Super League ‘spit in the face’ opens unprecedented conflict in European football

Updated 20 Apr, 2021

PARIS: Plans for a breakaway Super League announced by twelve of European football’s most powerful clubs plunged European football into an unprecedented crisis on Monday as UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin called it a “spit in the face” for supporters.

Six Premier League teams — Liverpool, Manchester United, Arsenal, Chelsea, Manchester City and Tottenham Hotspur — joined forces with Spanish giants Real Madrid, Barcelona and Atletico Madrid and Italian trio Juventus, Inter Milan and AC Milan to launch the planned competition.

Those clubs have 40 European Cups between them, including a record 13 for Real Madrid and seven for Milan.

Yet they have decided to break away from the UEFA-sanctioned Champions League and start their new competition “as soon as possible”, with plans for three more founding members to join and for five other clubs to be invited annually.

The competition threatens to completely upturn the world’s biggest sport and leaves the prestigious Champions League — itself the fruit of the last major shake-up in European football in 1992 — facing an uncertain future.

Monday’s breakaway announcement came just hours before UEFA planned to announce a new format for the Champions League which had been conceived to placate the continent’s biggest clubs and stave off the breakaway threat.

Champions League reform

UEFA is pressing ahead with the new format from 2024 onwards, which will see the number of clubs involved increase from 32 to 36, and Ceferin lashed out at the breakaway plan, calling it a “disgraceful self-serving proposal from a select few clubs purely fuelled by greed”.

The Slovenian added that European member associations were “all united against this nonsensical project” and said players involved would not be allowed to play for national teams, effectively banning them from taking part in European Championships and World Cups.

However, organisers of the Super League said they would file a motion “before the relevant courts” to stop players being banned and “ensure the seamless establishment and operation” of the competition, according to a letter seen by AFP, addressed to Ceferin and FIFA chief Gianni Infantino.

The breakaway league is being backed by US investment bank JPMorgan, which confirmed to AFP that it was “financing the deal”.

The founding clubs will share 3.5 billion euros for infrastructure investment and to offset pandemic costs, and are expected to receive a further 10 billion euros in “solidarity payments” over the life of the initial commitment — much more than in the current Champions League.

The 15 eventual founders will be guaranteed to play each year in a competition intended to take place in midweek, allowing clubs in theory to continue participating in domestic leagues.

Another five places will be available “based on achievements in the prior season”.

Bayern not in favour

The absence of French and German teams from the founding members is notable, despite Bayern Munich and Qatar-owned Paris Saint-Germain reaching last season’s Champions League final.

Bayern have distanced themselves from the project, with chairman Karl-Heinz Rummenigge saying: “We are convinced that the current structure in football guarantees a reliable foundation.”

However, a source close to the 12 founding clubs told AFP that “at least two French clubs” are set to be involved every year.

The reaction from fans and pundits across Europe has been furious.

“It’s the death of football... Football is based on the concept of competitive balance, sporting competition and qualifying on merit,” Tim Payton, head of the Arsenal Supporters Trust, told AFP.

“What is the point of going to watch Arsenal play Everton this Friday if we know they’ve already qualified for a so-called Super League next year?”

PSG midfielder Ander Herrera, once of Manchester United, also stated his opposition to the breakaway.

“I believe in an improved Champions League, but not in the rich stealing what the people created, which is nothing other than the most beautiful sport on the planet,” he wrote on Twitter.

FIFA’s ‘disapproval’

Under the plan, two groups of 10 will play each other home and away, with the top three qualifying for the quarter-finals. The fourth and fifth-placed teams would play off for the two remaining spots.

Then the competition would adopt the same two-leg knockout format used in the Champions League before a single-leg final in May.

World governing body FIFA expressed its “disapproval” and called on all parties “to engage in calm, constructive and balanced dialogue”.

The Premier League, the richest in Europe, issued a furious statement to say “the concept of a European Super League would destroy” the dream that any team could “climb to the top and play against the best”.

The powerful European Club Association said it “strongly opposes” the plans after its own chairman, Juventus supremo Andrea Agnelli, stepped down.

Having been heavily involved in negotiations with UEFA over a new Champions League format, Agnelli came in for stinging criticism from Ceferin.

“I’ve never seen a person that would lie so many times, so persistently as he did. It’s unbelievable,” Ceferin said.

Real Madrid chief Florentino Perez, who was announced as the first Super League president, said the breakaway reflected the big clubs’ wishes.

“Football is the only global sport in the world with more than four billion fans and our responsibility as big clubs is to respond to their desires,” he said. Real are by far the most successful club in the history of the European Cup, which began in 1955 before expanding into the Champions League in 1992.

Previously only open to the national champions of each country, it is now dominated by the leading clubs from England, Spain, Germany and Italy.

The last club from outside these countries to win the Champions League was Portuguese club Porto in 2004.

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