Berliner Boersenzeitung - UEFA suffers court defeat, but Super League finds few fans

EUR -
AED 4.295669
AFN 81.659805
ALL 97.59679
AMD 449.318813
ANG 2.093003
AOA 1072.451874
ARS 1475.644248
AUD 1.794058
AWG 2.10514
AZN 1.983214
BAM 1.949112
BBD 2.359903
BDT 142.594381
BGN 1.954148
BHD 0.440826
BIF 3482.281201
BMD 1.169522
BND 1.494286
BOB 8.076288
BRL 6.389332
BSD 1.168889
BTN 100.107506
BWP 15.605056
BYN 3.825008
BYR 22922.632738
BZD 2.347764
CAD 1.600134
CDF 3374.071364
CHF 0.933318
CLF 0.028812
CLP 1105.736529
CNY 8.391203
CNH 8.40049
COP 4728.868963
CRC 590.877604
CUC 1.169522
CUP 30.992335
CVE 109.890756
CZK 24.67598
DJF 208.146476
DKK 7.460604
DOP 70.129369
DZD 151.646348
EGP 58.102794
ERN 17.542831
ETB 162.211399
FJD 2.631132
FKP 0.857659
GBP 0.86313
GEL 3.169688
GGP 0.857659
GHS 12.184193
GIP 0.857659
GMD 83.619991
GNF 10137.475837
GTQ 8.983406
GYD 244.543456
HKD 9.18069
HNL 30.56313
HRK 7.53628
HTG 153.403634
HUF 399.99646
IDR 19032.334497
ILS 3.924764
IMP 0.857659
INR 100.31482
IQD 1531.146256
IRR 49266.117322
ISK 142.635147
JEP 0.857659
JMD 186.55467
JOD 0.829203
JPY 171.878229
KES 151.020046
KGS 102.274813
KHR 4692.97748
KMF 491.786276
KPW 1052.567626
KRW 1605.56683
KWD 0.357404
KYD 0.974099
KZT 607.326113
LAK 25179.817077
LBP 104723.56736
LKR 351.373364
LRD 234.357883
LSL 20.788303
LTL 3.453295
LVL 0.707432
LYD 6.313499
MAD 10.526351
MDL 19.782881
MGA 5162.330898
MKD 61.484377
MMK 2455.076978
MNT 4197.195447
MOP 9.451156
MRU 46.419912
MUR 52.757403
MVR 18.008227
MWK 2026.749695
MXN 21.884904
MYR 4.959987
MZN 74.80251
NAD 20.787772
NGN 1789.988932
NIO 43.013513
NOK 11.839768
NPR 160.173773
NZD 1.953501
OMR 0.449676
PAB 1.1688
PEN 4.167407
PGK 4.901308
PHP 66.212533
PKR 332.295336
PLN 4.245831
PYG 9315.275919
QAR 4.261188
RON 5.081113
RSD 117.18491
RUB 91.423841
RWF 1688.991301
SAR 4.386252
SBD 9.750217
SCR 16.501705
SDG 702.296742
SEK 11.172819
SGD 1.498561
SHP 0.919061
SLE 26.316673
SLL 24524.297511
SOS 668.019283
SRD 43.650656
STD 24206.745769
SVC 10.22717
SYP 15205.971824
SZL 20.779877
THB 38.148672
TJS 11.226754
TMT 4.105022
TND 3.408704
TOP 2.739135
TRY 46.809718
TTD 7.929858
TWD 34.070283
TZS 3081.915215
UAH 48.821633
UGX 4201.583321
USD 1.169522
UYU 46.930175
UZS 14816.540825
VES 130.147048
VND 30565.459521
VUV 138.967301
WST 3.205062
XAF 653.725086
XAG 0.032128
XAU 0.000355
XCD 3.160692
XDR 0.812384
XOF 653.730656
XPF 119.331742
YER 283.199244
ZAR 20.881174
ZMK 10527.103931
ZMW 28.313848
ZWL 376.585632
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

UEFA suffers court defeat, but Super League finds few fans
UEFA suffers court defeat, but Super League finds few fans / Photo: Fabrice COFFRINI - AFP/File

UEFA suffers court defeat, but Super League finds few fans

Europe's top court dealt football governing body UEFA a scything legal tackle on Thursday, but an attempt by rival Super League promoters to kick off a new competition met a solid defensive wall of clubs and fans.

