Irish Independent

Rummenigge rejects accusation­s of planned Super League

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ENGLAND’S leading clubs have declined to comment on leaked documents which appear to reveal plans for the launch of a European Super League within the next three years.

Manchester United, Manchester City, Chelsea, Liverpool and Arsenal were all named in the documents which were released by Football Leaks and published by German news magazine ‘Der Spiegel’.

The documents claim they are among 16 clubs who would leave their domestic competitio­ns to play in the new league as early as 2021. Such a move would leave the future of the leading domestic leagues and major competitio­ns such as the Champions League in question.

Real Madrid, Barcelona, Bayern Munich, Juventus, Paris St-Germain and AC Milan are the other clubs listed, with five further clubs allegedly to be invited as ‘initial guests’.

City, United and Liverpool all declined to comment when contacted, while Chelsea and Arsenal did not immediatel­y respond.

However, Bayern Munich chairman Karl-Heinz Rummenigge – who is also the chairman of the European Club Associatio­n (ECA) – issued a statement rejecting the documents and stating his club is committed to playing in the Bundesliga.

“FC Bayern Munich stands by its membership of the Bundesliga and, as long as I am chairman of the board of FC Bayern, also by the club competitio­ns organised jointly by UEFA and the ECA,” Rummenigge said.

The club statement read: “FC Bayern is also unaware of recent plans for a so-called Super League, also reported by ‘Der Spiegel’, nor has FC Bayern taken part in negotiatio­ns relating to such plans. FC Bayern is also unaware of why it is listed in a document quoted in this context by ‘Der Spiegel’.”

‘Der Spiegel’ reported the most recent document was sent to Real Madrid on October 22, with a plan to finalise arrangemen­ts later this month.

According to the published documents, the 11 founders of the league would be immune from the risk of relegation with guaranteed membership for 20 years.

The five clubs in line to be invited to join as guests were named as Atletico Madrid, Borussia Dortmund, Marseille, Inter Milan and Roma.

The story appeared yesterday alongside other documents which claimed current FIFA president and then UEFA boss Gianni Infantino helped arrange more lenient punishment­s for Manchester City and Paris St-Germain when they were found to have breached Financial Fair Play rules in 2014. UEFA said it could not comment on specific cases due to confidenti­ality obligation­s, while FIFA did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

A Manchester City statement said: “We will not be providing any comment on out-of-context materials purportedl­y hacked or stolen from City Football Group and Manchester City personnel and associated people.

“The attempt to damage the club’s reputation is organised and clear.”

Paris St-Germain published a lengthy statement on their website, in which they said: “Paris SaintGerma­in has always acted in absolute compliance with the laws and regulation­s issued by sports institutio­ns.

“The club has always complied strictly with the laws and regulation­s in force and strongly denies the allegation­s published today.”

 ??  ?? Infantino: FIFA president
Infantino: FIFA president

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