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    IOC, FIFA presidents welcomes new EU treaty

    OC, FIFA presidents welcomes new EU treaty
    Oct. 19, 2007
    CBSSports.com wire reports

    BRUSSELS, Belgium -- IOC president Jacques Rogge and soccer federations consider the new European Union treaty approved Friday "historic" because of a sports exemption likely to give sporting federations more autonomy.

    The 27 government leaders at a summit agreed Friday on a "reform treaty" that recognizes the "specific nature of sport," a byword for greater autonomy and possibly exemption from some economic competition rules.

    Rogge and the federations were concerned that sports would increasingly fall under the free-market principles within the 27-nation bloc unless it received an exemption.

    "This is definitely an important moment and we are grateful," Rogge said. "The Olympic movement has fought for a legal basis for sport in the EU for more than 12 years."

    FIFA president Sepp Blatter agreed with the results of the two-day summit in Lisbon, Portugal.

    "This is a major event that is crucial for the management of sport in general and especially football," he said.

    Rogge and Blatter were concerned that the financial pyramid structure of sports, where money trickles from the top down, could be undermined by wealthy clubs setting up breakaway leagues based only on profit. Those clubs would have felt shielded within the EU if there was no sporting exemption.

    "The reference to the specificity of sport will strengthen the role of sport in Europe. Sport cannot be approached only as an economic activity," said Rogge, who was concerned anti-doping rules would be determined by EU courts.

    With its special status, the sports movement can now redistribute revenues and impose specific measures to combat doping, bribery and corruption. Sporting organizations fear that any solidarity between rich and poor clubs would disappear if only a free-market economic basis applies.

    Outside the IOC, the debate on more autonomy was strongest within soccer, where there were concerns of a widening gap between the grass roots and the richest clubs, especially in the lucrative European leagues.

    UEFA president Michel Platini congratulated the EU on recognizing the specific nature of sport.

    "We look forward to these principles being applied in practice in future, and we also regard this as a very important step forward," Platini said.

    UEFA and the G-14 group of Europe's most powerful clubs wrote to the EU leaders to state their cases.

    The G-14 group -- whose 18 members include Real Madrid, Manchester United, Bayern Munich and AC Milan -- called on EU governments to ignore last month's letter from UEFA, in which president Michel Platini called for soccer to be rescued from "the malign and ever-present influence of money."

    The G-14 group backed the current legal system that effectively makes sports answerable to general principles of national and European law, arguing that any exemption for sporting federations would set a dangerous precedent.

    Soccer authorities and the EU have been at odds since the 1995 Bosman ruling at the EU's highest court, which forced free movement of players across the leagues.

    http://cbs.sportsline.com/soccer/story/10419398/rss
    Just believe and you never know what will happen.

    According to Benitez it's important not simply to go out to win but to go out prepared to win, which means players have to put in the same level of work on a daily basis. Anything else is unacceptable.

    #2
    hmm I wonder, will this be the first step to try and ride rough shot over the G14 and UEFA/FIFA etc enforcing the 3 foreigner rule and/or forcing clubs to have X number of homegrown players?


    "Who's your Daddy now?"

    LFC Champions one season someday
    Jurgen Klopp is just boss
    Semi retired poster
    twitter: @parmsahota
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      #3
      Originally posted by Parm View Post
      hmm I wonder, will this be the first step to try and ride rough shot over the G14 and UEFA/FIFA etc enforcing the 3 foreigner rule and/or forcing clubs to have X number of homegrown players?
      I think the clubs are the real powerbrokers now. There is no way they will accept the 3 foreigner rule. They'll push them toward the oft-threatened breakaway super leagues if they try it on.
      You can agree with me, or you can be wrong.

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        #4
        Originally posted by Kilteragh View Post
        I think the clubs are the real powerbrokers now. There is no way they will accept the 3 foreigner rule. They'll push them toward the oft-threatened breakaway super leagues if they try it on.
        yeah I see that, but think this is FIFA/UEFA way of trying to head that situation off. Thing is the Superleague has been mooted for years but never acted upon.


        "Who's your Daddy now?"

        LFC Champions one season someday
        Jurgen Klopp is just boss
        Semi retired poster
        twitter: @parmsahota
        insta:@parm78

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          #5
          I think a superleague is impractical while on the day attendances are the biggest revenue stream for big clubs and local derbies are of such interest. The idea is an empty threat from the big clubs who don't even really want it to happen IMO.

          This ruling to me will probably mean an end to the idea of individual team getting TV rights for a decent period of time. The idea that organisations such as leagues should have the ability to deal with this sort of agreement seems to me the most likely thing to be enforced by this sort of ruling. Along with the sort of anti-drugs rules everyone would probably get behind.
          "The man who never alters his opinion is like standing water, and breeds reptiles of the mind."
          -- William Blake

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            #6
            Originally posted by dww View Post
            I think a superleague is impractical while on the day attendances are the biggest revenue stream for big clubs and local derbies are of such interest. The idea is an empty threat from the big clubs who don't even really want it to happen IMO.

            This ruling to me will probably mean an end to the idea of individual team getting TV rights for a decent period of time. The idea that organisations such as leagues should have the ability to deal with this sort of agreement seems to me the most likely thing to be enforced by this sort of ruling. Along with the sort of anti-drugs rules everyone would probably get behind.
            interesting you mention the TV deal, I know in Italy (and possibly Spain) negoitate their own tv deals and get a lot of money for it, do you think this treaty will affect the way tv deals are negotiated?


            "Who's your Daddy now?"

            LFC Champions one season someday
            Jurgen Klopp is just boss
            Semi retired poster
            twitter: @parmsahota
            insta:@parm78

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