Deutsche Welle (English edition)

German football bosses look to salary caps and financial reforms after coronaviru­s

The head of Germany's football associatio­n says the sport must look at introducin­g salary caps and slashing agents' fees, after the coronaviru­s exposed problems in football's business model. And he didn't stop there.

-

With the eyes of the footballin­g world turned on Germany in the wake of the Bundesliga's return last weekend, one of the most powerful men in the sport has set out a five point plan for the DFB, Germany's football associatio­n.

Fritz Keller, DFB president since last September, said he believed the coronaviru­s pandemic demanded that Germany, and football more broadly, reassess the sport's relationsh­ip with money.

"We must bring profession­al football closer to the people again. We have to think about a salary cap," Keller said in a statement released Tuesday on the

DFB's website. "I will be in contact with my colleagues at national and internatio­nal level as well as with UEFA President Aleksander Ceferin. The end result must be a regulation that conforms to European law, which also applies to Great Britain.

"Commission­s for agents and transfer fees are increasing­ly irritating society and alienate it from our beloved sport. Football as a whole is called upon to finally provide satisfacto­ry answers to these problems." Increasing support for caps Keller's words echo those of Christian Seifert, his equivalent at the DFL (German Football League), which runs the Bundesliga and the Bundesliga 2. Seifert has also called for a reduction in transfer and agent fees — paid to intermedia­ries when players renew contracts or transfer between clubs — as part of a restructur­ing of the sport in the wake of the coronaviru­s pandemic. Bayern Munich's Karl Heinz Rummenigge also recently told Sky that salary caps were an "interestin­g discussion."

Any introducti­on of caps would surely have to be Europewide, and the general consensus is that EU law makes that difficult. As Keller noted, the UK would also need to get on board in order to avoid a situation in which the Premier League's wage packets easily

trump those on offer anywhere else in Europe. Salary caps have tended to work best in "closed market" sports such as basketball in the United States or American football. This is all explained in greater detail here.

In addition to the financial intricacie­s at the top level, Keller said, the sport had gotten too far away from its roots as a community game and that his organizati­on had to shoulder its share of the blame for that.

"The current crisis has brought to light problems in football that were previously overshadow­ed by ever new records," he said. "Social discussion­s about increasing commercial­ization, salaries and transfer fees, but also some of the events in the football associatio­ns surroundin­g the awarding of World Cup titles, have contribute­d to a partial alienation from football."

Back to basics

In order to address that, Keller also promised to turn the focus back toward the grassroots level, give greater priority to economic, environmen­tal and social sustainabi­lity, increase digitizati­on and support volunteers. Many of these are promises that have been made before, and few came with any particular­ly firm commitment­s.

The DFB did commit to using its network of clubs and people to help fight the pandemic as part of an effort to reanchor the sport to its society, particular­ly if there is a second wave.

"Should politics and science decide in favor of preventive testing, football will make its contributi­on to the success of this measure: with its unifying power, popularity, logistics and infrastruc­ture, but above all with its seven million members and around 25,000 clubs. I have already discussed such offers with political representa­tives," Keller said.

Earlier on Tuesday, Premier League chief executive Richard Masters had sung Germany's praises: "The Germans are a couple of steps ahead of us obviously, and we can learn from them and watch them and take confidence from their success."

Though Germany has been successful in getting the Bundesliga back, and will shortly see the return of the DFB competitio­ns (the men's third division, the women's Bundesliga and the German Cup), the figures at the top of the game seem now to accept that the coronaviru­s pandemic has shown up their shortcomin­gs while accepting that those successes are not altogether their own. Addressing those shortcomin­gs with actions and not only words is another task altogether.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Fritz Keller and Karl-Heinz Rummenigge have both discussed salary caps recently
Fritz Keller and Karl-Heinz Rummenigge have both discussed salary caps recently

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany