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  • An introduction to Top Soccer News on theScore ??

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  • Real Madrid beat Dortmund to win 15th European Cup

Soccer

Fans target owners, VAR in government-backed 'overhaul' of English football

The Football Supporters’ Association (FSA) and the U.K. government are overseeing an extensive review of football in England and Wales designed to put fans at the center of the sport’s governance.

Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool, Manchester City, Manchester United, and Tottenham Hotspur were set to join the European Super League until they bowed to fan pressure and backed out on Tuesday, triggering the competition’s collapse after only two days.

That particular threat to the domestic game is over, but Tracey Crouch – a Conservative MP for a constituency in southern England and the former sports minister – will still lead the government’s supporter-led review of the nation’s sport.

“What the last few days have highlighted is that football in this country does need a complete overhaul,” Ashley Brown, head of supporter engagement and governance at the FSA, told theScore on Wednesday.

“Crazy decisions such as the European Super League (shouldn’t) even get talked about, let alone see the light of day,” he added.

PAUL ELLIS / AFP / Getty

Brown doesn’t know yet if the government’s review will be a definitive partnership with the FSA.

However, he confirms government representatives contacted the representative body for fans in England and Wales before and after it announced its own investigation. He also hopes the Conservatives’ inquiry will lead to “wider support and recognition from the government” for the FSA, which relies on sponsors and football-focused charities to operate.

Crouch “will do a root and branch investigation into the governance of football and what we can do to promote the role of fans in that governance,” British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Wednesday, according to The Guardian’s Peter Walker and Haroon Siddique.

The FSA’s review, with or without government assistance, intends to look into every aspect of how football is run.

Brown says Germany’s 50+1 rule – which ensures club members hold a majority of voting rights – is ideal as an ownership model, but he appreciates it would be difficult to force into the longstanding structures of English football. Instead, a more realistic aim would be to form an independent regulatory body to oversee the sport’s governance, and also to introduce a different class of shares at clubs, giving fans an opportunity to approve and veto key decisions.

And after the Super League movement underlined the big clubs’ preoccupation with money in their decision-making, it’s clear an extensive look into football’s vast financial chasm is required.

“Why is all this money passing through the clubs into the hands of a few people?” Brown said. “So, of course, we’ve got to talk about player salaries as well, we’ve got to talk about parachute payments, all these topics which have had a detrimental impact on the game need to be addressed as a whole. So, it’s a holistic review that we very much require.”

The use of Video Assistant Referees (VAR) was already under review before the Super League plot arose. The FSA has conducted a huge survey into the popularity of VAR, Brown says, and the Premier League is taking a keen interest in the results.

Clive Brunskill / Getty Images Sport / Getty

Brown isn’t able to divulge the outcome of the survey until it’s publicized in the coming days, but he did offer an ironic response when pressed on the FSA’s findings.

“I don’t think anyone would be surprised about how popular VAR is with the fans,” he said.

The FSA’s ambitions aren’t restricted to its own shores. The group is also assisting umbrella organization Football Supporters Europe, the pan-European body that represents football supporters across the continent, in its efforts to shake up UEFA’s operations.

The groups are dismayed at UEFA’s weak anti-racism stance and the reformatting of its competitions that, Brown explains, put “more pressure, particularly in this country, on some of our other historic competitions and their continued existence.”

The FSA and other representative bodies of fans across Europe are determined that the fallout following the Super League’s collapse isn’t over, and the rebuild is just beginning.

“Nothing is off the table,” Brown said.

Soccer

Super League collapses as English clubs withdraw on wild day of U-turns

The Super League has crumbled as quickly as it arose.

Amid a furious backlash, all six English clubs decided to leave the ESL just days after revealing their intention to join the competition.

Manchester City led the way Tuesday, announcing they “formally enacted the procedures” to withdraw hours before Arsenal, Tottenham Hotspur, Liverpool, Manchester United, and Chelsea made their exits official.

