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Affectionately nicknamed Le Roi, or The King, Michel Platini bestrode the soccer field with inimitable elegance as the world's best player of the early 1980s, helping to bridge the gap between the eras of Pele and Diego Maradona.
Repeatedly voted Europe's best player, the Frenchman instantly recognizable for his unruly mop of hair and his often grumpy demeanor in his later years went on to become European soccer's able top administrator as president of the UEFA.
Banned from the sport four years ago for financial misconduct, the 63-year-old Platini was questioned by police Tuesday, 18 June, as part of an unconnected corruption probe into the vote that awarded the 2022 World Cup to Qatar. Platini denied any wrongdoing.
It is just the latest in a torrent of scandals that have brought down dozens of soccer officials, particularly from world governing body FIFA, in recent years.
"Of all those that have been either arrested, indicted etc, Michel Platini is the saddest and most depressing," former England captain Gary Lineker tweeted. "He was a footballer, one of us."
Born in 1955 into a family of Italian immigrants living in northeastern France, Platini played the first 10 years of his professional career in his native country, first for nearby Nancy (1972-79) and then for Saint-Etienne (1979-82), with whom he won the French league title in 1981.
He later joined the Italian giant Juventus, where he became a global star in the iconic black-and-white jersey between 1982 and 1987.
With his graceful technique, peerless passing, pinpoint set-pieces and unhurried style of play, Platini led Juventus to two Italian league titles, the European Cup Winners' Cup in 1984 and the European Cup in 1985.
Platini's winning penalty shot in the final against Liverpool is largely forgotten, overshadowed by the death of 39 people — mostly Juventus fans — in a crush at the start of the game at Heysel Stadium in Brussels.
He was the top scorer in the Italian league for three consecutive seasons, an astonishing feat for a midfielder, before retiring in 1987 at just 32.
For the French national team, Platini's finest hour came at the European Championship in 1984, when the country won its first major international soccer title.
He scored a tournament-high nine goals in five matches, a haul that included two hat tricks, and was the heartbeat of a famous midfield that also comprised Alain Giresse, Jean Tigana and Luis Fernandez.
Platini was awarded the Ballon d'Or as Europe's footballer of the year. He also won the award in 1983 and 1985.
One of his biggest regrets was never winning the World Cup with France, which lost semifinals against West Germany in 1982 and 1986. He scored 41 goals in 72 games for France.
Platini's sole coaching stint was with France's national team, and it didn't go well.
He took charge in 1988, and the team failed to qualify for the World Cup in 1990, despite having the talents of Jean-Pierre Papin and a young Eric Cantona.
After France was eliminated from the European Championship in 1992 in the first round, Platini stepped down.
He would enjoy more success with the national team as an administrator.
His first big off-the-field role was as joint president of the organizing committee for the 1998 World Cup, which was held in France and became a nation-affirming success. France's multicultural team won the biggest prize in soccer for the first time.
Platini then became part of UEFA, European soccer's governing body, first as a member of its executive committee and then as its leader after defeating incumbent Lennart Johansson in a presidential vote in 2007. He was the first former player to become UEFA president.
While overseeing the continued growth of the behemoth that was the Champions League — formerly the European Cup — Platini tried to curb spending and opposed the introduction of technology in soccer. Under his watch, from 2007 to 2015, more teams were added to the European Championship, and a minimum 10-game ban for racist abuse by players was introduced.
While organizing the 1998 World Cup, Platini worked closely with FIFA's CEO-like top administrator, Sepp Blatter. He helped Blatter become FIFA president in an eve-of-tournament election dogged by claims of vote-buying by other campaign supporters.
Platini served as Blatter's adviser from 1998 to 2002, and those ties that bound the mentor and his protege would bring them both down in 2015 .
In 2011, Blatter signed off paying Platini $2 million, a salary Blatter had no authority to approve. Swiss authorities opened a criminal investigation, and FIFA's ethics committee banned them both, just as Platini seemed to be about to achieve his ambition of succeeding Blatter as president.
The latest investigation centers on Platini's decision to vote for Qatar as 2022 World Cup host. Blatter has accused Platini of backing out of a secret "gentleman's agreement" to support the United State' bid to be the host country.
Platini changed his mind after meeting then-French President Nicolas Sarkozy at his official residence in Paris with Qatar's crown prince, now emir.
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