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Harry Cavan


Harry Cavan C.B.E. (1915 – 16 January 2000) (Henry Hartrick Cavan) was Senior Vice-President of FIFA from 1980 to 1990, and president of the Irish Football Association from 1958 to 1994. Its Harry Cavan Youth Cup is named for him.

Harry H. Cavan served on a variety of FIFA committees, including the Organising Committees for all World Cups from 1970 to 1986. He also chaired the Technical Committee, the Development Programmes Committee, the World Youth Tournament Committee, the Medical Committee and the Referees’ Committee. However, Mr. Cavan will best be remembered for his distinguished role in representing the British associations as a Vice-President of the FIFA Executive Committee from 1960 to 1990. He was made an Honorary Vice-President of FIFA in 1990. It fell to him to announce in 1988 the results of the vote of FIFA's Executive Committee: "It was a card vote, a secret vote. It resulted as follows: Brazil two, Morocco seven, the United States 10. I declare on behalf of FIFA that the host country for the 1994 World Cup will be the United States of America."

He had long had the ambition of spreading football and the World Cup beyond its traditional borders and into the developing world. "In his role as an international soccer statesman - he acted for a short time as general secretary at the FIFA Zurich headquarters - Mr Cavan played a big part in the development of soccer in Africa, Asia and South America, regularly inspecting stadia in emerging Third World countries and ensuring that the appropriate FIFA guidelines were observed."

Cavan made conflicting statements about the prospect of a single all-Ireland football team over the years: at the IFA's Annual General Meeting in 1979, he said that "two teams in a small country like this is nonsensical", however during the 1980s when Billy Bingham's Northern Ireland side qualified for the 1982 and 1986 FIFA World Cups, he commented: "with results like we have had over the last two years, who needs a United Irish soccer side?".

Former Belfast Telegraph sports editor Malcolm Brodie spoke at his funeral of the esteem Mr Cavan had been held in across the globe through his role as FIFA vice-president. "His friends at home sometimes took him for granted and he was not fully appreciated by those to whom he had imparted much of his knowledge. Contrast that with the way he was held in Asia and Africa - it had to be seen to be believed." FIFA President Sepp Blatter said at his funeral "When I entered FIFA in 1975, Harry was the first person I met and, until the 1990s when he left FIFA, I was always with him and he was always with me. He always said I was his protege and I was. He believed in football's grassroots, in giving to the Third World rather than the commercialism that came in the Nineties." If Harry Cavan was alive today to see the first African World Cup, no doubt he would be saying "full marks to Sepp Blatter for getting it done."


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