Lunch with Sepp Blatter
Sepp Blatter likes to start the day just before 6am. He skips breakfast but drinks a cup of coffee and does a little dance to stay in shape. "Rhythm, rhythm of life is very important. Also in football, but everywhere," he says. But on May 27, 15 minutes after he woke up, his morning routine was broken by a phone call. Swiss police, acting on extradition requests from the US Department of Justice, launched a raid on Zurich's Baur-au-Lac hotel and arrested seven senior FIFA officials on suspicion of taking more than $100m of bribes between them. The arrests, which were followed by another raid on FIFA's headquarters on a hill above Zurich, came as hundreds of football officials were gathering in Switzerland for an election to choose a new FIFA president. "I felt like a boxer who was just going into round 12 and said, 'I'm going to win.' But then: BONG!" says Blatter, 79, mimicking a knockout blow. The effect was seismic: although the vote went ahead two days later, ...