Uefa Opens Proceedings Against Barcelona, Juventus And Real Madrid Over European Super League Plan
Uefa has
opened disciplinary proceedings against Barcelona, Juventus and Real Madrid
over their involvement in the proposed European Super League.
The clubs
were part of the 12 'founding' members of the breakaway league, which later
collapsed.
The other
nine clubs renounced the project but Barcelona, Juventus and Real Madrid have
refused to do so.
Uefa said
proceedings had been opened against the three "for a potential violation
of Uefa's legal framework".
In a statement
released on Tuesday, Uefa said: "Following an investigation conducted
by Uefa ethics and disciplinary inspectors in connection with the so-called
'Super League' project, disciplinary proceedings have been opened against Real
Madrid, Barcelona and Juventus for a potential violation of Uefa's legal
framework.
"Further
information will be made available in due course."
The other
nine clubs involved - Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool, Manchester City, Manchester
United, Tottenham Hotspur, AC Milan, Inter Milan and Atletico Madrid - have
been punished by European football's governing body for their
participation.
They have
agreed to make a combined 15m euro (£13.4m) goodwill contribution to benefit
children's and grassroots football across Europe.
They will
also have 5% of Uefa competition revenues withheld for one season, starting in
2023-24, and this money will be redistributed, including in the UK.
Each has
also committed to Uefa and its competitions, with the clubs facing fines of
100m euros (£86.9m) apiece if they seek to join an unauthorised competition in
the future. They will be fined half that if they breach any other terms of the
declaration.
Real Madrid
president Florentino Perez, who was appointed as chairman of the ESL, recently
said that the 12 clubs that agreed to join the project have "binding
contracts" and "cannot leave".
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