In the article presented below, the topic of 51st FIFA Congress will be addressed from a multidisciplinary approach, with the aim of providing a comprehensive and complete vision of this issue. Various perspectives and points of view will be examined that will allow the reader to understand the importance and relevance of 51st FIFA Congress in different contexts and situations. Through a detailed and rigorous analysis, we will seek to shed light on little-known or overlooked aspects, in order to enrich knowledge and understanding about 51st FIFA Congress.
The 51st FIFA Congress was held between 6 and 8 June 1998, at the Equinox congress hall in Paris, France, just before the start of the 1998 FIFA World Cup. It was the last biannual meeting of the international governing body of association football FIFA, since 1998 the congress has been held on an annual basis.[1] The congress saw the election of Joseph "Sepp" Blatter as the 8th President of FIFA who succeeded João Havelange. Havelange had held the presidency since 1974.[2][3]
1998 presidential election
Voting for the presidential election took more than three hours, with the Swedish football administrator and president of the European football governing body UEFALennart Johansson considered the favourite to win. Johansson's rival was the Swiss-German football executive Joseph "Sepp" Blatter who had previously been an executive at the Swiss watch manufactures Longines and had served as the general secretary of FIFA since 1981.[4] The first round of voting in the election did not produce an immediate victor (a two-thirds supermajority needed to avoid a second round), with Blatter receiving 111 votes to Johansson's 80, but Johansson conceded victory.[2][5][6]