Arsenal are the only club thus far to offer an official apology to their fans.

AC Milan are also pulling out of the breakaway venture, according to The Athletic’s David Ornstein. Atletico Madrid and Barcelona are believed to be out, as well, according to The Times’ Matt Lawton, though there are conflicting reports about the Spanish teams’ stance.

In the wake of the mass exodus, the Super League said it would “reconsider” the project.

Spurs chairman Daniel Levy said he regrets “the anxiety and upset caused by the ESL proposal” but felt “it was important that our club participated in the development of a possible new structure that sought to better ensure financial fair play and financial sustainability.”

Real Madrid, Juventus, and Inter Milan would be the only remaining founding members of the Super League. It’s unclear if they will also withdraw, though it now seems inevitable.

Amid the chaos of the apparently failed tournament, beleaguered Manchester United executive Ed Woodward reportedly resigned.

“I am delighted to welcome City back to the European football family,” said UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin, who earlier in the day encouraged the teams to admit their mistake and change course. “They have shown great intelligence in listening to the many voices – most notably their fans – that have spelled out the vital benefits that the current system has for the whole of European football.”

Response to the Super League has been scathing since plans were announced on Sunday, with fans, players, coaches, national governments, and, of course, the sport’s governing bodies condemning the idea of a closed event. UEFA blasted the so-called “dirty dozen,” threatening sanctions, including banning players from the World Cup.

Over 1,000 fans gathered outside Stamford Bridge on Tuesday to protest the proposed league, which was met with widespread derision when 12 of the continent’s richest teams pledged to band together.

Less than two hours after the protests began, reports started filtering in that the Blues were pulling out of the competition.

The scene at Stamford Bridge as it’s reported Chelsea preparing to withdraw pic.twitter.com/meZpntKiBc

— Miguel Delaney (@MiguelDelaney) April 20, 2021

Europe’s biggest sides engineered the planned 20-team event to guarantee a consistent and massive revenue stream. The 12 founding members had agreed to share an initial pot worth €3.5 billion.

The Super League was viewed as a Champions League replacement, with teams hoping to continue competing in domestic competitions. But the concept of a closed league, in which 15 clubs would be permanent members, was lambasted.

Fans protested in the streets, players and managers spoke out, and, ultimately, it appears that was enough to derail a plan that top clubs have long held over UEFA as leverage.

Bayern Munich flatly rejected the idea, while Paris Saint-Germain refused to offer support.

“It’s not a sport when the relation between effort and reward doesn’t exist,” Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola said Tuesday, echoing one of the most prominent complaints about the idea.

Soccer

Report: United players unhappy after Super League bombshell

Manchester United’s involvement in the new European Super League was just as much of a shock to players as it was to supporters, according to Laurie Whitwell and other contributors from The Athletic.

“The boys aren’t happy,” a source close to the players said. “They feel exposed by the club, uninformed, and as though the club didn’t bother to fill them in or consult the players over career-influencing changes.”

Those involved with other impacted Premier League sides revealed similar concerns. An Arsenal insider told The Athletic the team’s players were also angry over a lack of communication from club officials.

Additionally, one footballer from a top-six side expressed concern over UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin’s threat that players who compete in the Super League risk being banned from continental and international tournaments.

Manchester United announced Sunday night that they, along with 11 other teams, intend to participate in the breakaway competition, which would rival UEFA’s Champions League.

Executive vice-chairman Ed Woodward reportedly told manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer of the team’s involvement just before kick-off Sunday against Burnley, The Athletic adds.

Manchester United star Bruno Fernandes appeared to speak out against the European Super League in an Instagram post Monday, saying, “Dreams can’t be (bought).”

Meanwhile, Manchester United supporters gathered outside of Old Trafford on Monday to express their opposition to the controversial plan:

Man United fans making their feelings clear at Old Trafford. pic.twitter.com/z3sDrfmtj0

— Martha Kelner (@marthakelner) April 19, 2021

United and Arsenal are two of six English teams involved in the Super League, along with Manchester City, Chelsea, Liverpool, and Tottenham Hotspur.

