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OverviewBefore the first ball is kicked in the 2026 World Cup, there is a story that needs telling. Mel Brennan was Head of Special Projects at CONCACAF. He remains the highest-ranked African-American in the history of world football governance. For over two decades, he has been one of the few people with direct knowledge of how world football is really run, and one of the fewer still willing to say so publicly. Saving Soccer is his account of what he saw, what it cost, and what the sport must do next. Brennan takes readers inside the corridors of power at CONCACAF and FIFA: from the 49th floor of Trump Tower, where General Secretary Chuck Blazer ran soccer as his personal fiefdom, to FIFA congresses where votes were traded, lies were told, and the men entrusted with the world's game helped themselves to it with extraordinary impunity. He introduces us to the world of Jack Warner, the CONCACAF president who commanded a chunk of FIFA's votes for a quarter of a century and used Caribbean football's development funds to buy land from himself, host tattoo conventions, and pay for his family's political ambitions. He shows us what FIFA's celebrated GOAL development program actually was. He also takes us to Korea in 2002, where the homeless were cleared from the streets of Seoul so FIFA delegates wouldn't have to see them on the way to their hotels. To Miami Beach, where a pre-dawn hotel lobby told him everything he needed to know about the culture he had walked into. To the waiting room on the 17th floor of CONCACAF's Trump Tower offices, where Caribbean football officials sat for hours asking where their money had gone, while the man they came to see never came down from the 49th floor. Saving Soccer is also an argument about what the sport can be. Drawing on two decades of experience inside and outside football governance, Brennan makes the case for a game organised around the people who play it rather than the people who profit from it; one that uses the cultural authority it commands to advance human dignity rather than to flatter the powerful. With the World Cup in North America, the conversation about what soccer owes its communities has never been more urgent. The structures that produced Chuck Blazer and Jack Warner remain largely intact. The reform agenda that followed the 2015 Department of Justice indictments is being quietly dismantled. A FIFA president is handing peace prizes on stages in Washington DC. Mel Brennan was there when the corruption was built. He worked alongside the men who would later be indicted, banned, and disgraced. He has spent the years since working with investigators, journalists, and reformers to bring it into the light. And he has written the book that North American soccer needs right now. The beautiful game deserves better than the men who have been running it. So do the hundreds of millions of people who love it. Saving Soccer is published in international markets as Fixing Football. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Mel BrennanPublisher: Fair Play Publishing Imprint: Fair Play Publishing Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.00cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.259kg ISBN: 9781923236585ISBN 10: 192323658 Pages: 178 Publication Date: 08 June 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsReviewsIn Saving Soccer, Mel Brennan tells the story of global soccer politics with the humble, good-natured spirit and with the articulate, even-tempered manner that stood out to me two decades ago when I first met him in England. Lasana Liburd Journalist, Wired 868 Trinidad and Tobago Author InformationMel Brennan served as Head of Special Projects for CONCACAF from 2001 to 2003, and as one of five North American delegates to the 2002 FIFA World Cup in Korea/Japan. He appears in the Netflix series FIFA Uncovered as one of a small number of former football insiders willing to speak on the record - and the only one from North America. He remains the highest-ranked African-American in the history of world football governance.A co-author of Sport, Revolution and the Beijing Olympics (Berg, 2008) with Grant Jarvie and Tony Hwang, Mel has spent over two decades levying a comprehensive critique of sport governance, the flawed relationship between sport and human rights, and what citizens deserve from their sporting culture.His career spans an unusually wide arc. He began as a Confidential Investigator with New York City's Civilian Complaint Review Board before moving into general management with global brands including Sega GameWorks, WWFE, and the Walt Disney Company. He has since led organisations across the nonprofit and public sectors, including as CEO of the Fuel Fund of Maryland, CEO of the United Way of Southern Maryland, and COO of the Ridgewood YMCA. He served as Deputy Director of the Office of Compliance Consultants at Rikers Island, working under FIFA vs Mastercard judge Loretta Preska.Mel pursued a PhD (ABD) in sport and human rights at the University of Stirling, taught within the University System of Maryland, curated TEDxBaltimore in 2011, and has written on sport corruption for outlets including Trinidad's Wired868. His commentary has been noted by ESPN's Gabriele Marcotti and by Deadspin, among others. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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