Professor Stephen Weatherill, Faculty of Law and Somerville
College, University of Oxford.
The crumbling of the ‘SuperLeague’ is a
source of joy to many football fans, but the very fact that such an idea could
be advanced reveals something troublingly weak about the internal governance of
football in Europe – UEFA’s most of all – and about the inadequacies of legal regulation
practised by the EU and/ or by states. This note explains why a SuperLeague is
difficult to stop under the current pattern of legal regulation and why
accordingly reform is required in order to defend the European model of sport with
more muscularity.
The creature that will not die
What, again?
It is over twenty years since
since ‘Project Gandalf’, a plan for a European Football League prepared by
Media Partners International, was notified to the Commission (OJ 1999 C70/5). Since
then football in Europe has been played with a regular rhythm in the
background: the threat of a breakaway ‘SuperLeague’ driven by the richest and
most successful clubs. UEFA, the sport’s governing body in Europe, has
responded. Alterations made periodically to the structure of its principal and
most lucrative club competition, the Champions League, have favoured the
interests of the richest and most successful clubs and, in a macabre dance, those
changes have typically followed those clubs’ well-briefed grumbling and
plotting. And Monday 19 April 2021 was glumly anticipated by football fans as
the latest reel around the fountain: UEFA, media reports confidently predicted,
would further compromise the structure of its competitions in order to give the
richest and most successful clubs more of what they want – more games and
firmer guarantees of participation.
But Monday 19 April instead brought
the ‘SuperLeague’ clattering out of its murky background as threat and into the
harsh light of day as execution. A group of twelve clubs from England, Spain
and Italy announced the creation of an entirely new competition which would
operate beyond the authority of UEFA. The self-chosen clubs are all rich,
though several groan under mountainous debts. There is no plausible world in
which this dozen would count as Europe’s undisputed finest in terms of sporting
merit: their status is commercially driven. The plans guarantee the long-term participation
of the founding clubs, and so would remove the threat of relegation from the
new SuperLeague. This is entirely alien to the orthodox model of football
Leagues across Europe. And the clubs plan to have their cake and eat it. They
intend to play midweek games in the brand new SuperLeague while remaining
members of their national associations, and so continuing to play in the
Premier League, La Liga and Serie A as well as selected national Cup
competitions. But they will no longer play in UEFA’s Champions League, which
will therefore be robbed of most of its richest and most successful clubs, and
also Arsenal and Spurs.
And then it crumbled.
Within 48 hours of the new
competition’s announcement its proponents were racing each other from West
London across East Manchester and beyond to see who could put most distance
between themselves and a plan which had attracted almost universal derision and
dismay. No longer a League from which its founder members could not be
relegated, the SuperLeague had turned into a competition from which its clubs
were desperate to knock themselves out. This Italian, Spanish and English Job
had been intended to cause an explosion within European football, yet they
couldn’t even blow the bloody doors off.
Gleeful mockery has its
short-term place. This SuperLeague is
dead. But the idea behind it and the people who drove it are not. A breakaway
league in European football is the creature that will not die. Now is the time
to think about the inadequacies of legal regulation of sport in Europe, in
order to be prepared to defend the European model of sport the next time that a
plan of this disruptive type is advanced, likely with greater strategic cunning
than this week’s sub-Baldrick effort.
Why the law is not currently adequate
UEFA was doubly offended by the
SuperLeague. The traditional regulatory model of European football was cast
aside. No longer would qualification on merit be the sole criterion for
participation. The infusion of fresh blood ensured by the system of promotion
and relegation would be stopped. UEFA oversight would be precluded. The
commercial model of recent years would be gravely imperilled too. UEFA’s
Champions League is a spectacular success and provides UEFA with a valuable
source of income. The ‘SuperLeague’ is a huge threat.
What could UEFA do?
