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    Dortmund REJECT European Super League but ‘at least two’ French clubs set to join controversial breakaway competition

    BORUSSIA DORTMUND have snubbed the renegade European Super League.But while the Bundesliga giants have rejected the unpopular proposals, two French sides are reportedly set to join.
    Borussia Dortmund have rejected the European Super LeagueCredit: Getty
    Money-grabbing plans for the new league have been widely slammed by fans across Europe.
    The competition could start as soon as NEXT SEASON with the 15 founding clubs signing up for 23 YEARS.
    Last night, the Prem Big Six alongside Spanish trio Real and Atletico Madrid and Barcelona, as well as AC Milan, Inter and Juventus, officially broke cover to confirm their membership.
    In a statement outlining the breakaway scheme, the 12 rebels said they ‘anticipated a further three clubs will join ahead of the inaugural season, which is intended to commence as soon as practicable’.
    But Dortmund released a statement denouncing the competition that read: “On Monday morning, Borussia Dortmund’s chairman of the board, Hans-Joachim Watzke, took a position on the discussion about the introduction of a European Super League.
    “Watzke said: ‘The members of the board of the European Club Association (ECA) got together for a virtual conference on Sunday evening and confirmed that the board decision of last Friday is still valid.’
    “And he added: ‘This decision means that the clubs want to implement the planned reform of the Uefa Champions League.
    “It was the clear opinion of the members of the ECA board that the plans to found a Super League were rejected.’
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    “Watzke also emphasizes that ‘both German clubs that are represented on the ECA Board, FC Bayern Munich and Borussia Dortmund, represented 100 per cent congruent views in all discussions’.”
    Fellow Bundesliga side RB Leipzig have also turned their back on the breakaway group, according to Sky Germany.
    And Portuguese giants FC Porto are also out, according to their president Pinto da Costa.
    He is quoted as saying: “There were informal contacts but we didn’t pay much attention.
    “We are in the Champions League and we hope to continue to be there for many years to come.”
    And according to an unnamed Super League source quoted by AFP, at least two French clubs are set to join where Dortmund have turned away.

    Paris Saint-Germain are yet to declare a position with Lyon and Marseille both being discussed as potential participants given their size, history and fanbase.
    Sir Alex Ferguson is one of several star names to slam the proposals saying ‘fans like European competition the way it is’.
    Elsewhere, Spanish LaLiga chiefs slammed the breakaway plotters in a withering attack.
    Real Madrid are the ringleaders of the self-appointed elite, with neighbours Atletico and rivals Barcelona joining the Prem Big Six in becoming ‘Founding Clubs’ of the competition.
    But as the Spanish clubs left out showed their disdain, with Real Betis publishing a table which wiped out the results of games involving the want-away trio, the League added further weight to its onslaught.
    LaLiga said it ‘strongly condemns’ the plan for ‘a breakaway, elitist European competition that attacks the principles of open competition and sporting merit which are at the heart of the domestic and European football pyramid’.
    It said: “Today football fans across Europe can dream that their club, no matter the size, may excel, climb to the top and compete at the pinnacle of European football.
    “LaLiga defends this European tradition of football for all. The concept proposed by 12 European clubs destroys that dream, shutting the door to the top of European football, allowing in just an elite few.”

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    The Spanish top flight added: “The newly proposed top European competition is nothing more than a selfish, egotistical proposal designed to further enrich the already super rich.
    “It will undermine the appeal of the whole game and have a deeply damaging impact on the immediate and future of La Liga, its member clubs, and all the entire footballing ecosystem.
    “This destruction of the European football ecosystem will also ultimately cause the failure of this new competition and its participating clubs, which have built their success based on the achievement of sports titles and triumphs, which will now be more limited.
    “We use all measures at our disposal and work with all stakeholders to defend the integrity and future of Spanish football in the best interests of the game.”
    According to Super League, the new elite will generate £346m EACH year in ‘solidarity’ payments for the rest of European football.
    That is up to three times the amount due to trickle down to the minnows from Uefa’s planned Champions League revamp.
    Super League insiders insist that figure, for each of the 23 years of the initial deal, is a ‘minimum’ return, with a fixed percentage of revenues doled out through the rest of the European club game.
    But the reality of why the ‘dirty dozen’ are willing to risk a legal fight with Uefa and their domestic rivals was evidenced in the news that the founding clubs will share an initial £3billion pot ‘to support their infrastructure investment plans and to offset the impact of the COVID pandemic’.
    ⚽ Read our Football live blog for the very latest news from around the grounds
    European Super League explained: Which clubs involved, how many matches would be played and what about Champions League? More

