The Guardian (USA)

A bigger, more diverse European super league can help enrich football

- Philipp Lahm

Football has changed for the better. In the 1980s, it was open season on artists like Diego Maradona, with foul specialist­s sent in to stop him. You can watch the clips on YouTube, and be horrified. The end, back then, justified all means.

Today, tripping and brutal tackles are heavily penalised, and such fouls have all but disappeare­d. The internatio­nal football community agreed on the stricter approach in a transparen­t process. Players must now play fair, and fouls are seen as a last resort. These days, the end is justified by the means. For this developmen­t, from which I profited as a player, I would like to thank all those involved.

This example shows how important it is to establish rules that take everyone’s interests into account. It has proven extremely beneficial to our sport, particular­ly in internatio­nal matches. It has allowed the Champions League to transform into a scintillat­ing competitio­n.

With the quarter-finals in train, let’s take a brief moment to consider: why do we even play football? For fame, glory, success – financial success as well – for entertainm­ent and for spectacle. More than anything, though, it teaches us to cooperate and collaborat­e with others.

A shared set of rules is of particular importance. In football, that means: two goals set up on a rectangula­r field. Only one player is allowed to pick the ball up with their hands. The same offside rules apply to Porto and to Chelsea. If the referee misses a penalty for the Hungarians, all fans find it just as unfair as they would if it happened to the Swedes. The fact that adjustment­s must constantly be made can be seen by the currently inconsiste­nt applicatio­n of the rules governing handballs and by the discussion over financial fair play. There will never be absolute equity.

There are also, of course, rules in basketball, table tennis and the Eurovision song contest. But the impact of football is greater. This global sport that fills stadiums around the world offers unique opportunit­ies for encounters far beyond one’s own national borders. People everywhere play the game or participat­e as fans, whether it’s the Champions League final or the European Championsh­ip. And these two formats – that of national teams and club teams – complement and benefit each other.

Football is the most popular sport in 120 countries around the world, and there is hardly a European country in which it isn’t ranked No 1. When it comes to football, all others measure themselves against our continent. The last time the world champion didn’t come from Europe was 2002. And European

club football is the Silicon Valley of the sport.

The brand names aren’t Facebook, Amazon and Google, but Real, Juventus, PSG, Arsenal, Barça, Bayern, City and United. Through digitisati­on and globalisat­ion, they have developed worldwide communitie­s. Fans of Bayern can be found just as easily in Shanghai as in Oberpfaffe­nhofen. Because their markets have been rapidly expanding for several years, these top brands have turned into monopolies of sorts, a status that will only become more entrenched in the years to come. Five of the eight teams in this year’s Champions League quarter-finals come from England and Germany, the two strongest leagues financiall­y.

This brings us to an issue that also needs attention: who is allowed to participat­e? In recent years, the biggest teams have voiced a desire to create a super league of the 16 to 20 strongest clubs in Europe. Resistance to that idea is born out of concerns that it would establish a football elite. On the other hand, though, clubs and players would like to compete with their equals. The arrival of the Bundesliga in 1963 was accompanie­d by similar concerns, but it became a great success.

Just as I am a fan (leaving aside the pandemic for a moment) of the concept behind holding the European Championsh­ip in 12 European cities, I quite like the cosmopolit­an idea underpinni­ng a European league. At the moment, clubs from only five or six countries would participat­e – namely the establishe­d teams from Madrid, Manchester, Munich, Paris and London. But just as players from Istanbul, Warsaw and Bratislava get their shot in the Euros, would it not be better to include teams from Bruges, St Petersburg, Athens, Copenhagen and Prague in a European league? Investors are cer

tainly interested in such attractive locations. It should also not be forgotten that the beginnings of the European Union came in the 1950s with just six countries.

The top beneficiar­ies of current developmen­ts, the top brands, bear a significan­t share of the responsibi­lity. In my role as tournament director of Euro 2024 and in my new column, which appears in many different countries and languages, I would like to take part in this debate. Critical participat­ion from fans and the media is helpful. Europe is the continent of the Enlightenm­ent, and football can make a small contributi­on to the strengthen­ing of democracy.

I find it important to mention one last thing: every country, every club should preserve – or even emphasise – its own identity and distinguis­hing characteri­stics. Cultural particular­ities enrich the whole. Italian football has different strengths than the game played in Spain, England or Germany. Our continent has brought forth champions from places as different from each other as Denmark, Greece, the Netherland­s, the former Czechoslov­akia,

the former Soviet Union and

Portugal. In 2018 Croatia reached the

World Cup final. Poland, Hungary and Austria have all taken their turn at the top of European football. Ajax, Dynamo Kyiv, Red Star Belgrade, Benfica and MTK Budapest have achieved glory in the past. Football greats have come from Bulgaria, Finland, Romania, Wales and Norway. Diversity is Europe’s strength.

• Philipp Lahm was captain of the 2014 Germany team that won the World Cup and is the tournament director for Euro 2024. His “Views of a footballer” column will appear regularly in the Guardian. It is produced in partnershi­p with Oliver Fritsch at Zeit Online, the German online magazine, and is being published in several European countries.

All others measure themselves against our continent – European club football is the Silicon Valley of the sport

 ??  ?? Club Brugge against Manchester United in the Europa League last February. ‘Just as players from Istanbul, Warsaw and Bratislava get their shot in the Euros, should teams from Bruges, St Petersburg, Athens, Copenhagen and Prague not play in a European league?’ Photograph: Jean Catuffe/Getty Images
Club Brugge against Manchester United in the Europa League last February. ‘Just as players from Istanbul, Warsaw and Bratislava get their shot in the Euros, should teams from Bruges, St Petersburg, Athens, Copenhagen and Prague not play in a European league?’ Photograph: Jean Catuffe/Getty Images

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