DUBAI — FIFA President Gianni Infantino has described football as a beacon of hope and a harbinger of peace, unity and solidarity as the world recovers from the disruption and desolation caused by COVID-19 pandemic. Infantino made the point in his keynote address, titled "Message from the Summit", at the Dubai International Sports Conference, which took place on Sunday evening at the Armani Hotel with the majestic Burj Khalifa forming the backdrop. A Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum Global Initiative, this year’s Dubai International Sports Conference was organized under the patronage Sheikh Mansoor Bin Mohammed by Dubai Sports Council under the theme "Football at the Top", and it also featured three of modern football’s biggest stars — "El Don" Cristiano Ronaldo, Spain and Real Madrid goalkeeping legend Iker Casillas, and Bayern Munich hitman Robert Lewandowski — together on the same stage for the first time. Mattar Al Tayer, vice chairman of Dubai Sports Council, was present at the Conference alongside Humaid Al Qatami, director general of Dubai Health Authority and first vice chairman of the National Olympic Committee, and Saeed Hareb, secretary general of Dubai Sports Council, as well as a number of heads of sports federations, and boards of directors of clubs and football companies, and also representatives of local and international media institutions. Addressing the gathering, Infantino said: "It is a great pleasure for me to be here tonight with you in this incredible place for the 15th edition of Dubai Sports Council’s Dubai International Sports Conference. "I have been coming to this Conference quite a few times, but I think this year is a special year, and the fact we are here united and reunited, marks a little step — not yet into normality — but a little step into the right direction and that’s why it is so important for us and for you to be here, and I would like to thank you all for being here. "It has been a difficult year. It is a year, which we will remember because of the pandemic, because of COVID19, because everything stopped, because football stopped as well and because we realized that there is actually something more important than football and that is health. "We were not aware, all of us, that so much is dependent on how we are and how our neighbors are and how our families and friends are until we saw that a small virus has put on its knees the entire world. We all have to wear masks now, we have to keep social distance. "We have to thank all those who have been fighting as volunteers, as meds, as doctors in order to keep and to save our lives. And we got to think of those who suffered in this particular year. "But in this very year and in the year to come, football can give a new message, a message of unity, of solidarity, and of hope. And these are not just words because we all need — after being distanced, after being locked down — we all need again to believe that the world is going back to normal, that we can again hope, and football is certainly giving hope. "We are playing in front of empty stadiums, but there are millions that are watching you, there are millions that, thanks to you the players, can hope again to come back to normal. We will all work together to bring back spectators, safely of course, into stadiums because that is what we are about." Infantino spoke about the $1.5 billion COVID-19 Relief Plan that FIFA has created to support the game in its 211 member associations and six confederations, and to help alleviate the financial impact of the pandemic. But the 50-year-old Swiss-Italian also suggested the ‘Beautiful Game’ should use this time to introspect and plan for the future of a truly global football. "In FIFA, we have tried to help a little bit," Infantino said. "We have created, as you might have heard, the COVID-19 Relief package worth $1.5 billion to help, not the top professional game, but to help the game all over the world in 211 countries — the grassroots game, the women’s game stay alive, to keep the flame of football burning, and in order to be ready when we can resume again. "But this period where we have been locked down has also given us possibilities to think about the future of football, of course. With football being the most important of the less important things, maybe we need to start reconsidering the way we have been organizing football so far. "We need to protect — and that’s the first priority — we need to protect the players, the legends. We need to protect the game. Maybe we need to look again at the formats of our competitions and we need to see how we can find a better balance between national teams and clubs, between leagues and cups, between long competitions and short. Maybe this is the time where we need to reduce a little bit travel in order to preserve health. "We need to consider this and I say this very openly, questioning whatever we, including FIFA, including Confederations, Associations, Leagues have been doing in the last 20 years, or 30 years or 40 years. Because the world is changing, because the world is going faster, the world wants more excitement; the youth, the young boys and girls, they strive for maybe a different type of organization of competitions as we are used to. "So we need to put all this on the table and this will be the challenge of the year 2021 and the following years to come for us in global football." "Football is global," Infanino added. "The fact we are here today in Dubai which is a global city, is a testimony of that. And the vision of FIFA is certainly to make football even more global than what it is today. Because even if football is global, the reality is that it is concentrated, of course, in a few countries only and we need to make this bigger with new ideas, new ways, and a new globalized game of football. "This is the task, this is the mission of FIFA, of course, to organize, to generate, to distribute revenues in the entire world. This is what we are try to do with the help of all those who are partnering with us, and we need to do it even more so in the future." Infantino also used the occasion to pay homage to two legends who departed a few weeks earlier, Argentina’s Diego Maradona and Paolo Rossi of Italy. "I said it is a very special year and I would like to remember a great legend, Diego Armando Maradona, who left us a few weeks ago," said Infantino. "He was also at home here in Dubai, and he is certainly one of those who have made us all fall in love with the game. "Another legend that left us is Paolo Rossi. Of course, as an Italian myself, I cherish the moments I was watching with my parents on TV the 1982 World Cup where Paolo Rossi scored six goals. Also, he has left us much too early." — WAM
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