Text size:

Responding to a query from Spanish judges, the European Court of Justice ruled that UEFA had broken EU law by abusing its "dominant position" in European football to stifle an upstart breakaway league of elite clubs.

But when the firm promoting the Super League seized on the court victory to announce plans for new 64-team tournament to compete with or replace national competitions and UEFA's flagship Champions League it was met with scorn and rejection.

"We will not try to stop them. They can create whatever they want," sneered UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin. "I hope they start their fantastic competition as soon as possible ... with two clubs."

With only two clubs, Spain's rival giants Real Madrid and Barcelona, still publicly attached to the Super League project, UEFA and football's world body FIFA can perhaps afford to be sarcastic about the prospect of a new competition shaking up the game.

- 'Football is free' -

But this was not the case in early 2021, when 12 of Europe's biggest clubs announced they had signed up to the planned Super League, triggering a furious backlash from fans and a stark warning from UEFA that clubs and players who took parts would be barred from competitions like the World Cup.

Within 48 hours nine of the 12 rebel clubs -- including six from the English Premier League -- backed down and the project collapsed, leaving promoters A22 Sports Management to launch a legal challenge through the Spanish courts, which referred the question to the ECJ.

In response to the Super League threat, UEFA launched a major reform of the Champions League starting in 2024, with 36 teams involved instead of 32. The clubs will play in a single league competition, which will replace the current group stage, guaranteeing at least eight matches for each team.

On Thursday, Europe's top court came back with its verdict, on the face of it a massive blow to UEFA.

"The FIFA and UEFA rules making any new interclub football project subject to their prior approval, such as the Super League, and prohibiting clubs and players from playing in those competitions, are unlawful," the ECJ ruled.

Because UEFA operates as a monopoly in setting the rules, while also organising tournaments of its own such as the Champions League, its criteria for authorising rival competitions should be "transparent, objective, non discriminatory and proportionate".

"However, the powers of FIFA and UEFA are not subject to any such criteria. FIFA and UEFA are, therefore, abusing a dominant position," the court ruled.

A22 Sports Management responded to the ruling by crying victory and promising to launch a new Super League project with 64 teams from across Europe divided into groups with promotion and relegation within their system and free video streaming to fans from a dedicated app.

"We have won the right to compete. The UEFA monopoly is over. Football is free," the firm's CEO Bernd Reichart declared in a social media post from the A22 account. "Clubs are now free from the threat of sanction and free to determine their own futures."

But it was far from clear how many big clubs, even those who had tentatively backed the previous venture, would support the new plan. Many said they would not.

The CEO of German champions Bayern Munich, Jan-Christian Dreesen, said a European Super League would be "an attack on the importance of national leagues ... the door to the Super League remains closed at Bayern".

Manchester United, which was briefly part of the 2021 rebel Super League movement, said the club remained "fully committed" to participation in UEFA competitions.

And Atletico Madrid, which also took part in the previous breakaway, said: "The European football community does not support the European Super League."

The two Spanish giants, however, maintained their support.

Florentino Perez, president of Real Madrid, welcomed the court ruling and said: "European club football will no longer be a monopoly."

- Fans will 'fight it' -

And a statement from Barcelona declared that it was maintaining its support for the Super League.

The first Super League project has been mothballed since it collapsed in early 2021 amid fan fury at the threat it posed to national league competitions.

Many football fans feared that a closed, US-style league with no promotion or relegation of clubs would have destroyed the hopes of glory for smaller teams and the prestige of beloved national competitions.

Football Supporters Europe (FSE), an umbrella lobby group spoke out after the verdict, saying "since 2021, FSE and fans across Europe have stood firm against a breakaway super league time and time again, and repeatedly called for the greater protection of our game.

"Whatever comes next, the super league remains an ill-conceived project that endangers the future of European football. FSE, our members, and fans across Europe will continue to fight it."

(F.Schuster--BBZ)