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the disruption a first winter World Cup ¼öÁ¤ »èÁ¦
Another sporting ·¹Çø®Ä«³²¼º°¡¹æ=·¹Çø®Ä«³²¼º°¡¹æ
mega-story the past decade will always be remembered for was Fifa's corruption scandal.

Allegations of skulduggery had hung around world football's governing body for years. But it was only in the 2010s that the people at the heart of the organisation faced accusations amid a crisis that shook Fifa to its core.

Nine years after it stunned the world by awarding the right to ¸íǰÆÐµù·¹Çø®Ä«=¸íǰÆÐµù·¹Çø®Ä«
host its flagship event to the tiny desert-state of Qatar, Fifa is still trying to recover from allegations surrounding how exactly the country won the vote, the human cost of building the infrastructure for the event, and the disruption a first winter World Cup will cause.

Five years after that vote came those dramatic dawn police raids with numerous Fifa officials arrested in Zurich on corruption charges amid a sprawling FBI investigation into tens of millions of dollars' worth of bribes connected to marketing and TV contracts in the Americas.

This - along with the subsequent downfalls of Fifa's long-reigning president Sepp Blatter and one-time heir ¸íǰÀÇ·ù·¹Çø®Ä«=¸íǰÀÇ·ù·¹Çø®Ä«
apparent Michel Platini shortly afterwards over ·¹Çø®Ä«ÀÇ·ù=·¹Çø®Ä«³²¼ºÀÇ·ù ·¹Çø®Ä«¿©¼ºÀÇ·ù ·¹Çø®Ä«³²¼º°¡¹æ
a "disloyal payment" - brought the organisation to its knees. Both ¸íǰ·¹Çø®Ä«Ãßõ=¸íǰ·¹Çø®Ä«Ãßõ
men, along with the Qatar bid, have always denied wrongdoing.
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