UEFA, FIFA get legal red card as EU court approves Super League
In this photo illustration, the European Super League logo is seen displayed on a smartphone screen, Sao Paolo, Brazil, April 20, 2021. (Getty Images Photo)


The European Court of Justice declared on Thursday that UEFA and FIFA breached EU law by obstructing the creation of a Super League, in a groundbreaking ruling that has the potential to reshape the governance of football.

The European clubs that proposed forming the breakaway league, sparking widespread protests among angry fans, had been threatened with sanctions by UEFA if they went ahead with the plan, leading to nine clubs pulling out.

In its ruling, the EU's top court said that FIFA and UEFA abused their dominant position by forbidding clubs to compete in a European Super League (ESL), although that project may still not be approved as the court did not rule on it specifically.

UEFA has organized pan-European competitions for nearly 70 years and sees the ESL project as a significant threat to the lucrative Champions League, for which teams qualify on merit.

Real Madrid, Barcelona, Juventus and nine other leading European clubs announced the breakaway plan in April 2021.

But the move collapsed within 48 hours after an outcry from fans, governments and players forced Manchester United, Liverpool, Manchester City, Chelsea, Tottenham Hotspur, Arsenal, AC Milan, Inter Milan and Atletico Madrid to pull out.

Sports development company A22, formed to assist with creating the ESL, had claimed UEFA and global football governing body FIFA held a monopoly position that breached the European Union's Competition and Free Movement Law.

New format

The promoters of the breakaway league announced on Thursday plans for a new 64-team tournament following the European Court of Justice ruling that UEFA broke EU law in blocking the rival competition.

A22 Sports Management, which was set up to promote the Super League after its initial failed launch in 2021, offered no details of when the planned competition might start or how much backing it enjoys.

But it said the tournament would feature promotion and relegation and would be broadcast live for free "on a new streaming platform."

"We have won the right to compete. The UEFA monopoly is over. Football is free," said A22 CEO Bernd Reichart.

"Clubs are now free from the threat of sanction and free to determine their own futures," Reichart added in a statement.

UEFA said the ruling did not signify an endorsement or validation of the Super League and that it had addressed a shortfall highlighted in its framework.

"UEFA is confident in the robustness of its new rules, and specifically that they comply with all relevant European laws and regulations," it added in a statement.

FIFA did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Unjustified

The court's ruling said FIFA and UEFA must "comply with the competition rules and respect the freedoms of movement," adding that their rules on approval, control and sanctions amounted to "unjustified restrictions on the freedom to provide services."

"That does not mean that a competition such as the Super League project must necessarily be approved. The Court, having been asked generally about the FIFA and UEFA rules, does not rule on that specific project in its judgment," it concluded.

After the collapse of the ESL plan, just three clubs were left as holdouts, but Juve opted to pull out earlier this year after its former chairman, Andrea Agnelli, one of the figures behind the project, and its board resigned in November 2022.

Real and Barca still hoped to go ahead with the competition, and the ESL took its case to a Spanish court, which subsequently sought guidance from the Luxembourg-based European Court.

Real Madrid President Florentino Perez said the ruling marked "a before and after" for football.

"The present and future of European football are finally in the hands of the clubs, the players, and their fans," Perez said in a pre-recorded video statement.

Barcelona said they were satisfied with the ruling and that the creation of the Super League would allow football to address issues of fixture overload, putting "local and international players and supporters at the centre."

"The medium-term sustainability of European football entails the need to create a concept along the lines of the Super League," the club said in a statement.

Its ruling will now be considered by the Spanish court, where a judge can apply its responses to facts of the case.

Spain's La Liga said: "Today, more than ever, we reiterate that the 'Super League' is a selfish and elitist model."