
FA
chairman Greg Clarke opposes plans for a European Premier League and insists
there would "big consequences" for players who joined a breakaway
competition.
Plans for a lucrative new tournament were leaked last month, which revealed
that Liverpool and Manchester United have participated in talks over the
construction of a new competition, which would receive funding of $6billion
(£4.6billion) by Wall Street bank JP Morgan.
Arsenal, Chelsea, Manchester City and Tottenham have also reportedly been
approached, and it is understood that more than a dozen clubs from England,
France, Germany, Italy and Spain have held talks about becoming founding
members of the competition.
FIFA president Gianni Infantino has said he is "not interested" in a
European Premier League, while UEFA says it "strongly opposes" the plans,
and Clarke says players would be banned from playing in the Champions League
or for their national teams if they join a breakaway league.
When asked how easy it would be for the Premier League's 'big six' to join a
European Premier League, Clarke said: "It is more complicated, it seems. For
example, any European Super League needs approval from three bodies.
"It needs the approval of FIFA, which is the global governing body which I
sit on the board of. It needs UEFA, which is the European governing body
which I sit on the board of. And it needs approval of the member
association, which in this case is the FA. So all three of those would have
to approve the clubs participating, for a European Super League to be
possible.
"Now it is practical to get an expensive lawyer to pick holes in that
because they'll look at the words and say 'maybe we can do this or maybe we
can do that'. But once you move out of association football, you can't play
for England, you can't play in the Champions League. So there are big
consequences to moving outside of the association football pyramid."
Clarke, who was elected as a FIFA vice president in 2019, said he would
oppose any plans for a breakaway European league.
"I would fight a European Super League at FIFA level, at UEFA level and FA
Level," said Clarke, speaking at a Digital, Culture, Media and Sport
Committee meeting on Tuesday.
"I'm sure I would get the support of the FA board, because our job is to
protect football. Not to create some sort of global elite which we look on
from a distance and are available to only a small number of clubs."
Clarke believes the current interest surrounding the proposed European
Premier League could be "sabre-rattling" from elite clubs hoping to get a
more favourable share of revenue from the next Champions League television
rights deal.
"The problem is there's a point of instability in football every few years,
because every few years they renegotiate the Champions League - which is the
big earner for clubs that play in Europe," added Clarke.
"The next Champions League negotiation is due to finish by 2022 and take
place in 2024, when the new Champions League and Europa League format takes
place.
"When that happens there is usually a lot of sabre-rattling, and sometimes
more than sabre-rattling about the formation of a competitor for the
Champions League.
"Usually that manifests itself as big clubs trying to create leverage for
themselves to get a better deal out of the Champions League.
"But I think it would be foolish in the extreme to assume there aren't big
money interests outside of football, private equity etc., who are looking at
that as a value creation vehicle and they have little interest in the
long-term interests of the game."