ASIAN Football Confederation president Sheikh Salman bin Ebrahim Al Khalifa said he didn’t want to allow the organization to lapse back into “chaos” as he announced a bid for re-election next year. The Bahraini royal first took the reins in 2013 when the Asian body was still reeling from a corruption scandal which saw his predecessor, Mohamed bin Hammam, banned from soccer for life. At the AFC Congress next April, Sheikh Salman could face a challenge from Saudi Arabia’s Adel Ezzat, head of a new regional bloc, the South West Asian Football Federation. “I am proud of what we have achieved in that time and I am not ready to leave this organization in a state of chaos,” Sheikh Salman said in a statement. “We have all seen what the AFC was before, and we have seen what it looks like now and I hope that we can continue that progress.” Sheikh Salman was elected by a landslide in 2013 and completed the last two years of bin Hammam’s term, before being re-elected unopposed to a full, four-year term in 2015. His potential challenger, Ezzat, resigned as head of the Saudi football federation last month, saying he wanted to focus on the AFC elections. (SD-Agencies) |