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Super League: Why are football's biggest clubs starting a new tournament? - BBC News

james Milner of Liverpool is fouled by Casemiro of Real Madrid during the UEFA Champions League Quarter Final Second Leg match between Liverpool FC and Real Madrid at Anfield on April 14, 2021
Michael Regan

A plan by some of the world's biggest football clubs to start a new European Super League (ESL), has provoked strong opposition.

The clubs involved say the ESL will benefit football as a whole, but critics say it's driven by greed.

Which teams want the Super League?

Twelve clubs have signed up - six of them from the English Premier League.

Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool, Manchester City, Manchester United and Tottenham, would join AC Milan, Atletico Madrid, Barcelona, Inter Milan, Juventus and Real Madrid.

The clubs want a new midweek competition and to continue competing in national leagues.

The ESL would have 20 teams. Of these, the 12 founding members - plus three yet to join - would be permanent and never face relegation.

Five other sides would qualify each year.

The new league would rival the current Champions League competition, one of the biggest club tournaments in football.

the 12 teams that have signed up for the ESL

Why is the plan widely opposed?

The move has been condemned by fans, pundits and by most football bodies not involved.

With 15 teams in the ESL not facing qualification or relegation, critics say it will create a closed shop at the top of football.

The Premier League says it "attacks the principles of open competition and sporting merit".

Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden said the plans threatened the pyramid structure of English football, "where funds from the globally successful Premier League flow down the leagues and into local communities".

There's also the fear that the ESL would draw huge global TV audiences away from existing leagues such as England's Premier League and Italy's Serie A.

Why do the teams want a Super League?

Money seems to be the driving force.

Football club revenues have been hit hard by the Covid pandemic, with disrupted fixtures and a lack of spectators.

Big clubs have superstar players with multi-million pound salaries to be paid.

The net financial debts of the top Premier League teams

The founding clubs are being enticed with a share of a €3.5bn (£3bn) grant provided by the investment bank JP Morgan.

The ESL argues the new tournament "will provide significantly greater economic growth and support for European football".

How would the Super League work?

Under the proposals, the ESL would start in August each year, with plans to launch "as soon as practicable".

The 20-team league would be split into two groups of 10, playing each other home and away.

The top three in each group would qualify for the quarter-finals, with the teams in fourth and fifth playing a two-legged play-off for the two remaining spots.

From then on, it would have the same two-leg knockout format used in the Champions League, with a final in May at a neutral venue.

What's being done to stop the ESL?

Uefa, Europe's football governing body, had hoped plans for a new 36-team Champions League would head off the formation of a Super League.

Sports bodies say they will "remain united" in trying to stop the breakaway league, using legal and sporting measures if required.

Uefa's president has warned that the clubs would be banned from all other competitions at domestic and international level.

How revenue has fallen for the ESL clubs during the pandemic

Can the government stop English teams joining?

The government has made it clear that it opposes the Super League.

Writing in The Sun, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said he was "horrified" at the plans, adding: "I'm going to do everything I can to give this ludicrous plan a straight red."

Asked if the government could claw back coronavirus loans to the clubs, a Downing Street spokesman said it was looking at all options.

No 10 has also refused to rule out introducing legislation.

What happens next?

Much could depend on which other teams sign up.

Bayern Munich, Borussia Dortmund and Paris St Germain - the biggest clubs in Germany and France - have not thrown their lot in with the breakaway league.

The world governing body, Fifa, previously said it would not recognise a breakaway European league.

Fifa has expressed its "disapproval" and called on "all parties involved in heated discussions to engage in calm, constructive and balanced dialogue for the good of the game".

Meanwhile, the ESL is trying to block any sanctions Uefa or Fifa may try to enforce over the formation of the league.

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