Uefa reluctantly clears AC Milan and Barcelona to play domestic league matches abroad

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

Soccer Football - Euro 2028 & Euro 2032 Hosts Announcement - Nyon, Switzerland - October 10, 2023 The UEFA logo is pictured at the headquarters ahead of the announcement REUTERS/Denis Balibouse

League matches should be played on home soil to prevent potentially distortive elements in competitions, says Uefa's president.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Follow topic:

European football governing body Uefa said on Oct 6 it had “reluctantly” approved the staging of a Spanish La Liga and an Italian Serie A match in the United States and Australia respectively, despite fan protests.

“While it is regrettable to have to let these two games go ahead, this decision is exceptional and shall not be seen as setting a precedent,” Uefa president Aleksander Ceferin said in a statement.

Uefa made its ruling after Spain’s La Liga agreed to move a game scheduled for late December between champions Barcelona and Villarreal to Miami, Florida.

Italy’s Serie A also decided to stage the encounter between AC Milan and Como on Feb 8 in Perth, Australia, to avoid a clash with the Winter Olympics opening ceremony at Milan’s San Siro Stadium.

But that sparked protests from European supporters’ groups, who branded the moves “absurd, unaffordable, and environmentally irresponsible”.

In its statement, Uefa said that it had “reiterated its clear opposition to domestic league matches being played outside their home country”.

But despite “the widespread lack of support that had already been raised by fans, other leagues, clubs, players and European institutions”, Uefa said that it had found no clear regulatory framework in Fifa’s statutes that would allow it to oppose the moves.

“The Uefa executive committee has reluctantly taken the decision to approve, on an exceptional basis, the two requests referred to it,” the governing body said in its statement.

While the idea of relocating European football matches to other continents seems shocking to many, other sports – particularly US ones – have been doing something similar for years, even decades.

The National Football League has held games in London since 2007 while it also expanded to Mexico and Germany.

In 2024, it added a game in Sao Paulo and, in 2025, there has been one in Dublin for the first time. Another is slated for Madrid in November, while Melbourne will play host to a game in 2026.

The NBA, which has relocated regular-season matches since 1990 to Japan and since 2011 to Europe, has already scheduled six games in Berlin, London, Manchester and Paris over the next three seasons. Mexico has been another regular destination.

In rugby union, the French Top 14 club competition took its 2016 final to Barcelona’s Nou Camp Stadium, while Ireland and New Zealand played an international match in Chicago that same year – with Ireland claiming their maiden victory over the All Blacks.

Last weekend, Argentina played their final Rugby Championship match at home to South Africa at Twickenham in London.

It is not unheard of in football to host matches abroad, but until now, those had only ever been glorified friendlies.

The Spanish and Italian Super Cups are already held in Saudi Arabia, after previous editions in China, Morocco, Qatar and Libya, as governing bodies seek to cash in on the global reach of the Beautiful Game.

La Liga has been trying for years to host games in the United States, home of its commercial partner Relevent.

Football’s world governing body Fifa shifted its hitherto opposition to relocating matches, with a “working group” launched in May to revise their rules.

That opened the door to Uefa granting La Liga and Serie A the permission to branch out.

On Oct 6, Lega Serie A thanked “Uefa for recognising the exceptional nature of this initiative”.

The San Siro stadium in Milan, Italy, will be unavailable as both the city and the stadium prepare to host the Winter Olympics opening ceremony on Feb 6.

PHOTO: REUTERS

“It should also be emphasised that this is only one match out of 380 in the league: an extraordinary event, not a structural change to the schedule,” a Serie A statement said.

“I hope that approval from Fifa and the Australian football federation will complete the authorisation process,” added Serie A president Ezio Simonelli.

“A contingency linked to the unavailability of the San Siro Stadium has been transformed into an opportunity to please the many Italian football fans, who will have the chance to follow the match live in Perth, and also for the two teams and Italian football to increase their international visibility and fan base.” AFP

See more on