Daily Mail

IT’S DIABOLICAL... SHEER ARROGANCE AND GREED

Legends from the Shameless Six clubs have their say

- Interviews by Dominic King, Jack Gaughan, Kieran Gill, Matt Barlow and Chris Wheeler.

MARTIN KEOWN ARSENAL 449 APPEARANCE­S

ON my first day at Arsenal I was handed a little booklet which explained the conduct expected of me. Even now I remember flicking through it and seeing the club’s motto: ‘Remember who you are, what you are and who you represent.’

That was spelled out to me and everyone else who joined.

But in becoming one of the dirty dozen to sign up for this Super League, Arsenal are forgetting who they are, what they are and who they represent.

We have to hope this talk of breaking away is extreme posturing at the negotiatio­n table. These club executives have always wanted to extract more money from UEFA, and news of this Super League comes as the 36-team Champions League is being approved. If this was a game of poker, they’d be going all-in. Now we wait to see if they win or if it backfires.

I hope it doesn’t go through and believe it won’t. To create a closed shop flies in the face of fair competitio­n. When Arsene Wenger left Arsenal in 2018, he said, ‘Take care of the values of the club’. This doesn’t fit with that wish.

you never hear from these mega-rich owners. Now they’ve put their managers in awkward positions as they face questions about why they want to run away and form their own league. But it isn’t on them. It’s on the greedy owners who don’t seem to care about the values of football.

WAYNE ROONEY MAN UNITED 559 APPEARANCE­S

WHAT Gary Neville is saying is right, but let’s see what comes from it. Whether it’s good news or bad news, we can all have a clearer opinion on the situation.

I completely understand the frustratio­n from everyone. It’s strange timing and a strange situation to come out.

Football is working fine the way it is at the minute. Let’s see if they’re looking to improve that or it’s a backward step. What you have to look at is the history of English football. If this is something on top of what we’ve got, the competitio­ns the teams are playing in, then that’s a decision for those clubs to take.

If they totally break away from the Premier League and the domestic cup competitio­ns in England, I don’t think that would be a great look.

ALAN MULLERY TOTTENHAM 374 APPEARANCE­S

THE whole idea is absolutely diabolical. I saw Gary Neville on the television and thought he spoke outstandin­gly well. It’s the principle of the matter. you’re talking about getting rid of what we’ve called football for more than 100 years and now they want to change everything when there’s nothing wrong with our game here in England.

People always wanted to play here and to come and watch our football. We have always been able to attract top-class players. Now we find these clubs want to break all that up and change everything because it means they will get huge sums of money.

I don’t know about the finances behind it — it seems to be about money and nothing else. I find it quite sad.

MARK LAWRENSON LIVERPOOL 356 APPEARANCE­S

THE more I think about it, the less I can fathom it. yes, I know this is all about money — isn’t everything these days? — but it’s the willingnes­s to turn your back on history and shut down the stories that have made our club what it is that is hardest to comprehend.

I’m one of the lucky ones. I got my hands on the European Cup in 1984. I’ll never be able to put into words the exhilarati­ng feeling of winning it. What made it so special was how we used to have to go into the unknown and overcome the challenges that were placed in front of us.

Beating Panathinai­kos in a European Cup semi-final, being told by Bob Paisley not to drink the local water in Tbilisi, silencing a baying crowd in Bucharest — that is the story of Liverpool and helped the club get its reputation. European tradition did not come by playing the same teams each year.

As a football supporter you love your club unconditio­nally, but these guys, Fenway Sports Group, just do not get it. They might own Liverpool but this shows me that they will never understand what they have got.

It’s the sheer arrogance of it all that bothers me. I’m surprised and disappoint­ed that our club has gone down this road.

In the middle of a global pandemic, the timing is awful. And for what? more cash and a bigger slice of the pie.

PAT NEVIN CHELSEA 242 APPEARANCE­S

I’m not convinced all of the clubs were desperatel­y keen to be involved in such an extreme way. It seems like a game of poker and they’ve thrown in the biggest chip and gone almost all-in. They must have known they would get some stick but they might be shocked because I don’t think anyone’s behind them. They’ve got the hackles up of absolutely everyone. I’ve yet to talk to anyone who thinks it’s a decent idea.

I’m old-fashioned enough to have not enjoyed the Premier League doing what it did. It was the same thing in a smaller way, cutting off those beneath and making sure vast sums of money went to an elite group.

I don’t particular­ly like it. That’s not my politics but that’s how the business world works. These clubs are coming from different points. Some will be trying to maximise the opportunit­y and others need to get out of schtuck, but they’re all businesses so there’s a fear of being left out.

I’d be amazed if Chelsea were one of the driving forces. But you miss the train and you’re left behind on the platform, and if you’re not in the original group you’re already at a massive disadvanta­ge.

MICAH RICHARDS MANCHESTER CITY 245 APPEARANCE­S

WE HAVE seen everybody throwing stones at manchester City over the years, since the new owners came in and transforme­d the club. Throughout that, the current owners have handled themselves impeccably. They have tried to keep that feel of a family club.

So when this news came out, it felt like a bit of a slap in the face for City supporters, as it did for fans of all the clubs involved.

This is a complicate­d situation for clubs, but I do not want this European Super League to go ahead and would be disappoint­ed if it does and City are part it.

Perhaps the City hierarchy felt caught between a rock and a hard place. It’s fair to suspect that Sheik mansour would not have been amongst the instigator­s of the European Super League. There are a few establishe­d European giants who will have been driving it. For the rest — and that includes City — you suspect they have that fear of missing out.

The beauty of the Champions League has been its unpredicta­bility. Playing the same teams every single year doesn’t appeal to me. What good is that to anybody? many will look at it as greed, and I would be in agreement.

I’m not sure it will happen, it feels there are many barriers. Regardless, whichever way this now goes, the ramificati­ons will be significan­t.

 ?? AFP ?? Spelling it out: United fans show their hostility toward the Glazer family at Old Trafford in 2010
AFP Spelling it out: United fans show their hostility toward the Glazer family at Old Trafford in 2010
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