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    Tuchel reveals he has NOT spoken to Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich since joining and nobody has to apologise for ESL

    THOMAS TUCHEL says no-one at Chelsea owes him an apology for the Super League shambles – and claimed football fans should actually be thankful of what the Big Six has done for the English game.Tuchel insists there is nothing Roman Abramovich or chairman Bruce Buck should say sorry for even though their decision to sign up for a breakaway league sent shockwaves through the world game.
    Thomas Tuchel says an apology isn’t necessary as Chelsea fans are happy with the owners
    And the German claimed it is important supporters remember what the under-fire owners have all done for the Premier League.
    Asked if they needed to regain trust, Tuchel – who revealed he has not spoken to Abramovich since taking the job – said: “No, because I think that the people and the fans know very much that it’s also the credit from the owners who improve their clubs and made big strong clubs, and build a strong and maybe the most competitive league in the world
    “So I think they appreciate that very well and I think that the people can read very clearly and can divide things from another and they express their opinion on this decision.
    “They were absolutely not happy, the fans and supporters obviously but I don’t think it affects in general the opinion on what for example the owner did for this club, for the community, for the women’s team, the academy and the first team. It’s a lot, a lot of positive things.
    “Nobody needs to apologise and I have not spoken to the owner since I arrived which is absolutely not a problem.
    “I was in dialogue with the club before and after the match so I was informed that we were pulling out and that was pretty much all I needed to prepare the next match against West Ham.”
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    Chelsea fans were successful in their protest against the European Super League
    Chelsea fans turned out in force before the Brighton draw in midweek – a protest which Tuchel and the Blues squad could not escape from as they arrived late for the match.
    He added: “It was not against the club, it was not against the team, we didn’t feel it like this. It was against the decision that the club made and this decision is off.
    “They express themselves, it’s their right to express themselves. They were hurt in this situation and in this decision, they were heard and the club is pulling off and changed the decision.
    “But in general, I’m very sure that everybody sees what our owner and clearly the other owners of the Big Six teams do for this league.

    “I mean they’re a big, big, big part of this competition.
    “This is the competition, where everybody in all Europe envies us to be in it, and to have a competition like this, and this is the solid basis, the big six teams and all the other teams.
    “With so many strong managers, so many strong players in there, and so many big clubs. This is what they did for the clubs.”
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    Man Utd joined by West Ham in five-way Max Aarons transfer fight as Norwich demand £30m fee for full-back

    WEST HAM have joined the fight for Max Aarons this summer and Norwich are willing to let the defender leave, according to reports.Aarons, 21, has been a long-term target of Manchester United and it now appears he is on the radar of Bayern Munich, Barcelona and Tottenham.
    Max Aarons has attracted suitors from across Europe
    West Ham and United will have to pay £30million to land the England U21 international, claim The Independent.
    The Canaries persuaded him to stay last summer but a promise the club made means Aarons has now been told he can leave.
    But it is The Irons who could hold the advantage in the transfer battle, as Aarons is reportedly keen to stay in the south.
    That could rule out a move abroad or to United, and West Ham may have the added appeal of European football to offer next year.
    The Hammers are currently level on points with fourth-placed Chelsea.
    Aarons has just three seasons as a senior professional under his belt but he has had a successful start to his career.
    He has two promotions with Norwich and clearly has a very bright future ahead of him, given the interest.
    Aarons has been ever-present under Daniel Farke, missing just eight league games since he first came into the side in 2018.
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    West Ham signing Aarons could depend on how much money owners David Gold and David Sullivan are willing to spend.
    Valdimir Coufal has proved a shrewd addition but the extra money from Champions League qualification could make Aarons an option.
    But with United and others interested there promises to be future twists in this transfer saga.
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    ED Woodward resigns from Man Utd over the European Super League fiasco More

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    Rage About Europe's Super League Is Muffled by Our Cheers

