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Nine Super League rebels rejoin European Club Association

By AFP
August 17, 2021

PARIS: Nine of the 12 founder members of the short-lived European Super League rejoined the European Club Association (ECA) on Monday, but Barcelona, Real Madrid and Juventus remain outside the influential group as they continue to back the breakaway project.

The ECA said that Atletico Madrid, AC Milan and Inter Milan, along with all six English clubs involved in the breakaway — Manchester City, Manchester United, Liverpool, Chelsea, Arsenal and Tottenham Hotspur — had been reinstated after acknowledging that a Super League “was not in the interests of the wider football community”.

The nine clubs initially signed up to the project in April but all backed down within 48 hours in the face of overwhelming opposition from fans, players and organisations. The ECA called it “a regrettable and turbulent episode for European football” and also acknowledged the clubs’ “willingness to engage actively with the ECA in its collective mission to develop European club football — in the open and transparent interests of all, not the few.”

The nine clubs accepted punishments from UEFA, including a five percent cut in their European revenue for one season, after backing down and apologising for their “mistake” in joining the project, widely condemned as a crude land grab.

However Real Madrid, Barcelona and Juve did not back down — earlier this summer Barcelona president Joan Laporta claimed the Super League was “still alive”. He insisted the Super League would mean “financial sustainability for the clubs and make for a more attractive competition”.