The key insight is that UEFA is doubly offended because UEFA has a double function. It is a regulatory body
but it is also a commercial actor. It protects the structure of the sport but
it also makes money out of the sport. Most governing bodies in sport began in
the days of well-meaning amateurs, carrying out the task of imposing routine
and order on the rules of the game and the conduct of competitions, but in
recent years, largely as a result of changes to the regulatory and
technological shape of the audiovisual media sector, sport has increasingly become
commercially lucrative to a dazzling degree. Governing bodies have typically
added these new commercially sensitive functions to their longer-standing
regulatory role by an incremental process of accumulation. UEFA, like many
governing bodies in sport, sets the rules of the game but it has also become
highly profitable.
This is where and why the
application of legal rules to governing bodies in sport becomes awkward. No one
doubts that UEFA has a legitimate role. Sport needs a regulator, to set the
rules, to impose order on the calendar, to protect the welfare of players and
fans, and so on. But equally no one doubts that regulatory choices have direct
commercial consequences. If UEFA decides to impose sanctions on those involved
in a ‘SuperLeague’ it will be able to present such steps as a means to defend
the integrity of the model of sport that has long dominated European practice.
But it will stand accused of seeking to promote its own commercial interest in
maintaining monopoly control over the Champions League by suppressing the
emergence of a new form of competition, a SuperLeague, which might generate
high levels of consumer demand and which, if the restless dozen are to be
believed, had already generated lucrative financial backing. Both these perspectives
contain their truths – regulatory and commercial motivations inevitably overlap
in the governance of sport.
Imagine UEFA had carried through
its threats to impose sanctions, which, in their most vigorous form, would have
involved banning participating clubs and players from any involvement in
football other than the ‘SuperLeague’ itself. To achieve that would involve
action not only by UEFA but also the relevant national football associations
and, to exclude players form the World Cup too, FIFA. Would EU law oppose a response
of this type, designed to protect European football’s traditional structures?
The problem in short is – it is
not clear.
There is nothing explicit in EU
law that addresses the matter. Sport was not even mentioned in the founding
Treaties until as late as 2009, and the provision then inserted, Article 165
TFEU, is programmatic rather than precise. EU secondary legislation on sport is
thin and of no relevance to the matter at hand. EU sports law largely comprises
the patchwork of decisions of the Court and the Commission which have, since
the very first in 1974 (Case 36/74 Walrave and Koch ECLI:EU:C:1974:140),
addressed the compatibility of practices in sport with the demands of EU
internal market law. This concerned initially the law of free movement, applied
in the famous Bosman case (Case
C-415/93 ECLI:EU:C:1995:463), and latterly competition law. And it is EU
competition law which provides the most obvious objection to UEFA’s desire to
take action against the promoters of and participants in a ‘SuperLeague’.
It is necessary to try to sift
the existing practice of the Commission and Court to try to piece together an
understanding of how EU competition law would apply in these circumstances.
Nothing is predetermined. This, then, is already a problem – it is impossible
to predict with confidence exactly how far UEFA’s autonomy of action is constrained
by EU competition law.
Let us try. The most recent
decision in which EU competition law has been applied to sport is also the one
that is factually closest to the case of a governing body taking action to protecting
its model against third party organisers wanting to offer competing events. It
is the International Skating Union
decision.
The International Skating Union decision (ISU)
In December 2017 the Commission decided that the
eligibility rules of the International Skating Union (ISU) were incompatible
with EU competition law, specifically Article 101 TFEU on anti-competitive
bilateral and multilateral practices (AT.40208). The Commission’s Decision was
upheld on appeal to the General Court, which in December 2020 approved all the
key findings made by the Commission (Case T-93/18 International Skating Union v
Commission EU:T:2020:610; this judgment has been appealed to the
CJEU).
The core of the objections in ISU were targeted at the governing
body’s treatment of skaters who chose to take part in events that were not
approved by the ISU. The ISU had power conferred on it as the sole governing
body in the sport recognized by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to
ban such skaters from the Olympic Games and the World Championship. The ISU was
able to act, and did act, in a way that protected and promoted the events which
it organized at the expense of competing suppliers. The Commission’s Decision
reached the conclusion that it reserved to itself powers in a way that exceeded
what was necessary for the organization of the sport and for the maintenance of
its integrity. It had pursued activities in the global market for the
organisation and exploitation of international speed skating events in
circumstances where its regulatory function overlapped with commercial
motivations. The ISU had – according to both the Commission and the General Court
- a conflict of interest. By
stretching its activities beyond the regulatory domain into areas which
prioritised its own commercial interests at the expense of third parties in the
market, the governing body had acted in an anti-competitive manner contrary to
Article 101 TFEU.