    A breakaway league would remake European soccer to benefit a few rich teams, but we will watch it anyway.Real Madrid’s players pumped fists and exchanged hugs. A scoreless tie at Liverpool on Wednesday night had assured that the Spanish club had taken what it saw as its rightful place in the semifinals of the Champions League. All of a sudden, a 14th European Cup title hung tantalizingly close.No club has quite so much of its identity bound up with the Champions League as Real Madrid. It regards the tournament as its personal fief. Its sees its pursuit of continental primacy as its central, animating force. At much the same time as Zinedine Zidane’s team was celebrating victory, though, the club’s president, Florentino Pérez, was putting the finishing touches to a plan designed, in effect, to destroy the competition forever.Pérez spent the tail end of last week making calls and lobbying support and quieting nerves among some of European soccer’s most powerful executives for a plan years in the making.On Sunday, the fruits of that labor were revealed: A dozen leading clubs — Manchester United, Liverpool, Arsenal, Manchester City, Chelsea and Tottenham from the Premier League; Juventus, Inter Milan and A.C. Milan of Italy; and Real Madrid, Barcelona and Atlético from Spain — had agreed to become founding members of a breakaway superleague.Pérez and his allies must have known what the reaction would be: a great torrent of caustic condemnations, each one flecked with scarcely concealed rage. UEFA released a statement, also signed by the Premier League, Spain’s La Liga and Italy’s Serie A, threatening the conspirators with expulsion if they continued down this dark and murky path. The Bundesliga of Germany lent its support, even though its teams had refused to sign up to the proposals. The French league did the same.Executives from those teams that would be cut adrift spoke gravely of the need to protect soccer’s pyramid. Fan groups rejected any rupture en masse and outright. So, too, did various national associations. Gary Neville, the former Manchester United player who has become a staple of British television broadcasts, had his say.Almost as important, Britain’s prime minister, Boris Johnson, gravely intoned that the clubs involved would have to answer to their fans. The French president, Emmanuel Macron, released a statement decrying the idea. None of his country’s teams had agreed to take part. Only Paris St.-Germain had been asked. It said no. For now.That none of these parties can be considered truly dispassionate goes without saying. Of course UEFA does not want the Champions League to be usurped. Of course the major domestic leagues cannot countenance the idea of seeing their competitions diminished. Of course executives at those clubs who would be excluded do not want to see the gravy train they are currently riding overtaken by an express.They are all compromised in one way or another, but that does not render their outrage unjustified. They might be no less avaricious or cynical in their thinking than the rebel clubs. Their calls to arms over the sanctity of soccer’s pyramid might ring deafeningly hollow. But the problem with the plan is not that it accentuates money; it is that it eliminates risk.Juventus won’t have to worry about an early exit, or any exit, from the Super League.Alessandro Di Marco/EPA, via ShutterstockFor the dozen founding members, the appeal of a Super League is that it is predictable. There would no longer be any need to worry about qualifying for the Champions League — it is possible that at least four of the signatories will miss out on next season’s edition simply through not being good enough in their domestic leagues — in order to have access to soccer’s most lucrative prize pot. The income would, instead, be guaranteed.The problem with that, of course, is that unpredictability — what is rather grandly known in the sport’s argot as competitive balance — is at least part of the secret of soccer’s appeal. In March, F.C. Porto knocked Juventus out of the Champions League in the round of 16. Its elimination came in the same week that the Juventus president, Andrea Agnelli, had ill advisedly gone public with his latest harebrained schemes for improving the sport he purports to love.From a business perspective, his club’s exit was bad. Juventus is the champion of Italy. It is one of the most popular teams in the world. It has far more box office appeal than Porto; the longer it stays in the Champions League, the better not only for Juventus itself, but to some extent for the competition as a whole. From a sporting perspective, though, its demise was compelling, spellbinding drama, and at the center of the plot was jeopardy: Something was riding on this. Remove the stakes, and it is highly likely that the product will suffer. More

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    Leeds star Patrick Bamford reveals he was SICK after running himself into ground during Liverpool draw

    PATRICK BAMFORD revealed he was SICK during Leeds’ draw with Liverpool. After running himself into the ground, the Whites striker threw up in the second half before Diego Llorente’s late equaliser in the 1-1 draw at Elland Road. 
    Leeds striker Bamford was sick after he hit the bar against LiverpoolCredit: PA
    The England hopeful has 14 Premier League goals so far this seasonCredit: AFP
    Bamford, 27, said: “I was actually sick in my mouth on the pitch when I was blowing.
    “I think it was just after I hit the bar and they broke on a counter-attack. 
    “I sprinted from their box to ours, nothing came of it, Illan Meslier got the ball and we started attacking again.
    “I ran all the way back up the pitch and we just kept the ball and were passing it around.
    “I thought I was going to burp, and I was sick in my mouth.
    “I spat it out and for the rest of the game, I had the taste of sick in my mouth.”
    And Bamford was left horrified when he heard Leeds boss Marcelo Bielsa shouting for the England hopeful to run even more just as he wanted to take a breather for a drink.
    The striker, who has 14 goals this season, added: “I was trying to stay away because after I did that run, I heard him shout ‘Patrick, move’ and I thought ‘Oh, my God!”

    Liverpool boast the most-valuable squad in the Premier League
    Having beaten runaway leaders Manchester City with 10 men the week before, Bamford was left disappointed to only claim a point against the reigning champs. 
    He told the Official Leeds United Podcast: “I remember me and Kalvin (Phillps) on the walk in the morning, we were talking and I said if we can get after them, we can win this.
    “I was really frustrated after the game that we had not won and in the second half we really had them up against the wall. It was frustrating.”
    Bamford had no time to take a breather with Leeds boss Marcelo Bielsa shouting at him to keep runningCredit: Reuters
    Leeds and Liverpool fans unite to protest European Super League More

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    Wolves ‘begin search for Nuno Espirito Santo replacements over fears he could QUIT with Mourinho favourite to take over’

    WOLVES are drawing up a list of managers to replace Nuno Espirito Santo amid fears he is preparing to quit, reports claim.According to the Mail, there is a growing sense at Molineux that the coach, 47, will call time on his four-year stay at the end of the season.
    Nuno Espirito Santo is reportedly considering his future at WolvesCredit: Getty
    The bookies have already made Jose Mourinho their favourite to land the role, should Nuno leave.
    The former Tottenham boss is available after being sacked by the North London club and is joined by Eddie Howe and Porto’s Sergio Conceicao.
    But reports suggest Wolves will look elsewhere with Mourinho’s former assistant Rui Faria among three men targeted.
    The 45-year-old did not join Mourinho at Spurs as he made his own managerial bow with a year in charge of Qatari club Al-Duhail.
    Vitor Pereira, last seen coaching Shanghai SIPG, and Carlos Carvalhal’s old Sheffield Wednesday assistant Bruno Lage are also named in the report.
    Lage, 44, most recently managed Benfica and, like both Faria and Pereira, is Portuguese, out of work, and linked to Jorge Mendes.
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    The agent has cut several deals with Wolves during their rise from Championship also-rans to Premier League mainstays.
    One such deal saw ex-goalkeeper Nuno take charge of the team in 2017 and he has enjoyed great success, winning the Championship title before earning consecutive seventh-place finishes in the top-flight.
    But the Portuguese coach is said to be considering his future amid rumours of a switch to Tottenham and Spain described as another option.

    That would allow him to be closer to his Porto-based family and he spoke earlier this month of how difficult it had been to spend time away from his wife and two daughters during the pandemic.
    In discussing a rare family visit, he said: “It wasn’t in the circumstances that we all wish, but it was a great lift for me, for them, for everyone and us as a family.
    “You need time together and it’s been a long period without each other. We’ve faced a long period without being able to visit our own countries.”
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    Nuno reveals Wolves star Adama Traore lathers baby oil on arms to stop being held back and to avoid shoulder injuries More

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    British Premier League: How Rangers and Celtic match up against English opposition on stadiums, transfers and honours

