Talks Over New £4.6bn Tournament European Premier League On
Talks have
taken place over the creation of a new £4.6bn European Premier League,
involving the top sides from across the continent.
Sources told
the BBC that discussions are still at an early stage but the plan would involve
replacing the Champions League with a new format.
Industry
insiders confirmed talks involved Wall Street bank JP Morgan.
But the
project is said to still have a "long way to go" and the deal
"may not happen".
Reports
suggest five Premier League clubs, including champions Liverpool and
Manchester United, have been approached by those behind the plan with more than
a dozen teams from England, France, Germany, Italy and Spain in negotiations
about becoming founder members of the competition.
It has also been
reported that the European Premier League would see 18 sides compete in a
single league with the top sides taking part in a play-off to determine an
overall winner and that world governing body Fifa is involved.
'Last nail
in the coffin'
Kevin Miles,
chief executive of the Football Supporters' Association, said the idea shows
that billionaire owners of clubs "are out of control".
"The
latest reports of plots, allegedly involving Manchester United and Liverpool,
to create a European Super League, expose the myth that billionaire owners care
about the English football pyramid, or indeed anything other than their own
greed," said Miles.
"This
has to be the last nail in the coffin of the idea that football can be relied
upon to regulate itself."
La Liga president
Javier Tebas said: "The authors of that idea - if they really exist,
because there is nobody actually defending it - not only show a total ignorance
of the organisation and customs of European and world football, but also a
serious ignorance of the audiovisual rights markets.
"A
project of this type will mean serious economic damage to the organisers
themselves and to those entities that finance it, if they exist, because
they´re never official. These underground projects only look good when drafted at
a bar at five in the morning"
FROM .bbc.com/sport/football
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