Sepp Blatter on Monday told reporters he gave the Brazil World Cup a 9.25 rating, not a 10, only “because perfection does not exist in football.” Judging by the jeers and insults hurled his way Sunday at Estadio do Maracana, Brazil gave the FIFA president a considerably lower rating at his 10th World Cup. The politicians and sports bureaucrats wouldn’t let Brazil rest for so much as a single day. Faster than you can say, “Clint Dempsey scores against Ghana,” the International Olympic Committee and the nation’s president, Dilma Rousseff, met to discuss the 2016 Summer Games in Rio, yet another potential money pit to sabotage the struggling economy. “I was pleased to hear the confidence President Dilma Rouseff has in the Games and what they will deliver,” Thomas Bach, president of the IOC, told reporters after the confab last week. “It was good to hear the Games and their legacy will be a top priority. The Olympic Games will benefit from the passion and efficiency of the Brazilian people.” Passion, yes. Efficiency… not always, at this World Cup. The IOC will now give Brazil about $1.5 billion for an Olympics that will cost far more than that, and you…