Fifa, Uefa ‘abused dominant position’ on Super League: Spain court
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
The ruling echoed an earlier one by the European Court of Justice which ordered the two governing bodies “to halt anti-competitive behaviour”.
PHOTO: REUTERS
Follow topic:
MADRID – Fifa and Uefa “abused their dominant position” and “prevented free competition” by opposing the creation of a European Super League, a Spanish court said on May 27.
The ruling echoed an earlier one by the European Court of Justice (ECJ), which ordered the two governing bodies “to halt anti-competitive behaviour”.
The court said Fifa, football’s world governing body, and the continent’s football governing body Uefa had imposed “unjustified and disproportionate restrictions” on free competition within the market, in a case filed by the promoters of the Super League.
Real Madrid and Barcelona are strong supporters of the project that most of Europe’s other big clubs have abandoned.
But the scope of the court’s decision is uncertain as it tackles regulations that have been completely rewritten in the interim period.
The case was brought before the Madrid Commercial Court by A22 Sports Management, the promoters of the three-tier, 80-club project.
A22 were buoyed after a decision by the ECJ in December 2023,
“It is not possible to impose a prohibition or restriction as a matter of principle, in other words to prohibit any other project in the future,” explained judge Sofia Gil Garcia in her ruling on May 27, seen by AFP.
“To admit the contrary would be tantamount to accepting a kind of ban... on any football competition project” that competes with the current Champions League, continued the judge.
Spain was not among 26 European countries which signed a joint-declaration
Proposed in 2021 by 12 elite European clubs,
However, the project was relaunched after the ECJ ruled that the powers of these two bodies were not “governed by any criteria ensuring that they are transparent, objective, non-discriminatory and proportionate”.
Uefa has since corrected this “shortcoming” with new, much more detailed regulations adopted in June 2022.
“This ruling does not mean that the so-called ‘Super League’ has been approved or validated,” said Uefa in response to the ECJ ruling.
La Liga chief Javier Tebas, who firmly opposes the Super League project, said: “The judgment is not final, nor does it bring anything new of significance.” AFP

