The board was confirmed by the FIFPRO general assembly in Paris on Tuesday (16th Nov), when David Aganzo was elected as the new president of the world player union, replacing replacing Philippe Piat.
The number of affiliated national player unions rose to 66 as the player unions of Slovakia (Únia Futbalových Profesionálov) and Bosnia & Herzegovina (Sindikat Profesionalnih Fudbalera u Bosni i Hercegovini) were introduced as members.
Player unions in Iceland and Uzbekistan have become candidate members, a step on the road to membership.
The new 18-person board is the most diverse in FIFPRO’s 56-year history and the first since statutes were ratified requiring mandatory increases in geographic and gender representation.
Among the seven members elected to the global board for the first time are Kathryn Gill, a former Australian national team player; Khadija Timera, a Senegalese lawyer; Karin Sendel, the Israeli national team captain; and Mila Hristova, the vice-president of the Bulgarian player union.
“We are excited to embark on this new phase in FIFPRO history with the most diverse and globally representative board we have ever had,” FIFPRO General Secretary Jonas Baer-Hoffmann said.
“We strongly believe this will result in even more effective and inclusive governance as we provide the best possible representation to professional footballers around the world.”
Philippe Piat, co-president of France’s Union Nationale des Footballeurs Professionels, is stepping down as FIFPRO president and will become honorary president of the organisation.
“Along with the rest of FIFPRO staff and on behalf of more than 60,000 professional footballers, I would like to thank Philippe for his hard work, dedication and achievements over the years,” Baer-Hoffmann said.
“As a proud former player and union leader he has remained an unstinting advocate of player rights. We are sure David Aganzo will follow in his footsteps with the same passion.”
Aganzo is president of Spain’s Asociación de Futbolistas Españoles and has been a FIFPRO board member since 2018.
The new board will comprise: Kathryn Gill (Australia), Mila Hristova (Bulgaria), Geremi Njitap (Cameroon), Camila Garcia (Chile), Carlos Gonzalez Puche (Colombia), Alejandro Sequeira (Costa Rica), Bobby Barnes (England), David Terrier (France), Khadija Timera (Gabon), Karin Sendel (Israel), Damiano Tommasi (Italy), Izham Ismail (Malaysia), Louis Everard (The Netherlands), Fernando Revilla (Peru), Dejan Stefanovic (Slovenia), David Aganzo (Spain), Caroline Jönsson (Sweden), Lucien Valloni (Switzerland).