The Asian Age

What next for Barca in case of Catalan independen­ce?

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Madrid: Catalonia’s drive for independen­ce from Spain could have widereachi­ng consequenc­es for the region’s football clubs, including the world famous Barcelona.

Catalan leaders signed a declaratio­n of independen­ce from Spain on Tuesday but immediatel­y put it on hold and called for talks with Madrid to resolve the country’s worst political crisis in decades.

A look at what questions lie ahead for the clubs and the Spanish football authoritie­s in the coming months:

WHICH CLUBS ARE

AFFECTED? As well as Barcelona, there are two other Catalan clubs — Espanyol and Girona — in La Liga and three more, including Barca’s B team in the second division.

COULD CATALANS CONTINUE IN LA LIGA? La Liga president Javier Tebas has repeatedly insisted that Catalan teams would not be allowed to continue in La Liga after independen­ce.

“If the rebellion succeeds, we will work for a league without Barcelona,” Tebas told BeIN Sports Spain earlier this week.

Tebas’s reasoning is that Spain’s sports law only allows teams from Spain and Andorra to participat­e in Spanish leagues. are shut out of La Liga.

However, the prospect of clubs in England or France voting for the inclusion of a powerhouse like Barca into their leagues remains a remote one.

“I don’t believe it is a scenario you can envisage in a realistic way,” Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger told BeIN Sports this week.

Palomar also believes the process of gaining Fifa recognitio­n for an independen­t Catalan federation could be a drawn out one like in the cases of Gibraltar or Kosovo, without which no agreements can be made to form crossborde­r leagues.

Any Catalan league would also need Uefa recognitio­n to gain entry to competitio­ns such as the Champions League.

Faced with a series of unenticing options, Barca could also use their sporting and financial muscle to try and convince some of Europe’s other top clubs to form a breakaway league.

WHAT WOULD THE ECONOMIC IMPACT BE? In an interview in 2015, Tebas described the Barca’s rivalry with Real Madrid as La Liga’s “crown jewels”.

El Clasico is regularly the most watched match around the world and a huge boost to La Liga’s near 1.8 billion euro ($ 2.1 billion) TV revenue for the 2016/ 17 season.

According to Jose Maria Gay de Liebana, professor of economics at Barcelona University, Barca’s departure would see a “minimum of 200 million euros” wiped off La Liga’s TV income.

For Barcelona, the impact could be even more drastic. The club announced last month they expect to make a record 897 million euros this season, nearly a quarter of which comes from La Liga TV deals.

“They wouldn’t be able to have world- leading figures,” added Gay de Liebana, of a squad currently boasting the likes of five- time World Player of the Year Lionel Messi.

“They would become a medium- sized club.”

WHAT ARE BARCA’S CONTINGENC­Y PLANS? A powerful symbol of Catalonia around the world, Barca have tried to walk a political tightrope by coming out in favour of its right to self- determinat­ion, but stopping short of backing independen­ce.

A Barca spokespers­on has said the club would “consult its members” in the hypothetic­al case independen­ce came to pass.

However, they remain confident that “any league in Europe, including the Spanish league, would love to have a club like Barca taking part in it.”

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