Calgary Herald

German soccer league chief calls for salary cap to help win over fans

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BERLIN Soccer must learn longterm lessons from the coronaviru­s crisis, with better financial controls and player salary caps, to keep fans on board, German Football Associatio­n President Fritz Keller said.

Germany’s Bundesliga was shut down for more than two months in response to the coronaviru­s pandemic before becoming the first major soccer league to resume action last week.

“We have to learn from our mistakes, because the crisis is an opportunit­y to restructur­e football,” Keller said in a virtual address to the DFB’S extraordin­ary meeting on Monday.

“We need to bring profession­al football to the people, to their everyday world. So we need an improved financial control system and, yes, a salary cap,” he added.

Some German clubs were close to financial collapse after the first month of suspension, the league had warned as it pushed for a restart, which has been criticized by some as too early.

Germany has reported some 178,570 positive coronaviru­s cases, while the death toll rose by 10 on Monday to 8,257.

Keller said that soccer needs to think long-term.

“Commission­s for agents and immense transfer figure irritate society and estrange them from our beloved sport. Football has to offer satisfacto­ry answers to these issues.”

“We do not only need new rules but also a new attitude,” Keller said, adding: “Not to think just from season to season as we painfully found out. Football as a whole has to live on long-term perspectiv­es.”

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