The Citizen (Gauteng)

‘Big Six’ make a very hasty exit

THREATS: FAN POWER FORCES ENGLISH CLUBS OUT OF ESL

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London

In just 48 hours, English football fans forced four billionair­es, a Russian oligarch and an Emirati sheikh into a hasty retreat as the European Super League collapsed with the withdrawal of six Premier League clubs.

The owners of Manchester United, Liverpool, Manchester City, Chelsea, Arsenal and Tottenham had signed up with six other Spanish and Italian clubs to a money-spinning European Super League (ESL) project, but with far-reaching consequenc­es for the rest of the football pyramid.

On the back of a fans revolt, government­s and governing bodies mobilised to threaten the “dirty dozen” with expulsion from domestic and continenta­l competitio­ns.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson even proposed dropping a “legislativ­e bomb” on the Premier League “big six” threatenin­g to break away.

After more than a year in soulless stadiums, with supporters shut out due to coronaviru­s restrictio­ns, perhaps those running the clubs forgot the importance of the match-going fan.

The show has gone on behind closed doors to protect lucrative television contracts of the sort the breakaway clubs thought they were buying into.

A $3.5 billion pot was to be shared among the founder members of the ESL, borrowed against future TV rights revenues.

However, after years of being pushed around to accommodat­e prime kick-off times in San Francisco and Shanghai, inflated ticket prices and with less say in how their club is run, supporters in England have emerged triumphant.

“It doesn’t matter what club you are, it doesn’t matter what allegiance, it’s not tribal, it’s about the rich, the few, the minority trying to take what is our game,” said Chelsea fan Will Todd, at a fan protest ahead of Tuesday’s Premier League game against Brighton.

The furious backlash could prove the tipping point over the issue of the open nature of club ownership in England.

“The whole ESL move shows how out of touch these owners are,” said British culture secretary Oliver Dowden in promising to still press ahead with a fan-led review of football governance.

The disconnect with English football culture is a physical as well as emotional one as not one of the owners from the breakaway six live in Britain.

United, Liverpool and Arsenal are owned by US-based billionair­es, used to working in the American sports franchise model without the perils of having to earn a place in the top leagues every year.

Chelsea and Manchester City have become global brands on the back of investment from Roman Abramovich and Abu Dhabi’s Sheikh Mansour.

Tottenham are the only British-owned club of the six, but even their billionair­e owner, Joe Lewis, resides in the Bahamas.

The Manchester United Supporters’ Trust (MUST) said: “This must be a turning point for football, and it must be a turning point for United too.”

The Chelsea Supporters Trust said it had “little or no confidence in our current leadership at board level”.

But there remains a long road ahead for supporters if they want to oust unpopular owners. –

 ?? Pictures: AFP ?? THE FANS HAVE SPOKEN. Banners critical of the European Super League project hang from the railings of Anfield and Old Trafford (below). The proposed league appeared dead in the water today after all six English clubs withdrew following a furious backlash from supporters.
Pictures: AFP THE FANS HAVE SPOKEN. Banners critical of the European Super League project hang from the railings of Anfield and Old Trafford (below). The proposed league appeared dead in the water today after all six English clubs withdrew following a furious backlash from supporters.
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