Greg Clarke Resigns as Fifa Vice-President
Former
Football Association chairman Greg Clarke has stood down as vice-president of
Fifa.
Clarke left
his job as head of the FA on Tuesday after using "unacceptable"
language when referring to black players.
He had
intended to continue in his position as Uefa's representative on the Fifa
Council but has now resigned.
The decision
comes after a phone call between Clarke and Uefa president Aleksander Ceferin.
Clarke used
an offensive term in reference to black players when he appeared in front of a
UK government select committee.
He was also
criticised for comments he made referring to gay players making a "life
choice", the different career choices of people from black and Asian
communities, and a coach telling him young female players did not like having
the ball hit hard at them.
Clarke was
elected as a vice-president of football's world governing body in February
2019.
On Wednesday
he told BBC Sport he would stay on in that role until March 2021 at the request
of Ceferin, in order to protect the European governing body's voting rights
until then.
However,
following a further call with Ceferin, he has now resigned.
Uefa will
appoint an interim replacement, likely to be from the home nations, to attend
Fifa's next meeting before naming a full-time replacement in March.
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