The responsible EU Commissioner
Margrethe Vestager, commenting at the
time on the Commission ISU decision, was eager to treat the ruling as an
expression of general principle, not simply one confined to its own particular
facts. She explained that where a single federation organises competitions from
local to international level according to the global pyramid structure which
characterises the governance of most sports, ‘the penalties these federations
impose should be necessary and proportionate to achieve’ goals associated with
the proper conduct of the sport, but they ‘certainly shouldn't be used to
unfairly favour the federation's own commercial interests, at the expense of
athletes and other organisers’.
The ISU Decision shows that EU competition law restrains the autonomy
of governing bodies in sport, but the asymmetry of power between the ISU and
skaters has little in common with the more balanced relationship between UEFA
and the biggest football clubs. So, in the search to understand how EU
competition law restrains UEFA, ISU
is a clue, but not definitive.
ISU and past practice
ISU is not a one-off: this is not the only material on which we can
draw to understand how EU law affects and restricts UEFA’s options in
responding to the SuperLeague. A wonderful book published in 2015 bursts with
relevant ideas (K. Pijetlovic, EU Sports Law and Breakaway Leagues in Football).
And the structure of the ISU ruling fits
comfortably into the EU’s track record in applying EU law to sport. The need
for a regulator in sport is acknowledged. A game needs common rules,
predictably applied and apt to secure the integrity of competition. But such
activities shall not spill over beyond what is necessary for the proper
organisation of the sport, and there is special suspicion of systems of
governance which are structured or applied in a way that prioritises the
commercial interests of the governing body in question.
In Meca Medina and Majcen v
Commission (Case C-519/04P EU:C:2006:492) the Court explained
that the compatibility of rules with EU competition law cannot be assessed in
the abstract. The legal assessment of practices that have the effect of
restricting competition also includes examination of their objectives. The
Court decided that the imposition of sanctions for violation of anti-doping
rules did not necessarily constitute a forbidden restriction of competition
within the meaning of (what is now) Article 101 TFEU, since they were justified
by the legitimate objective of preserving healthy sport, though it added that
attention would need to be paid in detail to fair procedure and proportionate
sanctions. Bosman (Case C-415/93
ECLI:EU:C:1995:463), a free movement rather than a competition law case,
similarly permits the interpretation of EU law to be informed by the sporting
context in which it is applied. So, famously, the Court declared that ‘In view
of the considerable social importance of sporting activities and in particular
football in the Community, the aims of maintaining a balance between clubs by
preserving a certain degree of equality and uncertainty as to results and of
encouraging the recruitment and training of young players must be accepted as
legitimate’. The Court ruled against the particular transfer system of which
Bosman had fallen foul because it went too far to apply collectively enforced
restraints to the contractual freedom even of players whose contracts had
expired. But the Court was plainly receptive to an adjusted regime which
addressed the legitimate concerns it had mapped in the ruling. The transfer
system was duly amended to apply only to players whose contract has not expired, and it lives on today in that
slimmed down form.
There followed Motosykletistiki Omospondia
Ellados NPID v Elliniko Dimosio – commonly abbreviated to MOTOE and known as the ‘Greek
motorcycling’ case (Case C-49/07 EU:C:2008:376). It was held that ELPA, a body
granted legal authority under Greek law to decide whether or not to permit the
staging of motorcycling competitions, had violated Article 102 TFEU (which
concerns abuses of a dominant position) by running a system in which ELPA
itself was engaged in the organisation and commercial exploitation of
motorcycling events. The problem was that in the circumstances ELPA had ‘an
obvious advantage over its competitors’; its gatekeeping right allowed it to
‘distort competition by favouring events which it organises or those in whose
organisation it participates’.
