Having outlined his commitment to cleaning up FIFA and having more transparency and control at the organisation, Gianni Infantino has admitted that there are some things the governing body will struggle to deal with.
In particular, the Swiss outlined his concerns with organisations such as Football Leaks, who he believes may be doing as much harm as they are good with the publication of private documents.
"Anything that doesn't present football in a good light is something that we have to be wary of," he said in an exclusive interview with MARCA in Zurich. "There are issues that we can do something about, but there are others that we can't.
"Football Leaks aside, let's look at what happens with player transfers. In one transfer window, there can be between 2,000 to 3,000 million euros passing from one country to another in deals.
"It is a lot of money and that's why it is important that football has systems in place that guarantees transparency and that money goes where it is supposed to go, which is the game itself."
Among other items on the agenda were plans for current competitions such as the World Cup, with Infantino a major backer of plans to increase the competition to 48 teams.
He discussed his specific ideas in relation to those proposals and explained why he is so passionate about introducing an expanded World Cup.
"I think today the World Cup is much more than just a sports competition," continued the 46-year-old. "It is a social event, more so perhaps than a football competition. The development and quality of football has increased a lot.
"In the Premier League, there are players of 69 different nationalities. In the last World Cup, for example, Italy and England were eliminated by Costa Rica, who are a good team, but not by Messi's Argentina or Neymar's Brazil.
"Football is no longer just about Europe and South America. That's why it is important for us to respect that. I think it is also important to include more countries in this event.
"For Spain, it is normal to be in a World Cup but there are other countries who have never been there or who have only been to one or two.
"It is very hard to get to November and know that you already don't have a chance of reaching the World Cup. Qualifying can be a tremendous boost to a country but if you don't, the coach can be sacked, the president has problems and it is the same for clubs.
"You can still play a new one in 32 days. The team that wins will play seven games in 12 stadiums. There are only positive aspects about this because football is open to all. [You could have] 16 groups of three teams and then direct knockout games. We could see this in 2026."
Infantino also outlined his vision for the women's game, which he is desperate to see continue to evolve and stand on its own two feet, by having the game double the number of participants over the next decade.
"That's very important because like the male game, the female game has teams of the same value throughout the world: in Australia, China, Japan, Korea, the United States, Germany and Spain," Infantino continued.
"We shouldn't fall into the trap of copying men's football. That would be a mistake. You have to create new competitions and new ideas.
"I saw that Atletico-Barcelona was played in the [Estadio Vicente] Calderon in front of 15,000 fans. That is incredible.
"It is at the bottom of the pyramid more than the top that we are missing out. There are 30 million women in the world who play football but in the next 10 years, we want that number to reach 60 million."