Sepp Blatter and Michel Platini, once the two most powerful men in world football, had their bans for ethics violations upheld on Wednesday, although they were reduced from eight years to six.
Blatter, 79, who served for 17 years as FIFA president, and Platini, 60, one of the greatest players of all time and UEFA president since 2007, had appealed against the bans imposed last October.
The ruling came two days before FIFA holds a special elective Congress to appoint a successor to Blatter, who was president of the ruling body from 1998 before standing down four days after winning his final term of office last May.
Neither will be at today’s Congress following the decision. Platini could hardly contain his wrath.
“The decision is insulting, shameful and is a violation of rights,” he said in a statement. “The charges against me are baseless, built from the ground up and surreal in view of the facts and the explanations I gave during the hearing.
“I will go to the end of my fight to show that I’m innocent, to restore my rights and identify who is responsible for this plot.”
There was no immediate response from Blatter. The pair will now turn to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) for the last chance to restore their reputations and roles in the game.
The final verdict from FIFA’s headquarters, though, came on a rainy evening in Zurich.
The statement issued by the Appeal Panel, while upholding the ban, determined that “some strong mitigating factors for Mr Platini and Mr Blatter were not taken into account when establishing the sanction.”
One of the factors for reducing the ban was the pair’s lifetime service to football.
Blatter and Platini were banned over a payment of 2mn Swiss francs ($2.03mn) made to the Frenchman in 2011 by FIFA with Blatter’s approval for work done a decade earlier.
They said the payment honoured a verbal or gentleman’s agreement made in 1998 for work carried out by the Frenchman when he was a technical adviser to Blatter.