Thought I'd pick this quote up to get the discussion going again:
Personally, I am now of the view that the Elite are moving towards the next stage and clubs like the rags and Arsenal are ensuring their blokes are in the right places...to defend their gains and ensure they control the future. The next stage being the control of the Global game. - See more at:
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Couldn't the fact that former board members and such are moving into the committes and administative bodies of the UEFA and the FIFA just mean that they're doing what seems to be the dream of all politicias and CEO:s alike? I.E. after having done a stressful and hard job as a politician or CEO, all they want to do is to kick back in a job where they get to wine and dine a lot, travel the globe, watch a good deal of quality football and also get paid in salaries and bribes to do it. Every country has these positions that are well paid, are mostly representative and are often handed out to people as gratitude for long an faithful service. In Sweden it's the position of county governor. I bet you have something similar in the UK.
Of course it's beneficial for the elite clubs to have their people inside the UEFA. At least it's not damaging. But it doesn't necessarily mean anything, especially not when the UEFA has stacked up at least two decades of proof of being very obliging towards the elite clubs anyways.
Right now there's no point in breaking away because everyone is getting what they want in domestic leagues where they are comfortable in their seats and in the Champions League where UEFA has made sure there's little or no friction between the clubs.
We shouldn't underestimate the difficulties that might arise between the clubs if they would start a league of their own. We often talk about them as a gang, the E14 or whatever their called, that has one will and one will only but that's because most of the clubs aren't competetitors domestically. The English clubs' powerbase is based in England, the German clubs' in Germany and etc. THey all have their different TV-deals. If they were to start a league together they would have to compete and argue about the basic incomes from TV_rights and such. As far as I know, the UK, Spain, Italy and Germany have more or less different structures for the TV-money, for how they discuss stuff that happens in their leagues. Bayern for example are used to being the one that gets to dominate the agenda of German football. In a European league that wouldn't be the case. Madrid and Barca are used to getting the bulk of the TV-money and have kick-off times adapted to their needs. Etc.
All of these clubs know that there's a lot of hassle and adjustment to be made if a European club is to be launched. And that's not counting the legal and political ramifications that'll probably follow. A factor that is rarely mentioned when we talk about the doomed global future of football.
And then there was this:
The pre season fixture list this year was also rather revealing. We are all use to the idea of tours of Asia and America to help boost 'brand awareness' but the itinerary for the major English clubs this year was to the eye rather odd. City vrs Arsenal in Helskinki, A eight team super cup in LA. Man United and Liverpool flying all the way over to Australia for one game. Liverpool going to Norway for one game. It probably went well under the radar in the UK but Real Madrid and PSG played friendlies in Gothenburg. The above mentioned markets have already been long since been conquered in the 70/80's and they certainly are not emerging markets financially or from a football sense. This was probably best explained by NQDP who summarized this pattern as 'continuing to tour the countries with a massive emerging middle class but paying lip service to the countries who can afford to pay now'. - See more at:
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Yeah I don't see the logic of this. THe last few years have seen an increase in pre-season games played by elite clubs at Swedish grounds. They wouldn't come here to pay lip-service, because no lip-service has ever been required. Swedes have watched English football since the late sixties and have never ever demanded that English teams, or Spanish or Italian for that matter, come and play in our country to satisfy us.
As for saying that the marked was cornered in Sweden (as an example of a the European market) in the seventies and eightis is just not true. In the eighties the Swedish national team never made it to the World Cup. The domestic league was plagued by something called hooliganism (with scary men who had shaved their heads) and football was big, but it wasn't even close to Ice-Hockey. Then came the world cup of 94 coupled with Gothenburgs successes in the Champions League and then, probably most importantly, football evolved into a massive global business. I think it was in... 08 or 09, in march, when the Swedish football league started and it started (as it always does) at the same time as our hockey league moves into the final phases of the playoffs. And the newspapers were only focused on the start of the Allsvenska. That would never have happened in the eighties.
And I think that this is a general trend as well. Regardless of whether football was the biggest or the second biggest or third biggest, the popularity and media coverage of football is second to none nowadays. And the hype and interest from basically all social layers of society is massive. And the top clubs in Europe are catcing up with that and they are doing these trips to Helsinki or to Stockholm, two nations that have been relatively spared by the crisis, to solidify and perhaps even strengthen the ties and brand-awareness that already exists in these countries. That's my take on it anyway.