    ENGLAND’S major clubs are looking to shake things up – and they want the Old Firm to join them.Plans for a European Super League have been binned but the big hitters down south now want to establish a new British Super League with Rangers and Celtic invited to join them.
    Rangers and Celtic fans could soon be adding noise and colour to a British League
    And it’s understood the new proposals would get the backing of Fifa, Uefa and the UK Government.
    Chat about the Scottish giants joining up with their English counterparts has been rumbling on for years.
    But it now looks like it could finally become a reality.
    The Premier League clubs have looked at Celtic and Rangers’ massive grounds, long honours lists and huge fanbases and decided they want to introduce that to their game.
    But just how do the Scottish pair stack up with the 20 best clubs in England?
    We’ve taken a look at a number of key areas ahead of the British Super League’s foundation.
    STADIUMS
    Celtic and Rangers would have the fourth and eighth biggest capacities respectively in a British League
    Ibrox and Celtic Park are two of the most famous grounds in world football.
    And when full to capacity they are usually intimidating and hostile cauldrons that put the fear in the opposition.
    That atmosphere could be huge in helping the Glasgow pair get the upper hand when Premier League clubs come calling.
    Parkhead’s capacity of 60,411 would make it the fourth biggest stadium in a new British League behind Man Utd’s Old Trafford ground, the new Tottenham Hotspur Stadium and Arsenal’s Emirates.
    Rangers would have the eighth biggest ground after West Ham’s London Stadium, Man City’s home at the Etihad, Liverpool’s famous Anfield stadium and St James’ Park in Newcastle.
    Both Scottish clubs operate out of stadia bigger than the other 12 Premier League outfits including Chelsea, Everton, Leeds, and Leicester.
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    TRANSFERS
    Rangers and Celtic lack the spending power of the big English clubs
    Rangers and Celtic may dominate the Scottish landscape but they remain the poor relations with England when it comes to spending power.
    The Ibrox side’s record transfer remains the £12m paid to Chelsea for Tore Andre Flo in 2000.
    Celtic broke the bank in 2018 to sign Odsonne Edouard on a permanent deal from PSG.
    But both those deals are dwarfed by the fortunes spent by the Premier League clubs to land their own record signings.
    Man United lead the way with the £89m shelled out for Paul Pogba, followed by the £75m Liverpool paid Southampton to recruit former Celtic defender Virgil van Dijk.
    Even relative minnows West Brom and Burnley have broken the bank to boost their squads, with the Baggies paying £18m for Grady Diangana and Burnley laying out £15m for Ben Gibson.
    But should the British League prove as lucrative as the Premier League then it won’t be long before Rangers and Celtic are soon smashing their own record transfer deals.
    HONOURS
    Rangers and Celtic have won significantly more honours than their English counterparts
    Rangers and Celtic do, however, lead the way when it comes to the list of major honours won by every club.
    The Glasgow pair have lifted more than 100 trophies each, with Rangers out in front with 116 and Celtic next with 111.
    The Ibrox club’s 55 league titles is a world record with the Hoops hot on their heels with 51.
    That puts them miles in front of the major English clubs. Man United lead the way with 66 domestic and European honours, followed by Liverpool (65) then Arsenal (48), Chelsea (31), Man City and Spurs (both 26).
    At the other end of the table, Crystal Palace and Southampton have just one major trophy win apiece, while Fulham and Brighton are still waiting for their first silverware success.
    TRAVEL
    Rangers and Celtic fans will be clocking up the miles to watch their team in the British League
    Rangers and Celtic’s current furthest matchday trip is the 180-mile journey to take on Ross County in Dingwall.
    But their supporters will need to really put in the miles if they are to watch their team in the British League.
    While Newcastle is slightly closer than Dingwall at 151 miles, most other away days will involve round trips of more than 500 miles.
    And any fans wishing to drive to take in an away match with Brighton will clock up 926 miles journeying to the English south coast and back.
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    FIFA's Infantino Issues Super League Warning; P.S.G. Won't Join It

    As opposition mounts to a breakaway European league, Paris St.-Germain opted out and an Italian team president called a rival backing the plan “a Judas.”Either you are in, or you are out.The president of world soccer’s governing body, FIFA, delivered a short but powerful message on Tuesday to the dozen rich and powerful European clubs whose planned breakaway Super League has threatened to upend the decades-old structures that underpin the world’s most powerful sport.“If some elect to go their own way then they must live with the consequences of their choice, they are responsible for their choice,” the FIFA president, Gianni Infantino, said in an address to European soccer leaders at their congress in Montreux, Switzerland. “Concretely this means, either you are in, or you are out. You cannot be half in and half out. This has to be absolutely clear.”Infantino’s intervention came amid mounting fury against a proposed European Super League that has turned the sports project into a national emergency in the three countries — England, Spain and Italy — that are home to its 12 founding members. More

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    Battle Over Super League Begins With Letters, Threats and Banners

