EPL 2020/2021
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From a non-anglophile pov.
From a Juventus pov, I can sort of see it. Serie A is now no more interesting than the Scottish or Portuguese league. Really just 2 teams in it.
I dont see what has changed in Spain. 2 giants dominate and contend for UEFA trophies.
It's a bit weird and sad that England with its 'big 6' us the most interesting and unpredictable league.
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Is this intended to replace the CL or run concurrently with it? As if they don’t already play enough games as it is.
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@rancid-schnitzel said in EPL 2020/2021:
Is this intended to replace the CL or run concurrently with it? As if they don’t already play enough games as it is.
i had understood it as replacing the CL, that they were saying its normally won by one of these teams anyway...so let them run it and negotiate their own deals etc
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@rapido said in EPL 2020/2021:
From a non-anglophile pov.
From a Juventus pov, I can sort of see it. Serie A is now no more interesting than the Scottish or Portuguese league. Really just 2 teams in it.
I dont see what has changed in Spain. 2 giants dominate and contend for UEFA trophies.
It's a bit weird and sad that England with its 'big 6' us the most interesting and unpredictable league.
Except this season of course when Juventus are struggling to finish in the top 4.
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- 20 teams will participate, including 15 founding clubs. Five further teams can qualify annually based on achievements in the prior season
- A group phase will start in August, featuring two groups of 10 teams playing home and away fixtures, with the top three in each group automatically qualifying for the quarter-finals. Teams finishing fourth and fifth will compete in a play-off over two legs for the remaining knockout spots
- The quarter-finals and semi-final will take place over two legs before the final in May, which will be staged at a neutral venue
- Midweek fixtures with the ESL claiming clubs continue to compete in their respective national leagues
So the 15 founding clubs have a life-long membership to the top table.
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@kiwiwomble Yes it is a midweek competition to take over the UCL and guarantee the "founder clubs" a spot every season no matter how crap they are in the previous season.
On Bayern/Dortmund - the German teams all have a minimum of 51% fan ownership (as far as I know) so cannot easily decide to jump ship.
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@gt12 said in EPL 2020/2021:
I don't know if any outside money is involved in this, but it smells like the sort of cautionary tale that could come about for NZ rugby from allowing outside money into the tent.
No cautions will be heeded.
Tbh you'd think super rugby would already be a cautionary tale the other way.
Eventually, surprisingly quickly, once the new equilibrium is found. Clubs used to being second best in their leagues ,competing annually, will find they are perennial cellar dwellers . E g. Queensland, Auckland and Natal etc.with crowds half what they used to get.
It's cute of Tottenham or Atletico to think they can compete better against the virtual entire population and economy of Bavaria better than Dortmund or even Berlin can.
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@kiwipie said in EPL 2020/2021:
@kiwiwomble Yes it is a midweek competition to take over the UCL and guarantee the "founder clubs" a spot every season no matter how crap they are in the previous season.
On Bayern/Dortmund - the German teams all have a minimum of 51% fan ownership (as far as I know) so cannot easily decide to jump ship.
yeah, that's how i saw the German club situation explained, in principle they're "in"...but need to take it to a vote of their fans/owners and that takes time to arrange
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@bovidae said in EPL 2020/2021:
- 20 teams will participate, including 15 founding clubs. Five further teams can qualify annually based on achievements in the prior season
- A group phase will start in August, featuring two groups of 10 teams playing home and away fixtures, with the top three in each group automatically qualifying for the quarter-finals. Teams finishing fourth and fifth will compete in a play-off over two legs for the remaining knockout spots
- The quarter-finals and semi-final will take place over two legs before the final in May, which will be staged at a neutral venue
- Midweek fixtures with the ESL claiming clubs continue to compete in their respective national leagues
So the 15 founding clubs have a life-long membership to the top table.
So a minimum number of games is 18 for the 10 worst teams. Maximum is 25 if you're 4th/5th and make the final.
Given the UCL is only 13 games if you win it (and don't have to pre-qualify) that's a game every midweek for all but the winter months when presumably they will halt as they do now? With 38 EPL games, that doesn't leave much of a gap in your calendar for anything else.
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@kiwiwomble said in EPL 2020/2021:
@kiwipie said in EPL 2020/2021:
@kiwiwomble Yes it is a midweek competition to take over the UCL and guarantee the "founder clubs" a spot every season no matter how crap they are in the previous season.
On Bayern/Dortmund - the German teams all have a minimum of 51% fan ownership (as far as I know) so cannot easily decide to jump ship.
yeah, that's how i saw the German club situation explained, in principle they're "in"...but need to take it to a vote of their fans/owners and that takes time to arrange
I’m thinking perhaps RB Leipzig being the most likely to jump ship. Officially RB means RasenBallsport but actually stands for Red Bull. They’re as manufactured as you can get and are universally hated in Germany anyway (or at least were).
The big permanent members and qualifications for the small fish make this look more like Eurovision.
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This is really quite unbelievable, but in reality should have been expected as the money in the game reached the levels it has, and the inevitable struggled caused by the pandemic.
Ultimately, the biggest clubs have a business model which means they must play Champs League football to survive. Ticket sales, merchandise and broadcast rights bring in colossal amounts of money and has time has gone on, the costs of running have also increased massively (salaries, transfer fee's etc) to the point that you still need an oligarch / billionaire to prop you up. And billionaires are first and foremost, business people. What brings in the money, is all that matters. So as the pandemic as destroyed ticket sales, and then the big clubs losing their colossal fans / cauldron atmosphere's, things have evened up somewhat (as can be seen by the tables). So suddenly all the CL places are up in the air the business boys get together and BOOM. A breakaway league for the rich.
It's shocking, and it shows just how little of the tournament is about the sport now. You've got to earn your right, not buy it, to play European football.
I have no idea how this will play out. I think it will come down to how the players feel. The fans hate it. The pundits hate it. Governments hate it.
But it seems to be set in stone. Interesting times ahead.
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@majorrage Surely it is their own fault if they have a wage bill that is not covered by their income. From my understanding it is not a written bylaw to the rules of the FA that you must pay more than you can afford in the salary department and any organisation that does so on an ongoing basis will/must eventually go broke - Law No. 1 of Economics. Off the top of my head I offer up Bury and Portsmouth as fine examples of this. Oh and Rangers in Scotland also had financial problems that saw them turfed to the lowest SFA League a few years back.
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@higgins It is of course completely their own fault, although they would argue that they've had to do what they have in order to survive. The only other real option is the Ajax model, whereby they basically have accepted they will never dominate, and produce home grown talent then sell it at a massive profit.
I do wonder who the other 3 teams are. It simply can't be the German ones due to their model. PSG surely must be one of them.
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@rapido said in EPL 2020/2021:
It can be the German ones, their model of minimum 50.1% fan ownership doesnt prevent it if 50.1% are in favour.
Barca and Real are 100% fan owned.
The other 3 are PSG, Bayern and Dortmund.
Difference between owned and controlled.
@rapido said in EPL 2020/2021:
Just not all are on the same page with how far to push this big bluff.
Yeah, agree. It must be one big bluff, mustn't it?
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@majorrage said in EPL 2020/2021:
Ultimately, the biggest clubs have a business model which means they must play Champs League football to survive.
Watching a few media pundits talk about this, the move to an ESL is being driven by 4 clubs - Liverpool, Man Utd, Real Madrid and Juventus, and in particular, their owners/presidents.