Alexander Ospelt elected FIS president in close vote

Alexander Ospelt from Liechtenstein won the presidency of the International Ski Federation in a narrow 65-64 vote at the congress held in Belgrade. The outcome marks the tightest presidential election in the organization's history.

Ospelt, a 58-year-old lawyer and former chair of Liechtenstein's ski federation, will lead FIS for the next four years. He called for greater unity among member nations and described the split result as an opportunity to build shared goals.

Karin Mattsson, the Swedish candidate for the FIS Council, lost by a single vote. She expressed satisfaction with the new president's election and noted positive reactions from colleagues across countries.

The congress also welcomed Belize as the 142nd member nation and confirmed Guinea-Bissau's full membership. Organizers postponed the decision on the host for the 2031 Nordic skiing world championships.

The next FIS congress is scheduled online for 2027, with the 2028 edition set for Vilnius, Lithuania.

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Florentino Pérez celebrating his Real Madrid election win at a podium with cheering crowd.
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Florentino Pérez wins Real Madrid presidential election

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Florentino Pérez defeated Enrique Riquelme in Sunday's Real Madrid presidential election with roughly 67-33 percent of the vote. The 79-year-old president heads toward his seventh term until 2030. The victory clears the way for several sporting and institutional moves.

Anders Larsson, who has chaired the Swedish Ice Hockey Association since 2015, is weighing a candidacy for the presidency of the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF). He already serves on the IIHF board, and the position will open after Luc Tardif steps down. The Swedish federation's board is reviewing the option ahead of a June 1 deadline.

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Kirsan Ilyumzhinov, former FIDE president from 1995 to 2018, has announced his intention to seek the organization's top job again at elections this September in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. In a recent interview with Sport-Express, the 63-year-old Russian said he hopes for support from Russia amid speculation of other candidates. He cited lifted U.S. sanctions and his past contributions to chess as reasons for a comeback.

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