players that formed the heart of the French team in the 1980s.

Platini was named Chevalier of the Legion of Honour on 29 April 1985 and became Officier in 1988. He was the French national team coach for four years, and was the co-organizer of the 1998 World Cup in France. He has also been the chairman of the FIFA Technical and Development Committee, and vice-president of the French Football Federation. On 29 July 2015, Platini announced his candidacy in the FIFA presidential election following Sepp Blatter's resignation,[10] but on 7 January 2016, Platini declared that he would not be standing in the 2016 FIFA presidential election after all.[11]

Early career

Born in Jœuf, in the Lorraine region, Platini is the son of Aldo and Anna (née Piccinelli), both of Italian ancestry. Anna's family has its roots in the province of Belluno, while Aldo's father, Francesco Platini, was an immigrant from Agrate Conturbia, in the province of Novara, and settled in France shortly after the end of the First World War.[12] Aldo was a professional footballer and a long-time director for AS Nancy, the club where Michel started his professional career.

After performing poorly in the final of a 1969 young footballers' competition, Michel Platini attracted attention at 16 years of age in a Coupe Gambardella tournament match with an impressive display for Jœuf juniors against a Metz junior side. Platini was called up for a trial with Metz, but missed out on the opportunity due to injury, and was not immediately invited back after the Metz coach moved to another club. He returned to regional league football with Jœuf. Another trial at Metz went horribly wrong when a breathing test on a spirometer caused Platini to faint. The doctor's verdict on Platini's breathing difficulties and weak heart ended any hopes Platini had of playing for his boyhood favorites. He then joined the reserve side of his father's club Nancy in September 1972, and became friends with team goalkeeper Jean-Michel Moutier.

Club career

Nancy (1972–1979)

Platini was quick to make a big impression at his new club, scoring a hat-trick in a reserve team match against Wittelsheim. Further outstanding displays put him in contention for a place in the Nancy first team. His introduction to the first-team squad was inauspicious. On the substitutes' bench for a match against Valenciennes, Platini was spat on and hit by various objects thrown from the crowd when a fight broke out in the stands. Playing for the reserves a few days later, a hefty challenge from an opponent left Platini with a bad ankle injury. His season would finish on a more positive note, and he would go on to make his league debut against Nîmes on 3 May 1973.

In March 1974, he suffered a setback when he sustained a double fracture of his left arm in a match at OGC Nice. Platini missed the remainder of the season as a result, unable to assist Nancy in an unsuccessful bid to avoid relegation from Ligue 1. The following season saw Nancy win promotion back to the French first division with ease. Platini became the team's most important player, scoring 17 goals, a number of which were scored from free-kicks, as was becoming Platini's specialty. Saint-Étienne, the then reigning French league champions, were knocked out of the French Cup with two goals from Platini free-kicks. Platini practised his free-kicks with the help of his friend, goalkeeper Moutier, and using a row of dummies to form a defensive wall of sorts.

With Nancy back in Ligue 1, Platini's military service reduced his availability for matches, but he continued to make himself available to play when possible. In a match away to Laval, Platini, angered by the taunts of the home supporters, scored a hat-trick, but unluckily sustained another injury. Press reports claimed that Platini's season was over and that he would require a knee operation, but neither claim proved to be correct. Instead, Platini returned to first-team football two weeks later for Nancy's French Cup semi-final against Marseille at the Parc des Princes. Platini headed the only Nancy goal in their 4–1 loss and was forced to leave the field injured. Following his participation in the 1976 Montreal Olympics, Platini signed a two-year contract with Nancy, his first professional contract.

Before travelling to Argentina for the World Cup, Platini won the first major trophy of his playing career, captaining Nancy to victory in the 1978 French Cup final against Nice and scoring the only goal of the game. President Valéry Giscard d'Estaing presented him with the trophy. However, with the World Cup scheduled to start two weeks after the cup final, there was little time left for preparation.

Although Platini was not disgraced by his performances at his first World Cup, fans held him responsible for the French team's failure to progress in the tournament, and in the season that followed he was a target of jeering crowds. The situation came to a head in a match away to Saint-Étienne. Spurred on by booing fans, Platini competed for every ball, and he picked up a bad ankle injury in a tackle. As a result, he was ruled out of Nancy's Cup Winners' Cup campaign. His contract with the club expired in June 1979, and Internazionale, Paris Saint-Germain, and Saint-Étienne emerged as the clubs most likely to sign him, although the Nancy club president had been unwilling to let Platini leave the club. Having set his mind on a transfer to Saint-Étienne, he signed a three-year contract with les Verts.

