Rumours of a private competition between Europe's biggest clubs have been igniting world football for several months. On the night of Sunday to Monday, the project of a European competition called Superleague becomes official. It aims to compete with existing federal competitions such as the famous Champions League. The threat seems so concrete that UEFA and FIFA have been quick to react by threatening to exclude dissenting teams and punish players who participate. French and German clubs would not take part in the competition. A revolution to come in the world of football? Back on this bombshell…
An elitist competition?
The opposition of UEFA and FIFA
Before the formalization of the European Superleague, UEFA, FIFA and several federations threatened all clubs wishing to participate in this new competition. As in January, when FIFA and UEFA signed a joint statement to curb any dissident projects, the football authorities threatened clubs and their players with exclusion from current competitions, including the Euro or the World Cup: "The clubs concerned will be banned from participating in any other competition at national, European or world level, and their players could be denied the opportunity to represent their national teams. In addition, clubs could be banned from all European competitions but also from their respective championships. For any founding club wishing to withdraw from the Superleague, after exclusion from their national championship, it will be necessary to start again from the 5th division. FIFA also expressed its opposition to the project: "From our point of view and in accordance with our statutes, any football competition, whether national, continental or global, must embody the principles of solidarity, inclusiveness, integrity and fairness in financial redistribution. In view of this, FIFA can only express its disagreement with a 'closed European Super League', outside the structures of international football and which does not respect the principles mentioned above."
The European Club Association (ECA), which includes all the leaders of European football, also said on Sunday that it was "strongly opposed to a closed Superleague model". This strong position of the ECA is all the more surprising as this union is often seen as the mouthpiece of the most powerful European clubs.
It is an earthquake that is hitting the football planet. It is difficult to really understand what is happening now and to realize the repercussions that this could have. One thing is certain, many things will change. Business to follow…