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Court date set for UAE appeal against Qatar's Asian Cup win

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    Court date set for UAE appeal against Qatar's Asian Cup win

    If a year later they can still appeal and possibly win this case then perhaps we should do the same about Williams. If in fact they have lived there less than 5 years and their mother isn't qatari then UAE has an open and shut case. Qatar probably could have made a better case by claiming the fathers of these players are qatari.

    https://www.yahoo.com/news/court-dat...194641231.html

    A legal challenge by the United Arab Emirates soccer federation that threatens Qatar’s 2019 Asian Cup title will be heard at sport’s highest court.

    The Court of Arbitration for Sport said Tuesday it will hear the UAE's appeal on March 12 in a case that alleges Qatar fielded two ineligible players at the tournament. The Asian Cup was hosted by the UAE during an ongoing diplomatic rift with neighboring Qatar, which will stage the next World Cup in 2022.

    A verdict by CAS judges is likely at least several weeks after the hearing in Lausanne, Switzerland.

    The ruling could strip Qatar of its biggest success in world soccer, affect key young players in its World Cup planning, and see the UAE inflict an embarrassing loss on a regional political rival.

    The UAE filed a complaint with the Asian Football Confederation after a 4-0 loss to Qatar in the Asian Cup semifinals in Abu Dhabi last January.

    When an ineligible player case is proven, AFC rules say a team must forfeit the game.

    The Asian governing body’s first disciplinary ruling cleared Qatar of wrongdoing hours before beating Japan 3-1 in the final.

    UAE officials have appealed to CAS against the Qatar Football Association and the AFC, whose appeal committee also later dismissed the claims of wrongfully submitted documents.

    The UAE alleges Qatar’s star forward Almoez Ali and defender Bassam Al-Rawi were not born there and did not meet FIFA nationality requirements to represent the country.

    FIFA’s statutes say players can acquire a nationality if they have “lived continuously for at least five years after reaching the age of 18 on the territory of the relevant association.”

    Both Ali, who turned 23 since the Asian Cup ended, and Al-Rawi, who is now aged 22, seemed not to meet the five-year residency rule.

    However, both reportedly claimed their mothers were born in Qatar — meeting FIFA’s national eligibility standard if a parent or grandparent is born on a territory.

    Ali scored against the UAE, and again in the final, for a tournament-leading nine goals. Al-Rawi was suspended for the semifinal but returned to play against Japan.

    They are also club teammates at Al-Duhail, runner-up in the Qatari league last season, and fellow graduates of the state-of-the-art Aspire youth academy in Doha which has educated many players born outside of Qatar.

    The latest appeal extends difficulties between the soccer neighbors which showed in a heated semifinals game played 20 months into an economic and travel boycott of Qatar by regional political rivals.

    After Qatar took a 2-0 lead in Mohammed bin Zayed Stadium — named for the UAE crown prince — players celebrating the goal had to dodge shoes thrown by some spectators.

    The UAE soccer body was later fined $150,000 by the AFC for the fans' misconduct, including the shoe-throwing and disrespecting the Qatari anthem.

    The teams met again in Doha five weeks ago, when the UAE and Saudi Arabia agreed to travel to Qatar to play in the Persian Gulf Cup, won by Bahrain. Qatar beat the UAE 4-2 in a group-stage game.
    I went to Sharif University. I'm a superior genetic mutation, an improvement on the existing mediocre stock.


    #2
    https://www.yahoo.com/sports/sports-...2599--sow.html

    An appeal by United Arab Emirates soccer officials that could strip Qatar of its 2019 Asian Cup title was being heard at sport’s highest court on Thursday.

    A Court of Arbitration for Sport judging panel is weighing the UAE soccer federation’s claim that 2022 World Cup host Qatar fielded two ineligible players to achieve its biggest soccer success.

    The appeal seeks to overturn Asian Football Confederation rulings that cleared Qatar of wrongdoing at the tournament hosted by the UAE during ongoing diplomatic tensions between the Middle East neighbors.

    A verdict by three CAS judges is likely to take at least several weeks.

    Lawyers arriving at court for the day-long hearing declined to comment.

    The UAE has alleged Qatar star forward Almoez Ali and defender Bassam Al-Rawi were not born there and did not meet FIFA nationality requirements to represent the country.

    The UAE filed a complaint with the AFC after losing to Qatar 4-0 in the Asian Cup semifinals in Abu Dhabi in January last year.

    When an ineligible player case is proven, AFC rules say a team must forfeit the game.

    The Asian governing body’s first disciplinary ruling cleared Qatar hours before beating Japan 3-1 in the final. An AFC appeal panel confirmed the initial verdict.

    FIFA statutes say players can acquire a nationality if they have “lived continuously for at least five years after reaching the age of 18 on the territory of the relevant association.”

    Both Ali, who turned 23 since the Asian Cup ended, and Al-Rawi, who is now aged 22, seemed not to meet the five-year residency rule.

    However, both reportedly claimed their mothers were born in Qatar. That would meet FIFA’s national eligibility standard if a parent or grandparent is born on a territory.

    Ali scored against the UAE, and again in the final, for a tournament-leading nine goals. Al-Rawi was suspended for the semifinal but returned to play against Japan.
    I went to Sharif University. I'm a superior genetic mutation, an improvement on the existing mediocre stock.

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      #3
      Its all political because of the latest animosity between UAE and Qatar

      Bottom line: AFC is a joke. AFC being part of FIFA and FIFA always closing an eye of AFC because of Arab $$$ are a joke too with no morals.

      And they have the attitude of “oh whats done is done”, just a fine, and that would be it. Hope the court decides with a heavier penalty than just a fine.


      “Things without all remedy should be without regard: What's done is done.”
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      Don't Select Players That Suit Your Tactics; Select A Tactic That Suits Your Players !!!

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        #4
        If Iran did such a thing AFC would have banned us before the tournament even began

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