In spite of his injuries and the boos that would greet him, Platini maintained his pranksterish sense of humour. On away trips, he would set off firecrackers in public places and then pretend to be dead, inevitably drawing a crowd. While in Argentina for the World Cup, he would squeeze tubes of toothpaste into his team-mates' beds.

Saint-Étienne (1979–1982)

Platini's three years at Saint-Étienne were a mixed success. The club had signed him with a view to success in the European Cup, but despite some excellent results (including a 6–0 win over PSV in the 1979–80 UEFA Cup and a 5–0 win at Hamburger SV in the UEFA Cup the following season), the club were unable to surpass the feats of the Saint-Étienne side that had reached the final of the 1976 European Cup.

Platini won the French league title in 1981 with Les Verts, but was on a losing Saint-Étienne side in two French Cup finals, against Bastia in 1981 and against Paris Saint-Germain in 1982, in what was his last match for the club before joining Juventus. He left for a nominal transfer fee (under UEFA regulations) despite being out of contract and no fee being necessary under French regulations at the time.[13]

Juventus (1982–1987)

Platini holding aloft the Ballon d'Or in Juventus colours.

At Juventus, in a team featuring numerous members of Italy's victorious World Cup squad, Platini had a difficult introduction to Italian football. He was a target in the demanding Italian sports media, and even came close to leaving Italy in the winter of his first season. Platini and teammate Zbigniew Boniek successfully called for a change in tactics, and in the second half of the season Juventus saw an upturn in their fortunes. They reached the European Cup final, losing to Hamburger SV, but won the Italian Cup, the first of many club honours to follow for Platini in the coming seasons.

"Michel was one of those great players who saw fitness work as being a bit superficial. He used to say, 'We're not going to compete in the 5,000 metres at the Olympics, we have to play with our feet."

Giovanni Trapattoni, Juventus coach.[14]

He won the Serie A title with Juventus in 1984 and 1986, the European Cup Winners' Cup in 1984, the 1984 European Super Cup, the European Cup in 1985 and the 1985 Intercontinental Cup. He finished top scorer in Serie A for three consecutive seasons (1982–83, 1983–84, and 1984–85), and won a hat-trick of European Footballer of the Year awards (1983 through 1985). He was also voted Player of the Year by World Soccer magazine in 1984 and 1985.

"I played for Nancy because it was my hometown club and the best in Lorraine, for Saint-Étienne because it was the best team in France, and for Juventus because it is the best team in the world!"[15]

—Platini after his final match in Serie A against Brescia, in 1987.

The 1985 European Cup final against Liverpool at the Heysel Stadium in Brussels should have been the crowning moment of Platini's Juventus career, but was instead overshadowed by the Heysel Stadium disaster in which 39 people died, and 600 more were injured. It was decided to proceed with the match in order to avoid inciting any further trouble, and after both captains had appealed for calm, the match began just under an hour and a half beyond schedule, with riot police still engaged in a pitched battle with Juventus fans. Platini scored the only goal of the match from a penalty kick awarded for a foul on Zbigniew Boniek. In the days following the final, Platini was criticised in some quarters for his lack of restraint in celebrating Juventus' win. In his own defence, Platini maintained that he had not been made fully aware of the scale of the disaster. Following the 1986 World Cup in Mexico, Platini spent another season at Juventus before retiring from football in June 1987.

International career

Having first attracted the attention of national team selectors in the Coupe Gambardella tournament, Platini was selected for the French junior team, but injuries prevented him from playing. He made his first appearance for a French national selection playing for the French amateur side on 26 September 1973.

Platini began his military service in summer 1975. He was assigned to the Joinville battalion, as were all talented French sportspeople fulfilling their military obligations. His colleagues in the battalion included his Nancy team-mates Olivier Rouyer and Jean-Michel Moutier, as well as Maxime Bossis, soon to become a regular in the French national team along with Platini. Platini would turn out for the French military team, in addition to representing the French under-23s and the French Olympic team. He impressed in the Olympic team's 4–0 win over Romania in Brest, a result made even more impressive by the fact that Romania had fielded a full international side for the Olympic qualifier. Platini's performance made him a star in France. The away leg of the qualifying tie was a mere formality, France coming away with a 1–1 draw. Three days after the draw in Bucharest, Platini received his first call-up to the a national team for what was coach Michel Hidalgo's first game in charge, a friendly against Czechoslovakia in Paris (27 March 1976, 2–2), and scored his first goal with a trademark free kick.