    The founding members of a league that would reshape soccer have warned the sport’s leaders that they will fight any effort to block their plans.LONDON — The superclubs have called in the lawyers. The president of European soccer has responded, calling the teams’ leaders “snakes and liars.” And the fans want no part of any of it.The pitched battle to pursue, or prevent, a breakaway European soccer superleague started to take shape on Monday, hours after the stunning announcement late Sunday night by 12 of the sport’s richest and most popular teams that they were forming one.The plan threatens to redraw the European soccer economy, from rich clubs in the Premier League to tiny ones in every corner of the continent, and funnel billions of dollars toward a handful of wealthy elite teams. It would represent one of the biggest wealth transfers in sports history, imperil the future of marquee events like the Champions League and threaten the existence of the domestic leagues and the smaller clubs that were left behind.By first light on Monday, the fight was on. In a letter written by the breakaway teams, they warned soccer’s authorities that they had taken legal action to prevent any efforts to block their project.A few hours later, Aleksander Ceferin, the president of European soccer’s governing body, UEFA, used his first public appearance to denounce the group behind the plan and vowed to take stern action if it did not reverse course. He raised the possibility of barring players on the participating teams from events like the World Cup and other tournaments, and threatened to banish the rebel clubs from their domestic leagues. Sunday’s announcement, he said, amounted to “spitting in football fans’ faces.”By then the outrage was spreading. In Germany, Bayern Munich and Borussia Dortmund — clubs seen as potential joiners of the breakaway league — distanced themselves from the plan. In France, Paris St.-Germain midfielder Ander Herrera lamented “the rich stealing what the people created.” In Spain, La Liga has convened a meeting of its clubs but will hold it without the three teams — Real Madrid, Barcelona and Atlético Madrid — who have agreed to join the Super League.And in England, coaches and players revealed they had not been consulted on the move, fan groups united in their opposition to the proposal, and, in Liverpool, supporters demanded the club remove their banners from the team’s stadium before its next home game on Saturday.“We feel we can no longer give our support to a club which puts financial greed above integrity of the game,” one of the groups said on Twitter.Aleksander Ceferin, the president of European soccer’s governing body, threatened to punish the clubs leading a breakaway league, then offered them an olive branch.Richard Juilliart/Agence France-Presse — Getty ImagesAs they went public on Sunday with their plans for the European Super League, though, the proposal’s backers simultaneously wrote to the president of FIFA, world soccer’s governing body, and to UEFA’s Ceferin saying that they would like to work with the organizations but that they had also taken measures to protect their interests.The group includes a dozen top teams from England, Spain and Italy, such as Manchester United, Liverpool, Real Madrid and Juventus, and its six-page missive made clear its intent to proceed, and to overcome any opposition.Rumors of the creation of the breakaway competition, which hopes to add three more permanent founding members to what will be an annual 20-team league, prompted FIFA in January to bow to pressure from UEFA and issue a statement that threatened severe repercussions against players and clubs involved in any unsanctioned tournament. FIFA issued a statement of “disapproval” of the breakaway plan on Sunday, but notably did not repeat the threat of expelling those who took part.Faced with that threat, though, the company created to control the new Super League said in its letter sent on Sunday that motions had been filed in multiple courts to prevent any moves to jeopardize the project, which, its organizers said, has $4 billion of financing in place.The company has “taken appropriate action to challenge the legality of the restrictions to the formation of the competition before such relevant courts and European authorities as may be necessary to safeguard its future,” said the letter, a copy of which was reviewed by The New York Times.At Arsenal, some fans vented their anger at the owner Stan Kroenke.Tolga Akmen/Agence France-Presse — Getty ImagesThe superleague the clubs have agreed to form — an alliance of top teams closer in concept to closed leagues like the N.F.L. and the N.B.A. than to soccer’s current model — would bring about the most significant restructuring of elite European soccer since the creation of the European Cup (now the Champions League) in the 1950s.Yet even as it detailed its pre-emptive legal actions, the six-page letter invited soccer’s leaders to hold “urgent” talks to find a common path forward for a project that the group says will benefit soccer even beyond the narrow group that will enjoy unparalleled riches. Under the plan announced Sunday, the 15 founding members of the Super League would share an initial pool of 3.5 billion euros, about $4.2 billion.That equates to some $400 million each, more than four times what the winner of the Champions League took home in 2020. In the letter, the founders of the Super