Article 165(1) TFEU, introduced
into the Treaty with effect from 2009, directs that the EU ‘shall contribute to
the promotion of European sporting issues, while taking account of the specific
nature of sport, its structures based on voluntary activity and its social and
educational function’. But both the Court and the Commission have long been
assiduous in interpreting and applying EU internal market law in a way that
recognises the legitimate concerns that arise in sport. Article 165 merely
codifies that contextual sensitivity. EU law has been shaped according to a model
whereby sport enjoys ‘conditional autonomy’ under EU law (see S. Weatherill, Principles and Practice in EU
Sports Law, 2017). Governing bodies are able to operate
consistently with EU law on condition that they demonstrate why their practices
are necessary for the organisation of their sport – to defend its ‘integrity’,
as is asserted in ISU. It is when
governing bodies reach beyond the sphere of legitimate and necessary regulation
that they tend to come into conflict with EU law – for example by applying the
transfer rules even to out-of-contract players or by leveraging regulatory
power to enhance a position in the market at the expense of commercial rivals.
The legitimate reach of a governing body’s regulatory power
In ISU the objection was not to the role of a governing body acting as
gatekeeper, in order to impose order on a sport’s calendar: the objection was
to leveraging that regulatory power to achieve commercial advantage. The
problem was a conflict of interest between regulatory concerns and
profit-making, and it is an endemic problem in sports governance given the
rising commercial value of sport alongside a reluctance among governing bodies to
establish systems which sharply separate the regulatory from the commercial sphere.
ISU insists on review of a governing body’s regulatory choices for
fear that they may generate anti-competitive consequences. But it does not assume
that the supply of competitive sporting events shall become a wholly
unregulated market. Neither the Commission nor the General Court in ISU objects to the notion that sports
governing bodies shall be able in principle to arrange the calendar, to decide
how many events should be permitted, to ensure safety standards are met, and to
perform a broader gate-keeping function. The Commission went out of its way in ISU to state that protecting the
integrity and good functioning of the sport is a legitimate objective pursued
by a governing body and this is confirmed in the ruling of the General Court.
So too Commissioner Vestager, reflecting on the Decision, insisted that ‘we're
certainly not questioning the right of …federations to do their job of
organising the sport’.
The question: where to draw the
line between legitimate supervision and anti-competitive conduct?
SuperLeague
Would EU law have precluded UEFA
from taking steps to oppose the SuperLeague?
It is plain that UEFA would gain
commercial advantage by killing off the SuperLeague. But the exercise of
regulatory power commonly has some commercial consequence – that unavoidable
overlap does not take the governing body’s activities over the line. The real
issue is whether the exercise of regulatory power is necessary to secure the
organisation of the sport.
ISU was an extreme case. The power imbalance between ISU and the
skaters was very great; and the penalties envisaged by ISU went beyond any
conceivable band of proportionate response. Given the aggressive suppression of
third party organisers that was involved, disclosing a clear strategy of
furthering the ISU’s own commercial aspirations in staging skating
competitions, there was no need for the notion of protecting the ‘integrity’ of
sport to be explored in any depth. The Commission and the General Court did not
trouble to do so. Meca-Medina too,
though the leading case, does not help to tease out the precise boundaries of
the zone of legitimate action to police the integrity of sport, because
anti-doping procedures plainly fall within it.
UEFA’s position in the face of
rebellion by the major football clubs would have obvious distinctions from the
situations found in MOTOE and ISU, most of all that its concern to
defend the integrity of its existing structures would seem to carry much more
weight given that the leading football clubs possess a destructive power which
the third parties in MOTOE and ISU did not. The SuperLeague was clearly
designed to reduce the Champions League to a sideshow, if not to destroy it
altogether.
Two questions structure the legal
inquiry. What legitimate objectives may UEFA defend? And, assuming legitimate
objectives have been identified, what are the permissible limits of action
designed to defend them?
Once again the problem is that
these are not matters set out cleanly in any existing legal texts. But let us
try.