1976 Olympics

Platini was a member of the French football team at the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal. Their tournament began on 19 July with an 4–0 win over Mexico. They registered another 4–0 win in their next match against Guatemala, with two goals from Platini. The French team completed the group stage with a draw against Israel, Platini scoring from a penalty. France progressed to the quarter-final stage, where they would face a full-strength East German team. France lost 4–0 and finished the match with nine men.

Prior to 1978 World Cup

With a 3–1 win over Bulgaria at the Parc des Princes on 16 November 1977, a match in which Platini excelled in the role of playmaker and scored with a strike from 30 yards, France secured qualification for the 1978 World Cup in Argentina for their first appearance in the World Cup finals since 1966. In the month following the decisive qualifying match, Platini finished third in the voting for the 1977 European Footballer of the Year.

Among the international friendlies France played in preparation for the World Cup, their match against Italy in Naples on 8 February 1978 (2–2) was particularly significant for Platini. With a number of scouts from Italian clubs in attendance, he was in excellent form. He beat Italian goalkeeper Dino Zoff from two direct free-kicks, the first being ruled out because the referee had not blown his whistle. The re-taken free-kick was blocked by the defensive wall, but minutes later Platini had the ball in the Italian net from another free-kick. Zoff attempted to anticipate the flight of the ball by positioning himself on the left side of the goal, only for Platini to find the unguarded area of the net with his free-kick, leaving Zoff rooted to the spot. Platini's duels with Zoff and his performance in a match that was broadcast on Italian television made him a name in Italy. A number of clubs both in France (Paris Saint-Germain and Saint-Étienne) and across Europe (Juventus, Internazionale, Napoli, Barcelona, Valencia, and Arsenal, to name a few) began the clamour for his services.

1978 World Cup

In retrospect, this match may have been a Pyrrhic victory because Platini's brilliance drew the attention of Italy coach Enzo Bearzot, who devised a successful plan to contain him in a match-up that really mattered—the first round of the 1978 World Cup four months later. Platini was kept in check by Marco Tardelli's implacable marking and Italy won 2–1. Drawn in a difficult group with Italy as well as hosts (and eventual winners) Argentina, France's loss to the hosts in Buenos Aires effectively ensured their elimination; France did not survive the first round.

Road to Spain '82 and the World Cup

Platini was nonetheless made captain of the French national side after the World Cup and made the number 10 jersey his own. One of his trademark free-kicks helped France defeat the Netherlands 2–0 in Paris (18 November 1981) in a crucial qualifying match for the 1982 World Cup in Spain.

France unexpectedly reached the semifinals of the 1982 World Cup where they met West Germany in Seville for what proved to be one of the great matches of World Cup history. German goalkeeper Harald Schumacher had collided with Patrick Battiston, leaving the Frenchman knocked-out cold, and the referee did not call a penalty, much to the anger of the French. With both sides level at 3–3 after extra time had been played (Platini having scored France's first goal of the game from a penalty) the match went to a penalty shoot-out which West Germany won 5–4. Interestingly, Platini would consider this match the greatest memory of his career.

Euro '84

"He didn't run a lot like Cruyff and didn't depend on his physique, but I liked how he was the brain organising things on the pitch. He was a player who used his head in the broader sense. The way he shone with France and Juventus, and his capacity for taking free-kicks, made him the European footballer of the 1980s."

Pelé.[14]

In 1984, Platini captained France to success in the European Championship on home soil. His individual impact on the tournament was huge with nine of France's 14 goals in just five games (the top goal scorer in Euro '84).

He scored the winner in France's opening match against Denmark, and scored one "perfect" hat-trick against Belgium as France topped their first-round group with three wins out of three. In the dramatic semi-final in Marseille against Portugal, Platini scored the final goal of the match for a memorable 3–2 win in the last minute of extra time.

In the final against Spain at the Princes Stadium in Paris, he opened the scoring with a free kick-goal, helped by a monumental blunder from Spain goalkeeper Luis Arconada. A second goal from Bruno Bellone in injury time at the end of the match secured France's first major title in international football.