League said they did not wish to replace the Champions League, but instead wanted to create a tournament that would run alongside it.The damage to the prestige and value of the Champions League, though, would be immediate and run into the billions of dollars, turning what has for decades been club soccer’s elite competition into a secondary event, one that is unlikely to retain anything close to its current commercial appeal.In a concurrent effort to make the event more valuable, UEFA on Monday ratified the biggest changes to the Champions League since 1992. And then Ceferin held a news conference in which he took direct aim at the rival league.Having digested the letter’s content, Ceferin said, he was in no mood to acquiesce to demands for an urgent meeting. Instead, he issued pointed rebukes to several of the men leading the effort, and singled out Andrea Agnelli, the chairman of the Italian champion Juventus.Agnelli, who resigned from his role on UEFA’s executive committee after the announcement of the breakaway, had spoken to Ceferin as recently as Saturday. At the time, Ceferin said, Agnelli had told the UEFA president he fully supported changes to the Champions League and dismissed talk of a breakaway as “just rumors.”“Agnelli is the biggest disappointment of all,” said Ceferin, who worked as a criminal lawyer before moving into soccer. “I’ve never seen a person who would lie so many times and so persistently as he did.”Ed Woodward, the vice chairman of Manchester United, gave his support for UEFA’s Champions League restructuring as recently as Thursday, Ceferin added. He said UEFA was considering seeking damages from the 12 clubs that formed the breakaway group, and even from some of their top officials.Still, he enters the next stage of the fight for control of European soccer with the support of some top club executives. Nasser al-Khelaifi, the chairman of the French champion Paris St.-Germain, was among the officials who voted to approve the changes to the Champions League, and he has resisted efforts to lure P.S.G., a club stocked with some of the world’s best players, to the new league.Teams in Germany, including last season’s Champions League winner, Bayern Munich, and its biggest domestic rival, Borussia Dortmund, also have declined to join the new venture. In another boost for UEFA, Bayern’s chairman, Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, was chosen to replace Agnelli on UEFA’s board.The substantial changes to the Champions League may now be consigned to irrelevance, though, if the breakaway clubs manage to get their way and take to the field in a competition that they said they hoped to begin as soon as this summer. Their urgency stems from their financing; the investment bank JPMorgan Chase has provided four billion euros in debt financing to start the league, but it is contingent on the group’s securing a broadcast contract.Manchester City and Liverpool are among the six Premier League clubs that have signed on to the new Super League.Pool photo by Jon SuperIn the letter, the group said that its urgency stemmed from the huge losses piling up as a result of the coronavirus pandemic. The sight of games played in cavernous but empty stadiums has become the norm, and restrictions on public gatherings mean that hundreds of millions of dollars are being lost in gate receipts in every league in Europe, while broadcasters have also clawed back vast sums from leagues and competition organizers.The biggest European clubs have long been frustrated with sharing the wealth created by tournaments in which they are the biggest draw, and talks about a new league began well before the pandemic. Documents that leaked in 2019 showed that the president of Real Madrid, Florentino Pérez, an architect of the current plan, had sought to create an earlier iteration of a competition involving the biggest teams.The role FIFA will play in the fight over the Super League is intriguing, too. Its president, Gianni Infantino, has talked in recent years of creating new competitions to increase interest in soccer around the globe. As part of that push, he has given his backing to a 20-team superleague in Africa.FIFA issued a statement late Sunday in which it reiterated that it would not support a closed breakaway competition. The Super League’s founders, though, insisted that their event is not completely closed, since they plan to provide access every season to five teams outside the 15 founding members.Ceferin said he expected Infantino to dispel any doubts about his position on Tuesday when he addresses UEFA’s annual meeting.For now, UEFA and other groups opposed to the new competition are huddling to discuss their legal options, and engaging in talks with governments across Europe as well as with the European Union. Ceferin praised some of the politicians who have publicly condemned the Super League plan, including Britain’s prime minister, Boris Johnson, and France’s president, Emmanuel Macron.Yet he also offered an olive branch to the rebel clubs.He told them it was not too late to come back from the brink. While relationships have been damaged, he said, he vowed to act professionally for the benefit of European soccer. While he felt betrayed by the “greediness, selfishness and narcissism” of some of those involved, he would not — with the possible exception of Agnelli — make things personal. Ceferin is the godfather to Agnelli’s youngest child. More