It’s official: Bahrain's Sheikh Salman joins Fifa presidency race

The president of the Asian Football Confederation (AFC), Sheikh Salman bin Ebrahim al-Khalifa of Bahrain, has formally entered the race to become Fifa president, the Bahrain News Agency reported on Sunday.
The agency said Sheikh Salman had submitted his paperwork to Fifa headquarters on Sunday, a day ahead of the deadline for candidates to deliver the nominations from five football associations.
The Bahraini, who is closely allied with Kuwaiti Sheikh Ahmad Al-Fahad Al-Sabah, one of the most powerful men in international sports politics and a key figure in the Olympic movement, had canvassed opinion from Asian football associations last week.
Sheikh Salman had initially backed Michel Platini, the Uefa president. But the Frenchman’s troubles, which originated with a 2011 payment of US$2 million from Blatter’s Fifa for work done nine years earlier, have dramatically changed the electoral landscape.
Earlier this month, Platini was handed a 90-day provisional ban from football by Fifa’s ethics committee – a decision which has quickly led to his support dissipating.