Can UEFA adopt measures to secure
the integrity of its competitions' ability to produce the one true champion:
that is, can UEFA take steps to stop European football looking like
boxing? I think this is plausible, and it would justify action designed to
ensure that UEFA’s Champions League has a higher profile and greater appeal
than any breakaway competition.
Can UEFA adopt measures to
suppress a competition where access is not based on merit and/or where
promotion and relegation are curtailed: that is, can UEFA take steps to stop
European football looking like sports leagues in North America? I think this is
also plausible, and it would justify action designed to curtail the viability
of any breakaway competition.
UEFA has other plausible
legitimate objectives on which it may rely in responding to the threat of a
SuperLeague. Protecting the calendar to prevent player overload would belong on
this list; so too would protecting the pyramid structure of governance in order
to ensure that all competitions are subject to the same rules globally rather
than fragmented according to which organiser is in charge; and the
re-distribution of income raised at élite level throughout the structure of the
sport, in order to achieve some degree of vertical solidarity, is a further relevant
concern.
If (some or all of) those are
legitimate aims, then one would need also to check whether UEFA's measures are
proportionate and apt to achieve the end in view. The length of any ban
would be legally relevant, so too the
breadth of its scope. The harsher the penalty, the less likely it is to survive
proportionality-based review - yet of course the harsher the penalty, the more
effective it is likely to be. Here too a detailed context-specific analysis
would be required, but one may think that sanctions imposed on clubs would be
more readily shown to be necessary and therefore justified than sanctions
imposed on individual players.
The implications under
competition law would not be limited to measures taken directly by UEFA. The collective
sale of broadcasting and other media rights to the UEFA Champions League falls
within the scope of Article 101 because it restricts supply (by individual
clubs as sellers), but it is permitted on the basis that it generates
sufficient economic benefits. It remains
to be seen whether the sale of rights to a SuperLeague would be treated with
similar indulgence: its closed nature and the extent to which it shares the
proceeds of collective selling with the game more widely might induce sceptical
assessment.
A prediction? It seems to me
highly plausible in principle that EU law would permit some forms of action taken
by UEFA against participants in a SuperLeague which are designed to protect the
legitimate interests of a governing body with overall responsibility for its
sport, subject to meeting the demands of the principle of proportionality. But
one needs to be fully aware that competition law, like high level sport, rarely
yields a wholly confident prediction. A SuperLeague will be using it too, to
argue that it is injecting fresh competition into the market for sports events
and that accordingly it should be protected from sanctions. These are difficult
legal arguments, for which both legislative texts and precise case law
precedents are wanting.
What next?
The contempt directed at the
owners of the twelve clubs involved in the breakaway has been torrential.
Disdain for VAR unites football fans, but that unwelcome intrusion of
technology into the frantic pace of a proper football match is a pimple
alongside the wrecking ball arrogance of the SuperLeague. The protests appear
to have brought the plan unveiled on Monday 19 April 2021 to its knees. The
twelve clubs, it seems, will remain within the existing arrangements and play
in the existing competitions. But the biggest clubs have not lost their
appetite for inducing UEFA to alter the design of the Champions League to suit their
interests better. And although this SuperLeague
appears to be dead, the threat of the breakaway league in European football
remains the creature that will not die.
The legal and regulatory
framework is not adequate to meet such challenges. Consider the frantic
response to the SuperLeague. UEFA needed to decide what type of sanctions it would
impose, doubtless after – urgent – consultations with national associations and
FIFA, and perhaps with national governments minded to legislate too. UEFA
needed to seek – urgent – advice from the Commission on its view of the impact
of EU competition law on proposed sanctions, even if ultimately the authoritative
voice on the meaning of EU law belongs to the Court of Justice. And UEFA was already
faced by – urgent – applications to national courts on behalf of the
SuperLeague 12 seeking to secure orders restraining the imposition of any
penalties.
