World Cup football organisers are breathing a sigh of relief after the Court of Arbitration for Sport dismissed an appeal by Cape Verde which could have caused havoc ahead of the finals in Brazil.
The Cape Verde
federation had appealed to international sport’s supreme court against a FIFA
decision to punish it with a 3-0 defeat for fielding an ineligible player
against Tunisia in a crucial World Cup qualifying tie.
Trouble erupted
in May 7 last year when Fernando Varela of Romania’s Steaua Bucharest was
suspended for four matches for unsporting behaviour to a match official during
an earlier qualifying tie in the African section.
Cape Verde then
brought him back too soon, in the climactic Group B game in Tunisia which they
won 2-0. On the face of it Cape Verde topped the group with 12 points, one more
than Tunisia.
That promised to
send Cape Verde into a final round play-off against Cameroon with a place in
Brazil at stake.
However Tunisia
appealed to FIFA which punished Cape Verde with a 3-0 defeat and thus placed
Tunisia top of the group with 14 points, five more than Cape Verde.
The decision was
upheld by the world federation’s appeal committee so Cape Verde then went to
CAS which kicked the appeal into the far distance.
A three-man
panel headed by Portugal’s Rui Botica Santos noted that FIFA had informed the
Cape Verde federation of the matches from which Varela was suspended and which
included the Tunisia game.
If CAS had
allowed the appeal, FIFA faced the nightmare prospect of legal action by
Tunisia while simultaneously having to organise a play-off rerun between Cape
Verde and Cameroon.
Had Cape Verde
managed to secure an unlikely qualification for the World Cup finals – which
would have caused administrative chaos in Brazil – they would have been the
smallest ever country to do so, with a population of around 500,000.


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