Twelve clubs from Spain, England and Italy on Sunday, April 19, announced that they had signed up for a new mid-week competition dubbed ‘European Super League’ in a seismic move that has triggered angry reactions from many football fans across the globe.
The founding clubs of the league are so far, Italy’s AC Milan, Inter Milan and Juventus, Spain’s FC Barcelona and Madrid clubs Real and Atletico as well as England’s Premier League ‘Big Six’ clubs Liverpool, Manchester United, Tottenham Hotspur, Arsenal, Chelsea and Manchester City.
In exchange for their commitment, Founding Clubs will receive an amount of €3.5 billion (£3bn) from an American bank JP Morgan solely to support their infrastructure investment plans and to offset the impact of the COVID pandemic.
The move was, however, condemned by the European Football governing body (UEFA), the English Football Association and the Premier League, the Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) and LaLiga, and the Italian Football Federation (FIGC) and Lega Serie A, vowing to stop the ‘cynical project’ which, they claim, was founded on the self-interest of a few clubs at a time when society needs solidarity more than ever.
The likes of German giants Bayern Munich and France’s Paris Saint-Germain have rejected the proposal.
The UEFA and affiliated federations are already considering banning the clubs concerned 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.
The creation of the European Super League has since sparked mixed reactions from football pundits and supporters of concerned clubs across the globe and Rwanda was no exception.
Reacting to the move, Arnold Kwizera, a football enthusiast and business presenter at CNBC Africa, said that it’s all about economic power that is driving Europe’s big clubs to create their own league as they already have a sponsor.
"It’s those European clubs benefiting, but again, it shows a shift in power. The clubs are reacting to the impact of the covid-19 situation based on how much UEFA makes from stadiums, for instance, during the UEFA Champions League. The clubs have taken back their own power
Kwizera said UEFA and its affiliate federations from Spain, Italy and United Kingdom and their league leaderships are against the move because they could lose the revenues they would make from sponsors if the European Super League takes shape.
"The problem is ‘can those leagues survive without those top clubs?’, who is going to be paying those TV rights to watch the leagues without Barcelona and Real Madrid in Spain or the Premier League’s ‘Big Six’? And this is something that happens in other sports like Cricket and Rugby, it has only been pronounced because Football is the most popular game,” he said.
Faustin Mugenzi, a local football commentator who closely follows Europe’s top five leagues, said European Super League can be a good channel for big clubs to do business.
"On one hand, big clubs are right to join the European Super League because today’s football means business. The clubs are finding the offer placed on their table too hard to reject. But the project itself might kill the sport,” said Mugenzi.
"But I don’t think this league will be as entertaining as the Premier League, La Liga, Serie A or La Liga because it’s a league with no relegation battles or that clubs can compete to qualify for a European competition like the Champions League,” he claimed.
Many football fans have shown their disbelief at the creation of the European Super League, criticizing their clubs for putting money first.
"I have been a Liverpool fan for over 15 years but I don’t see the importance of this so-called Super League as long as I can’t see my team competing to qualify for the Champions League. If they can’t play these games, their fan base could fade globally,” said Jojo Ingabire, a Liverpool fan.