On all these points the law is
not clear. EU competition law does not provide a checklist of sanctions which
UEFA may lawfully impose and those which go too far. EU law more generally does
not regulate directly the structure of governance in European sport. Nor do
national laws provide clear controls. Governing bodies in sport have been
largely successful in sheltering their autonomy from legal regulation. The
SuperLeague fiasco should prompt a re-think. What is UEFA’s autonomy’s worth,
when it is revealed to be so vulnerable to the concerted strategies of the
biggest clubs? This breakaway failed,
but the creature is not dead, and the next version, more skilfully prepared,
might succeed.
Re-thinking sporting autonomy
In the past UEFA, jealous of its
sporting autonomy, frequently called into question the legitimacy of EU
intervention. The judgment in Bosman records
that UEFA had requested the Court to order a measure of inquiry under its Rules
of Procedure in order to obtain fuller information on the role played by
transfer fees in the financing of the game, but the Court, noting that UEFA had
haplessly failed to submit this request before the close of the oral procedure,
refused. Things have changed. UEFA has come to understand the strategic
advantage of keeping the EU, most immediately the Commission, onside.
In 2012 a ‘Joint Statement’
by the EU Commissioner then responsible for competition law, Joaquín Almunia,
and Michel Platini, then President of UEFA, declared that the ‘break even’ rule
at the heart of UEFA’s system of ‘Financial Fair Play’ is based on sound
economic principle and that its objectives are consistent with EU state aid
policy (IP/12/264). This ‘Joint Statement’ is not legally binding and its
analysis lacks depth, but its very existence demonstrates that UEFA, here also
reflecting the interests of Europe’s leading football clubs, has succeeded in
getting close to the Commission and securing its informal approval. This
strategy of co-operation rather than confrontation also marked the reform of
the transfer system after Bosman. In
March 2001 the Commission declared it had
formalized the matter in an exchange of letters between Mario Monti, at the time
the Commissioner for Competition, and Sepp Blatter, President of FIFA
(IP/01/314). Pending litigation was settled and brought to an end, and the
Commission announced closure of its own investigation in June 2002 (IP/02/824).
This has no formal status, and, as with FFP, one cannot exclude that a court
would take a different view, but for the time being a co-operative solution
prevails. Moreover the involvement of FIFA reminds that the effect of EU law is
frequently not confined to EU territory alone. The economic centrality of
Europe to many, if not all, sports means that in practice the need to adjust
practices to comply with EU law sometimes entails that adjustment operates more
widely. EU’s norms become global norms. Note too that since 2014 the Commission
and UEFA have had a formal arrangement for co-operation.
For present purposes the
principal point of interest is that here the governing body, UEFA, has a real
and direct interest not in securing autonomy from EU law but rather in using it
to defend its existing model of governance and, most of all, its premier club
competition, the Champions League. Pursuit of a more intimate relationship with
the EU may involve a diminution of autonomy from regulation but it may the best
way for UEFA to protect its autonomy from the avaricious might of the biggest
clubs. The EU is an imperfect regulator of sport – it lacks expertise, its
competence is not comprehensive, and the geographical boundaries of the EU mean
nothing to football. But it will be intriguing to observe whether April 2021’s
eruption prompts demands for a more assertive EU, able and willing to move
beyond the ad hoc application of competition law and to adopt instead a more
proactive role, seeking to establish minimum standards of good governance while
ruling out sporting competitions which depart from merit-based criteria for
admission. It would – and should – be a chance too for the EU to insist on a
more serious commitment to re-distribution of wealth within European football.
The biggest clubs have induced the transformation of the Champions League into
a competition in which only a small pool of clubs may aspire to reach the later
stages, let alone win it, and the disproportionate benefits which attach to
mere participation in it have wreaked havoc with competitive balance in smaller
national leagues across Europe. UEFA needs EU backing to stop these trends, and
to reverse them. This would transform the ‘European Model of Sport’ from windy
rhetoric and window-dressing to something more concrete and normative.
Consider too national political
processes. In the short term had there been a need to stop the SuperLeague by
immediate intervention, then it is national political processes which have the
power to act with the necessary speed. Legislation could forbid closed Leagues.
