
Acting Football Association chairman Roger Burden has withdrawn his application for the permanent post over England's 2018 World Cup vote failure.Burden, who was appointed in May, says he can no longer trust Fifa members after England lost out to Russia. "I recognise that an important part of the role is liaison with Fifa, our global governing body," said Burden. "I'm not prepared to deal with people whom I cannot trust and I've withdrawn my candidacy," added the 64-year-old.England 2018 officials have suggested that as many as six of the 22 Fifa members had promised to vote for England. But in the end England received just two votes - one of them from Englishman Geoff Thompson - ensuring the bid crashed out in the first round of voting in Zurich on Thursday. Burden accepted there might have been a backlash over the Sunday Times and BBC Panorama investigations into the world governing body, but said Fifa needed to be more thick-skinned."We have a free press in our country and we all have to live with adverse comment from time to time," he added. "But there is no doubt that English football benefits from the media coverage that it receives and would have been given great coverage if we had brought the World Cup to England. "I have no issue with Russia's winning bid. I am sure they will put on a great World Cup and I have congratulated them." But the FA's acting chairman was mystified as to why England had only secured two votes given the strength of its bid. "We were equal top of Fifa's own technical assessment of the four bids," said Burden. "We were top of an independent assessment of the best commercial bids and our presentation on Thursday was widely acclaimed as the best of the 2018 and 2022 bids. "Against this background, I am struggling to understand how we only achieved two votes. It is difficult to believe that the voting was an objective process. "On top of that, Prince William, the Prime Minister and other members of our delegation were promised votes that did not materialise." Burden will remain as acting chairman until a successor can be found. He rose through the FA's ranks and is chairman of the Gloucestershire FA and the National Game Board and became acting chairman after the departure of Lord Triesman, who resigned after what he called his "entrapment" by a national newspaper.Burden initially was not interested in taking the role full-time, but later changed his mind, with the FA due to name the permanent chairman early next year. Earlier on Friday, England 2018 bid ambassador Viv Anderson described the World Cup bidding procedure as a "joke". "How can 23 people have so much power," Anderson told BBC Radio 5 live. "It's an old boy's club. We should form a splinter group and try and break up that boy's club up. "If the criteria is new markets then let them - Russia and Qatar - have it but don't let us spend £15m and don't get anywhere near it." Meanwhile, England's friendly with Thailand in June - a match organised to gain support for the 2018 bid - may now be scrapped. |
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