The National - News

Super League organisers unveil new plans after court ruling

- THE NATIONAL

Promoters of the breakaway European Super League announced plans for a new 64-team men’s tournament following a ruling from the European Court of Justice that stated that Uefa and Fifa broke the law by blocking a rival competitio­n.

The original league proposal in 2021, which included six top teams from England, three from Italy and three from Spain, fell apart just days after its creation following a public uproar and threats from world governing body Fifa and Uefa of sanctions.

On Thursday, Europe’s top court adjudged that “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”.

And soon after the legal victory, A22 Sports Management, which was set up in late 2022 to promote the Super League after a failed launch, announced plans for a new competitio­n.

According to them, the tournament will feature promotion and relegation and would be broadcast live for free “on a new streaming platform” called Unify.

“Football is free. Free from the monopoly of UEFA, free to pursue the best ideas without fear of sanctions,” A22 CEO Bernd Reichart said in a streamed video presentati­on in reaction to the court’s ruling.

The original project featured just 12 clubs. However, now the proposal involves 64 teams to be split into three separate leagues, with 16 clubs in the top Star league, divided into two groups of eight.

A second tier, known as the Gold league, would feature 16 clubs in two groups of eight. The third tier, the Blue league, would have 32 clubs in four groups of eight. Also, a women’s competitio­n with 32 clubs across two leagues has been proposed.A22 also said that it will offer “a minimum of €400 million” in solidarity payments to other European clubs, “more than double the current amount” distribute­d by Uefa.

However, the path ahead is not so straightfo­rward. The European Club Associatio­n (ECA) said football on the continent is “more united than ever” despite the top court ruling. “European Club Associatio­n, representi­ng nearly 500 profession­al football clubs across Europe, takes note of the judgment,” it said in a statement. “The judgment in no way supports or endorses any form of Super League project.”

Also, English clubs are still unlikely to join a revived plan. The league’s financial power has grown in the past two years, and a UK government bill announced last month proposed powers to block English teams from joining a breakaway league.

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