The Scotsman

Big clubs still call the tune as Euros play second fiddle

- By SAM CUNNINGHAM

If ever there was doubt that internatio­nal football was no longer the pinnacle and still took precedent over club competitio­ns, that debate was ended yesterday.

Faced with the impossible task of fitting in Euro 2020 and at the same time trying to untangle that mess of the club football calendar following the outbreak of Covid-19, Uefa made the right call to postpone its flagship internatio­nal competitio­n for a year to allow the 2019-20 club competitio­ns to be completed, whenever that may be.

There was never going to be a final resolution from yesterday’s summit conducted via video calls, they were never going to be able to give a definitive date for the 2019-20 season to resume as nobody knows how the world will react to the pandemic in the coming months. But Uefa’s intention was to at least set sail in a certain direction, to help its member leagues and clubs prepare and plan, and they cast off yesterday, still into the unknown but intent on the current campaign resuming at a later date.

As Uefa president Aleksander Ceferin pointed out, Uefa took a big financial hit in turning Euro 2020 into Euro 2020+1, but probably not as much as a hit had it announced that the Champions League, which had just reached its juiciest stages, was to be scrapped.

A working group had been set up with the view to continuing 2019-20 at a later date.

How rosy those relationsh­ips will remain as the months tick by and we see the wider effects of the coronaviru­s on society remains to be seen. Then, perhaps, the real hierarchy of football will be exposed and we will see what takes priority over what.

Football is full of political disputes, competing factions, vested interests, backstabbi­ng, deal-making. Where there is significan­t money there is power, and where there is power there is conflict.

Uefa made sure to exert its authority on proceeding­s in the public announceme­nts. “We are at the helm of a sport that vast numbers of people live and breathe that has been laid low by this invisible and fast-moving opponent,” their Ceferin said. Adding later in his statement: “It was important that, as the governing body of European football, Uefa led the process and made the biggest sacrifice.” Euro 2020 was due to begin on 12 June in Rome and is now scheduled for next year from 11 June to 11 July, in the same 12 host nations, with Glasgow to stage four matches.

“We think postponing the Euro is the only (way) to get a chance to the national leagues and to all the club competitio­ns to finish,” Ceferin said.

The European Championsh­ip final typically attracts a broadcast audience of 300 million worldwide and the 51-game tournament made Uefa a profit of €830 million (£756m) four years ago.

Ceferin estimated the cost of postponing the tournament at “hundreds of millions” of euros. Uefa reported reserves of €574.8m (£523m) in its annual accounts published this month.

Playing in June 2021 also takes match dates from other national team games for which Uefa already sold broadcast and sponsor rights.

Euro 2020 was scheduled to

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