Soccer

12 of Europe's biggest clubs agree to form Super League

Twelve of Europe’s biggest and richest clubs have agreed to form a breakaway league, dubbed the “Super League,” that threatens to derail the longstanding structures of the sport.

After widespread reports about the formation of the 20-team competition, the dozen founding members confirmed their involvement Sunday evening.

Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool, Manchester City, Manchester United, Tottenham Hotspur, Atletico Madrid, Barcelona, Real Madrid, AC Milan, Inter Milan, and Juventus are the clubs that have agreed to participate.

Three additional teams are expected to join ahead of the inaugural season, the Super League said, adding that the competition will begin as “soon as practicable.”

The remaining five teams would vary each season based on performance.

“The new annual tournament will provide significantly greater economic growth and support for European football via a long-term commitment to uncapped solidarity payments which will grow in line with league revenues,” read a Super League statement. “These solidarity payments will be substantially higher than those generated by the current European competition and are expected to be in excess of €10 billion during the course of the initial commitment period of the clubs.”

The founding clubs will receive a one-time payment of €3.5 billion.

Investment bank JP Morgan is underwriting the project, sources told Mark Ogden of ESPN.

The move threatens the existence of the Champions League, Europe’s premier club event. The Super League’s proposal notes that matches will take place in the middle of the week, a slot the Champions League currently occupies.

In response to Sunday’s development, which Martyn Ziegler and Matt Lawton of The Times first reported, UEFA reiterated its stance that clubs and players involved in any breakaway competition will face serious sanctions.

UEFA issued a joint statement with the Premier League, La Liga, Serie A, and the football federations in Spain and Italy, saying that the groups remain “united in our efforts to stop this cynical project.”

“Football is based on open competitions and sporting merit; it cannot be any other way,” read the statement. “As previously announced by FIFA and the six federations, the clubs concerned will be banned from playing in any other competition at domestic, European, or world level, and their players could be denied the opportunity to represent their national teams.”

Though UEFA explicitly thanked German and French teams for refusing to sign up for the breakaway competition, two Bundesliga sides and one Ligue 1 outfit will be among the initial participants, according to Ogden.

The potential creation of a Super League has long hung over European football, with top clubs using the possibility of the competition to squeeze more money and control out of UEFA.

Sunday’s news comes after the European Club Association and UEFA reportedly agreed on a plan to revamp the Champions League. UEFA is expected to announce Monday a new 36-team format – a style that would give major clubs a larger share of revenue generated.

Juventus quit the ECA in the immediate aftermath of the Super League plans going public, reports Rob Harris of The Associated Press. Club chairman Andrea Agnelli, who had been heavily involved in talks regarding a revamped Champions League, also resigned as ECA chairman and relinquished his position on UEFA’s executive committee.

Agnelli is the vice president of the Super League, along with Manchester United co-chairman Joel Glazer. Real Madrid chief Florentino Perez is the president.

The other 11 founding Super League clubs are expected to follow suit and leave the ECA.

The teams said they want to continue competing in domestic leagues, while a corresponding women’s league will also be created, the Super League noted.

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Soccer

  • Watch: Carvajal's header delivers killer blow for Madrid in UCL final

  • An introduction to Top Soccer News on theScore ??

  • An introduction to Top Soccer News on theScore ??

  • Real Madrid beat Dortmund to win 15th European Cup

  • Police arrest dozens of ticket-less fans at Wembley final

  • Dortmund boss Terzic lauds 'brilliant' Sancho after UCL defeat

  • Modric, Kroos among Madrid stars to make history with latest UCL triumph

  • Madrid's inevitability is a superpower no rival can match

  • Transfer window preview: 50 players who could move this summer

  • Vinicius Jr. named Champions League Player of the Season

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