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    ‘European Super League KILLS football’: Papers across continent slam ‘war of rich’ after bombshell division announced

    THE European Super League will KILL football.That’s the view of Italian newspaper Tuttosport.
    Tuttosport claimed the European Super League would ‘kill football’
    L’Equipe slammed the ‘war of the rich’ after plans for the breakaway competition emerged
    But the rest of European’s sporting papers have been equally blunt in their anger towards the proposed footballing shake-up.
    Over the weekend, it emerged 12 European giants – including six Premier League teams – had agreed to join the breakaway league.
    Manchester United, Man City, Liverpool, Arsenal and Chelsea are all involved in the plot.
    Under the proposal, European domestic leagues would still be played, but it would be curtains for the Champions League.
    Even then, the ‘race for the top-four’ in the Premier League would die off, with the European Super League’s 15 founding members of the 20-team league immune from relegation.
    Pundits were quick to have their say with United legend Gary Neville calling it ‘criminal’.
    Liverpool idol Jamie Carragher later called his former club ‘an embarrassment’.
    And as fans and pundits had their say, newspapers across Europe were also quick to vent their rage with some strong front pages.
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    Gazzetta dello Sport also made their feelings about the European Super League clear

    Italian publication Tuttosport led the way with a front page which read: “Are you crazy?
    “The Super League will kill football.”
    French outlet L’Equipe slammed the ‘war of the rich’ after it emerged a huge £4.6billion fund was being formulated by the competition’s organisers for the 15 founding clubs.
    And Gazzetta dello Sport in Italy wrote: “Super League? Super NO.”
    As well as impacting the Champions League – and potentially the Europa League and Europa Conference League – the European Super League could have a major knock-on effect on domestic competitions.
    As part of Project Big Picture there were proposals for the Premier League to be reduced to just 18 teams to help the ‘Big Six’ reduce what would become a very crowded schedule.
    The Premier League’s 38-game season is already squeezed into a 34-week window.
    Plans for more games could mean the League Cup could also being scrapped.
    Gary Neville gives impassioned rant about greedy Big 6 and The European Super League More

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    European Super League explained: Which clubs involved, how many matches would be played and what about Champions League?