Mexico '86

Suffering from groin pain and playing under injection, Platini was not in peak physical condition for the 1986 World Cup in Mexico. Nonetheless he contributed two important goals. The first contributed to their 2–0 defeat of defending champions Italy at the Olimpico Stadium in Mexico City. The second came during the quarter-final match against Brazil in Guadalajara. After Careca scored for Brazil, Platini scored the equalizer, his 41st on his 31st birthday, which sent the game into a penalty shoot-out. France won 4–3, with Platini infamously sending his over the bar. This goal was to be the last of his international career. After losing a second World Cup semi-final in a row to West Germany in Guadalajara, France had to settle for third place. Platini did not take part in the 1982 or 1986 World Cup third-place matches.

Retirement

"When I was a kid and played with my friends, I always chose to be Platini. I let my friends share the names of my other idols between themselves."

Zinedine Zidane[14]

Platini made his last appearance for France on 29 April 1987, in a European Championship qualifier at home to Iceland, a few weeks before announcing his retirement from all football. In 72 appearances for France from 1976 to 1987, including 49 appearances as captain, Platini scored 41 times, a record for the French national team, which has since only been surpassed by Thierry Henry after scoring his 42nd and 43rd national team goals against Lithuania in a Euro 2008 qualifying match on 17 October 2007.

Kuwait

Platini's last match came on 27 November 1988, when he came out of retirement for one day to play in an international friendly match representing Kuwait against the Soviet Union, at the request of the Kuwaiti Emir. Platini played a total of 21 minutes in the 2-0 loss to the Soviets. In doing so, Platini completed the rare feat of appearing for more than one country at full international level.[5]

Style of play

Platini is considered to be one of the greatest players of all time, and is regarded as one of the best passers in football history, as well as one of the best ever penalty kick and free kick specialists to have played the game.[9][14] A quick, versatile, and intelligent offensive midfield playmaker, with a unique ability to read the game and bend the ball from set pieces, he was renowned in particular for his ball control, technical skill, creativity, range of passing, and vision, despite his lack of notable physical or athletic attributes.[9][14][16][17][18] Although he primarily served as a creative midfielder, who mainly provided assists and created chances for team-mates, Platini was also a prolific goalscorer, who was known for his composure in front of goal, as well as his accurate finishing ability with both his feet and his head; he won several top-scoring awards throughout his career, both at club and international level.[9] Despite his talent, skill, and ability, he was also drew criticism from his managers at times, due to his lack of stamina and poor defensive work-rate.[14] Due to his leadership and dominance, as well as his technical and creative attributes, he was given the nickname "Le Roi" ("The King", in French).[18][19]

Coaching career

Platini was named coach of the French national side on 1 November 1988, replacing Henri Michel, who had been forced out after France infamously drew with Cyprus (1–1) in a 1990 World Cup qualifier. France's qualifying campaign was ultimately unsuccessful.

The focus of the team shifted to qualifying for the 1992 European Championship in Sweden. France excelled in the qualifying stages, winning all eight of their group matches, including notable victories away to Spain and Czechoslovakia. After a record 19-match unbeaten run, they were among the favourites to win the competition and Platini was named Manager of the Year by the World Soccer Awards. But a string of uninspiring performances in warm-up matches, followed by France's first-round elimination from the tournament, led Platini to step down as coach.

Administrative roles

"He [Platini] was a great player who left a mark on his era, and it's always good when players take up positions in the higher echelons of the game. He knows everything there is to know about football."

Lilian Thuram, France '98 World Cup winning defender.[14]

Platini was, along with Fernand Sastre, head of the organizing committee for the 1998 FIFA World Cup, held in France. He served on the UEFA Technical Development Committee from 1988 to 1990. He has been a member of the UEFA Executive Committee and European member of the FIFA Executive Committee since 2002. He continued to climb the ranks of UEFA and FIFA football administration and in 2006, became a chairman of the FIFA Technical and Development Committee, while also being vice-president of the French Football Federation.

UEFA presidency

Platini confirmed that he would run for the UEFA presidency in July 2006.[20] In the election in Düsseldorf on 26 January 2007, he defeated Lennart Johansson, who held the post for the previous 16 years, by 27 votes to 23.[21] Platini based his speech on virtues of solidarity and universality.