A higher level of state intervention in sport would be another threat to UEFA’s
autonomy, and would likely be accompanied by pressure to reform its governance,
yet it would also provide UEFA with a further means to defend its model from the
destructive power unleashed by a SuperLeague. So ‘will politics show its teeth
and confer a real-sanctioned monopoly to the football pyramid … [as] a
transitional public service?’ (Antoine Duval,
April 19 2021). After all, tongue in cheek, ‘political interference with sports
is only bad if it goes against governing bodies’ objectives’ (Borja García,
April 19 2021).
Conclusion
Radical change is often generated
by moments of crisis, and it could be that the prime movers behind the
‘SuperLeague’ will come to be seen as having provoked a strengthening, not a
weakening, of UEFA’s regulatory and commercial profile. This, however, does
depend on UEFA, the EU and national politicians seizing the moment, and acting
now to reform governance. They should not assume that because the current
crisis is over, business as usual will resume. The unsystematic character of EU
competition law should serve to focus attention on the need for broader
intervention by the EU in order to protect and improve established systems of
governance. Faced by the biggest clubs’ plain disdain for matters of
fundamental sporting significance in Europe such as merit-based qualification
for competitions and open Leagues with promotion and relegation, UEFA may find
the EU a helpful ally: so too it may find a higher level of readiness to
intervene in sport at state level serves its purposes. A durable accommodation
between sporting tradition and commercially-driven innovation is desperately
needed, or else fans can gloomily anticipate the emergence of many more
malformed creatures. The creature is not dead.
Photo credit: Ed g2s, via Wikimedia Commons
Barnard & Peers:
chapter 17
This is excellent, thanks for the posting. I wonder if there would also be an argument that the agreement to set up a breakaway league is itself anticompetitive as its effects would be to harm an existing product (the leagues) and raise the costs for broadcasters as a result of this likely exclusion. Not impossible to conceive a theory of harm. Then this would lead to nullity and fines rather than intervening on clubs/players with bans, so you'd also get a proportionate remedy.
ReplyDeleteYes, thanks, that is possible. Depends, of course, on detailed market analysis. But if one could show that the SuperLeague would in effect replace, rather than compete with, existing competitions, then one could argue its very creation is anti-competitive. Probably unlikely though?!
DeleteThis is very interesting, but isn't it also a bit moot given the UK Parliament's ability to act without regard to EU competition law? The principle of parliamentary sovereignty means PM Johnson's promised "legislative bomb" would not be struck down by UK courts, and a European super league without English clubs wouldn't be very super
ReplyDelete(This assuming a majority in Parliament, but that's seems a given).
I did have a quick look at the TCA, but the rules on competition law allow for exemptions in "pursuit of legitimate public policy objectives" and surely the Commission would not be politically inept enough to try such a unpopular case anyway.
If there were a complaint by either or both sides, the Commission could rule on it, and whatever decision it took could then be the subject of legal challenge. Competition issues can also be litigated by private parties without a Commission decision.
DeleteOutstanding analysis from an academic point of view. This "drama" reminds me of when I decided to write a paper about EU State Aid and Football a couple of years ago while studying my LLM in European Law. I cited most of these case law, concluding that EU State Aid Law applies to Football clubs, but to what extend? Is there a clash between State Aid rules and UEFA's Financial Fair Play rules? arguing that the current system is weak and confusing. What happens when a couple of clubs owned by private investors receive an injection of unlimited capital from sovereign wealth funds? Then I came up with the funny "Third-State-Aid" concept. We all laughed but...
ReplyDeleteWell, it seems this has fitted in the "European way of Football" lately, and UEFA does not seem worried about it as far as I know. Let alone the lack of transparency of the mentioned institution. So let's make European Football fans yell "Football belongs to everybody" while they enjoy the next FIFA World Cup in Qatar.
So let's not demonised the creators of the EU Super League, as they might be governed by more transparent and democratic statutes than other clubs and institutions.
To those who might be interested, a Spanish court has already adopted an injunctive relief measure prohibiting UEFA & FIFA to take any action or sanctions against European Superleague Company S.L.
The Professor seems very knowledgeable about European law but very little about Superleague. He clearly did not understand the intentions and measures he wants to take for the good of all European football. And to say that they have been explained several times.
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