LAUSANNE: Michel Platini will discover by May 9 if he has overturned a six-year ban from FIFA over a $2 million payment approved by Sepp Blatter.
The UEFA president attended an eight-hour closed-door hearing at the Court of Arbitration for Sport on Friday.
It appears unlikely there will be a verdict in time for Tuesday when UEFA gathers in Budapest, Hungary, for its annual congress of 54 soccer federations who have been without their leader for seven months.
CAS secretary general Matthieu Reeb said the verdict would come before May 9 after a three-member panel judged Platini’s case afresh.CAS also has the authority to impose a life ban for corruption.
Previously, FIFA’s ethics and appeals committees ruled out bribery as a factor and found Platini and Blatter guilty of charges including conflict of interest and disloyalty.
Blatter, the former FIFA president, arrived at 10:30 a.m. to be a witness at FIFA’s request. He employed Platini as a presidential adviser from 1999-2002, nine years before FIFA paid Platini the $2 million in uncontracted salary.
“I accepted this task. I’m on good form and I’m happy to be a witness in this matter,” Blatter said before going in.
He emerged 90 minutes later. “It was fair and correct,” Blatter said.
“I do hope that my participation has helped to find a solution to this problem.”
Platini and his former mentor deny wrongdoing, and claim they had a verbal contract for the additional money. FIFA eventually paid Platini three months before Blatter was re-elected as president in 2011.
Both are effectively the star witness in each other’s appeal case, and were heard on back-to-back days by the two earlier FIFA tribunals.