Michel Platini visiting the construction site of a Stadium in Maślice, 2009

Platini has recently backed the 6+5 idea, six home-grown players and five foreign players to be introduced in top-flight teams in Europe. Platini has also backed caps on wages, transfer spending – both absolute and as a fraction of club turnover – and foreign ownership of clubs. He has stated that he wants to reduce the number of Italian, Spanish, and English teams that participate in the UEFA Champions League to a maximum of three instead of four.[22] This hasn't happened yet, but instead for the 2009–10 season, different routes were created for champions of smaller countries and non-champions of bigger countries. He has also talked about banning clubs from the competition based on the debts of the clubs.[23] Among his more contentious claims is that international transfer of players under 18 is in fact a form of illegal "child trafficking" and should be prohibited by the EU. "Paying a child to kick a ball is not that different from paying a child to work [...] in a factory," said Platini to members of the EU on 18 February 2009.[24]

FIFA presidential campaign

Following Sepp Blatter's announcement in June 2015 that he would resign from the post of FIFA president amid the ongoing corruption scandal,[25][26] Platini announced in July that he would run for FIFA president in the 2016 special election.[27] However, on 7 January 2016, Platini announced that he would not be standing in the Fifa presidential election, saying "The timing is not good for me. I don't have the means to fight on equal terms with the other candidates. […] Bye bye Fifa, bye bye Fifa presidency."[11]

Controversy

Following the ongoing corruption case, and after his announcement that in July he would run for FIFA president, Platini was also involved himself in the case. Swiss prosecutors accuse FIFA president Sepp Blatter of making a "disloyal payment" of $2m (£1.6m) to Platini. Swiss attorney general, Michael Lauber, stated: "We didn't interview Mr Platini as a witness, that's not true. We investigated against him in between as a witness and an accused person."[28][29] Both Platini and Blatter were placed under formal investigation by FIFA's independent ethics committee in late September 2015.[30]

On 8 October 2015, Platini was provisionally suspended for 90 days from any football-related activity.[31] On 21 December, Platini and Blatter were both found guilty of ethics violations and barred from the sport for eight years. The committee said Platini "did not show commitment to an ethical attitude" and lacked respect for laws and regulations of the organization.[32][33] Platini boycotted the hearing, and said he planned to appeal the decision, declaring himself "at peace with my conscience."[34]

Platini was also involved in the Greek public polemica regarding the 2015 Greek football scandal.[35][36][37]

In April 2016, Platini has been named in the Panama Papers.[38]

Health

On 9 July 2010, the day before the third place play-off of the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, Platini collapsed at a restaurant in the Michaelangelo Hotel in Sandton, Johannesburg. He was rushed to the Morningside Medi-Clinic with a suspected heart attack after having received first aid care by a Brazilian radio director who was sitting at a table next to him. He was attended to and discharged by cardiologist and former President of the South African Heart Association – Dr Leonard Steingo.[39] The official statement released by FIFA confirmed that Platini was discharged, stating that the UEFA President was "fine, and merely suffering from a bout of flu."[40] Platini was confirmed in attendance two days later at the final between Spain and Netherlands on the evening of 11 July.

Honours

Club

Nancy
Saint-Étienne
Juventus

International

During Platini's international career, France were five times holders of Nasazzi's baton, and Platini was captain on the third, fourth, and fifth occasion that the French national team held the unofficial title while he was an international.

Individual

Player

Manager

Career statistics

Club performance League Cup Continental Total
Season Club League Caps Goals Caps Goals Caps Goals Caps Goals
France League Coupe de France Europe Total
1972–73NancyDivision 142--42
1973–7421230-242
1974–75Division 23217613-3830
1975–76Division 1312276-3828
1976–77382510-3925
1977–783618107-4625
1978–79191253-2415
1979–80Saint-ÉtienneDivision 1331675754726
1980–813520105745229
1981–82362285204627
Italy League Coppa Italia Europe Total
1982–83JuventusSerie A301697954828
1983–84282073824325
1984–85301894974829
1985–86301261634216
1986–872928142415
Total France 2851565744169358209
Italy 1476839163619222103
Career total 43222496605228580312

[59] [60]

France national team
YearAppsGoals
197654
197772
197864
197942
198065
198142
1982104
198341
19841013
198562
198692
198710
Total7241

