Giancarlo Abete

Giancarlo Abete (born 26 August 1950) is an Italian politician and sport director. Formerly a member of the Italian parliament, Abete is now the third vice president of UEFA. Abete also served positions in the FIGC before being admitted to UEFA in 2009.[1]

Giancarlo Abete
Third Vice President of UEFA
Assumed office
2011
Personal details
Born (1950-08-26) 26 August 1950
Rome, Italy
NationalityItalian

Early life

Abete was born in Rome, Italy. As entrepreneur, he went to Sapienza University of Rome and earned a degree in Economics and Commerce.

Career

In politics

In 1972, when Abete was 22, joined as member of the Italian Parliament.[1] He stayed there for 20 years before deciding to go elsewhere in 1992. In 1994, Abete was elected as the president of the Rome entrepreneurs association which he served as until 2000. Abete served as the head of Rome's tourist board from 1999 to 2003.[1]

In football

Abete first became involved in the FIGC in 1989. He later became president of the Serie C and the association's vice president from 1996 to 2000 and again from 2001 to 2006. He was head of the Italian delegation when Italy won the 2006 FIFA World Cup. Abete was elected president of the FIGC in April 2007. In 2009, Abete was admitted to UEFA in 2009 and became a vice president in 2011. Abete stepped down from his position of president of the FIGC in 2014, but he still continues to be a vice president of UEFA.[1][2]

gollark: How should profile pictures work? Presumably you'd want them globally set, so they'd be fetched from your identity server, but would each server you chat in have to proxy them or something?
gollark: The actual messaging features are in a different spec to their bizarre XML encapsulation formats.
gollark: Indeed. I think we may be slightly reinventing XMPP, but XMPP is beeoid due to it being overly "extensible".
gollark: - better interserver capability than IRC's weird tree thing
gollark: osmarksdecentralizedchatoid™ featuring:- approximately IRCous design instead of the matrix state synchronisation one - channels belong to a particular server which manages history and permissions and such- global accounts looking somewhat like email addresses. Or maybe they're just public keys and people have to something something web of trust the actual name.- end to end encryption option for small private channels

References

  1. "UEFA Executive Committee". UEFA. 8 January 2010. Retrieved 26 March 2018.
  2. "Giancarlo Abete - Presidents". Figc.it. FIGC. Retrieved 26 March 2018.
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