"There’s nothing Mr Blatter says that surprises me much. If he is saying, ‘We wanted Russia’ and it looks like he wanted that fixed before the vote, it’s suggesting that it was all fixed anyway.” The FA spent around £21 million ($32.2 million, 29.1 million euros) on England’s failed 2018 bid, including £2.5 million of public money, and Dyke said it would be "very nice” to get the money back. "We will obviously go back and look at it,” he said. "I think it would be a good idea. But get the bid costs back from whom? From FIFA? I agree it would be very nice to get taxpayers’ money back.”
Dyke also said that there were no plans in place for England to step in and host the World Cup in either 2018 or 2022 should the tournaments be stripped from Russia or Qatar for any reason. Blatter and Platini are serving bans from all football-related activity over a $2 million payment the Frenchman received from Blatter on behalf of FIFA in 2011, purportedly for consultancy work carried out years earlier. But Platini remains a candidate to succeed Blatter in February’s presidential election, along with Prince Ali Bin Al Hussein, Musa Bility, Jerome Champagne, Gianni Infantino, Sheikh Salman bin Ebrahim Al Khalifa and Tokyo Sexwale.—AFP