Bibliography

References and notes

  1. 1 2 "Sepp Blatter & Michel Platini lose Fifa appeals but bans reduced". BBC Sport. Retrieved 24 February 2016.
  2. 1 2 "Rise and fall of Michel Platini - the self-proclaimed 'football man' who forgot the meaning of integrity". Telegraph.co.uk. 21 December 2015.
  3. 1 2 "Sepp Blatter and Michel Platini given eight-year FIFA bans - ESPN FC". ESPNFC.com.
  4. "Michel Platini Biography". Soccer-fans-info.com. 3 May 1973.
  5. 1 2 "Michel Platini - Goals in International Matches". rsssf.com. 21 April 2011.
  6. "FIFA Player of the Century" (PDF). touri.com. Retrieved 30 November 2010.
  7. "European Footballer of the Year ("Ballon d'Or")". RSSSF. Retrieved 13 January 2015.
  8. "Pele's list of the greatest". BBC Sport. 4 March 2004. Retrieved 18 November 2013.
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 "Elegance and intelligence personified in blue: Michel Platini". FIFA.com. Retrieved 1 February 2015.
  10. "Michel Platini announces he will run to replace Sepp Blatter as Fifa president". theguardian.com (The Guardian). 29 July 2015. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  11. 1 2 "Michel Platini will not stand in Fifa presidential election". BBC News Online. 7 January 2016. Retrieved 7 January 2016.
  12. "Buon compleanno, Monsieur Calcio". Archivio - la Repubblica.it.
  13. Moving with the Ball: The Migration of Professional Footballers. Books.google.com.au. Retrieved 2012-09-20.
  14. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Michel Platini - I was there". FIFA.com. Retrieved 24 May 2014
  15. "Michel Platini compie sessant’anni: da ‘Le Roi’ in bianconero alla poltrona più importante della Uefa" [Michel Platini turns sixty: from "The King" with Juventus to UEFA's highest throne] (in Italian). Il Fatto Quotidiano. 21 June 2015. Retrieved 10 August 2015.
  16. "Michel Platini". Retrieved 1 February 2015.
  17. "Michel Platini Biography". Retrieved 1 February 2015.
  18. 1 2 "Michel Platini" (in Italian). DNA Milan.com. Retrieved 9 December 2014.
  19. "Tra Hamrin e Batigol Toni per la storia" (in Italian). La Gazzetta dello Sport. 31 March 2006. Retrieved 9 December 2014.
  20. "Platini to run for UEFA presidency". EuFootball.biz. 27 July 2006. Archived from the original on 18 December 2007. Retrieved 5 November 2006.
  21. "Platini elected UEFA president". UEFA.com. 27 January 2007. Archived from the original on 8 February 2007. Retrieved 27 January 2007.
  22. Scott, Matt (29 December 2006). "Platini victory would reduce England's Champions League quota". The Guardian (UK). Retrieved 7 May 2009.
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  27. "Michel Platini to stand for the FIFA presidency". UEFA. 29 July 2015. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  28. "Fifa scandal: Michel Platini drawn closer to Blatter case". bbc.com. 30 September 2015. Retrieved 30 September 2015.
  29. "Platini says the SFr2m was contracted, Lauber says he is under investigation". insideworldfootball.com. 30 September 2015. Retrieved 30 September 2015.
  30. "Michel Platini's future 'in great doubt' after he is dragged into football corruption scandal over £1.3million Fifa payment". dailymail.co.uk. 30 September 2015. Retrieved 30 September 2015.
  31. "Sepp Blatter, Michel Platini & Jerome Valcke suspended". BBC Sport. 8 October 2015. Retrieved 8 October 2015.
  32. Borden, Sam (21 December 2015). "Sepp Blatter and Michel Platini Are Barred From Soccer for 8 Years". The New York Times. Retrieved 21 December 2015.
  33. Warshaw, Andrew (23 December 2015). "Merry Christmas Mr Blatter and Mr Platini...you're fired". insideworldfootball.com. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
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Further reading

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Michel Platini.
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Michel Platini
Olympic Games
Preceded by
Robyn Perry
Final Winter Olympic Torchbearer
with François-Cyrille Grange

Albertville 1992
Succeeded by
Haakon Magnus, Crown Prince of Norway
Civic offices
Preceded by
Lennart Johansson
President of UEFA
2007 – present
Succeeded by
Incumbent


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