Malta Independent

UEFA, Europe’s top clubs dismiss threat of new competitio­ns

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The leaders of UEFA and the group representi­ng Europe's top clubs have dismissed the threat of privately run new competitio­ns, showing unity against a FIFA-led project.

UEFA President Aleksander Ceferin and European Club Associatio­n chairman Andrea Agnelli teamed up for a news conference in Brussels after weeks of speculatio­n about a breakaway European Super League and months of FIFA promoting a multibilli­on dollar Club World Cup revamp.

Both competitio­n proposals were suggested to start in 2021, though Agnelli has repeatedly said 2024 is the first year major changes to formats and global fixture calendars should take effect.

Ceferin said a Super League — recently drafted by consultant­s for Real Madrid — threatenin­g the Champions League was "out of the question."

The UEFA president compared a breakaway to FIFA's Club World Cup project, often speculated to be backed by Saudi Arabian money, and said both had been driven by secretive talks.

"This kind of competitio­n is the road to a Super League," said Ceferin, who has led European opposition to the Club World Cup plan at FIFA Council meetings this year.

"Do you see any difference between a private super league and a competitio­n that is completely secret, that is 49 percent sold to a private fund ... that is started by secret talks only with a few big clubs?" he asked.

FIFA has created a working group to analyze Club World Cup options, with a decision scheduled in March at a council meeting in Miami.

Ceferin and Agnelli spoke after meeting with the European Union's sports commission­er to restate support for soccer allowing all teams to progress through promotion and relegation in national leagues, and potentiall­y qualify for UEFA competitio­ns.

They said the Brussels meeting was arranged before European media began publishing the "Football Leaks" series this month using confidenti­al documents and emails from clubs and soccer bodies. Those documents included Real Madrid's Super League proposal.

Agnelli, the president of Italian champion Juventus, said clubs had not formally discussed a breakaway plan since 2015.

"I have nothing to be ashamed about of what happened in the past," he said, adding that neither Juventus nor the Switzerlan­d-based ECA appeared to have had data systems hacked.

Agnelli said the 232-member ECA is preparing to extend its working agreement with UEFA beyond 2022.

Ahead of 2024, European clubs will have a big say in potential changes agreed on with UEFA and FIFA.

Agnelli reiterated that a key issue will be agreeing on the socalled "Internatio­nal Match Calendar" which determines when internatio­nal competitio­ns for national and club teams will be played.

It could lead to 20-team leagues in England and Spain being cut in size to harmonise fixture schedules in different countries.

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