    THE Premier League has been rocked after members of its ‘Big Six’ signalled their intent to join a European Super League.Manchester United, Man City, Liverpool, Arsenal and Chelsea are all involved in the plot, which has been blasted by Gary Neville as “criminal”.
    Real Madrid club president Florentino Perez had publicly backed the plans
    Fans will be keen to know what is being laid out, how it would work and the impact any breakaway would have.
    SunSport explains the plans, as they stand – and the hurdles that have to be overcome:
    What is the European Super League?
    A 20-team breakaway league with matches to be played midweek and an end of season play-off to determine the winners, with a provisional kick-off from the start of the 2022-23 season.
    In addition to the 15 founding clubs, who cannot be relegated from the closed-shop elite, five clubs will be entitled to qualify each season.
    All matches will be played in midweek slots, with the clubs insistent they will be able to continue to play in their domestic leagues and “preserve the traditional domestic match calendar which remains at the heart of the club game”.
    The 20 clubs will be split into two groups of 10, playing 18 games – nine home and nine away – with the top three in each group qualifying automatically for the last eight knock-out stage.
    Teams finishing fourth and fifth in each group will then play off to fill the final two knock-out slots, with the ties played over two legs apart from a one-off final “which will be staged as a single fixture at a neutral venue”.
    Which clubs would play in it?
    England will have the largest contingent, with Liverpool and United joined by Arsenal, Chelsea, Manchester City and Spurs.
    Among the remaining 12 ‘founder members’, Spain would supply Real Madrid, Atletico Madrid and Barcelona as well as Juventus, Inter and AC Milan from Italy.
    It is expected Bayern Munich, Dortmund and Paris Saint-Germain will complete the 15-strong closed shop.
    It is then unclear how the five additional teams will be selected each year.
    What would be the format of the league?
    It is envisaged that the teams will play each other home and away in a midweek league, with four from each group involved in the end of season play-offs.
    Will they play in their domestic leagues?
    That’s the plan. At least, for now.
    How does it all fit in to a standard football season?
    That is the big question.
    The Premier League’s 38-game season is already squeezed into a 34-week window and there would now be an EXTRA 34 games for each of the five selected Prem teams to fit in.
    Reducing the Prem to 18 clubs, as envisaged in Project Big Picture – an element backed by all the Big Six – would create some wriggle room, as would scrapping the League Cup.
    But Prem sides are mandated to play in the FA Cup.
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    Is there room for any other games?
    Other than an early start and a late finish, no.
    Until 2024-25, when the new international match calendar – still being worked on by Fifa – comes into operation.
    One plan that gained support was for three four-game international windows – in November, March and June – each year, opening up the entire autumn part of the season for extra club matches.
    How much would clubs be paid?
    A huge £3.1billion fund was being formulated by the competition’s organisers, which was to be split between the 15 founder clubs.
    The payment, ranging from £89m to £310m, was reportedly described as an ‘infrastructure grant’ to spend on stadiums, training facilities and account for lost pandemic revenue.
    The Glazers own Man Utd, one of the teams touted as potential members
    What would a European Super League mean for the Champions League?
    Curtains – which is why Uefa will fight tooth and nail to kill the plot stone dead.
    If Europe’s biggest 18 clubs go it alone, the Champions League – let alone the Europa League – will plummet in commercial value, devastating European football’s economic model.
    What would be the impact on the Premier League?
    Not so much in the immediate term – but significant in the longer term.
    The “top four” race will be rendered redundant if there is a closed shop Super League, which will have an impact on future TV rights sales, although there will still be the appeal of the Big Six playing their domestic matches.
    But the financial disparity between the elite and the rest will become a gaping chasm that will make the Prem utterly uncompetitive – unless the big boys prioritise the new European Premier League and play shadow sides at home, which, of course, will make the Prem even less appealing to the broadcasters.

    Will it really go ahead?
    On Sunday, Uefa, the English Football Association, the Premier League, the Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF), LaLiga, the Italian Football Federation (FIGC) and Lega Serie A released a joint statement condemning the plans.
    Should the domestic associations not give their blessing for clubs to join the league, they could be booted out of all domestic competitions.
    Clubs have also been warned that their players could be ineligible for international football if they join a breakaway league.
    Uefa are expected to confirm the details of the new-look Champions League to take effect from the 2024-25 season in the next few months.
    ⚽ Read our Football live blog for the very latest news from around the grounds More

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    Fans must act now and make a stand against greedy owners who want to tear up 130 years of English football history

    UNDER the cover of the pandemic, they made their move.The owners of England’s ‘Big Six’ clubs — three American sports moguls, two oil barons and the Bahamas-based billionaire who holds the keys to Tottenham — have made the cowardly move of signing up for a breakaway European Super League.
    Man Utd executive vice-chairman and director Edward Woodward is among bigwigs seemingly backing a betrayal of football as we know itCredit: Getty
    Tottenham chairman Daniel Levy and Liverpool owner John Henry will have big questions to answer from their shocked fans over the new leagueCredit: Getty
    Man Utd’s American owners, the Glazers, want to ditch domestic English football
    And they did so while the match-going supporters of those six clubs — most with proud traditions of unity and protest — are locked out of their stadiums.
    True supporters of those clubs will appreciate the importance of the English footballing pyramid as well as those who follow less wealthy clubs — and they will be appalled by these proposals.
    The green-and-gold anti-Glazer protestors at United, the Spirit of Shankly at Anfield, the Chelsea Pitch Owners who united to save Stamford Bridge from property developers years before Roman Abramovich had ever heard of their club.
    Now these, along with supporters of Manchester City, Arsenal and Tottenham, must make their voices heard. Loud and clear.
    It might not make a whole lot of difference because the owners of these clubs care only for their global fanbases rather than those who have turned up to support their teams for generations — but they must resist.
    This was always the endgame for the Glazers at Manchester United, John Henry’s Fenway Sports Group and Stan Kroenke of Arsenal — all owners of American sports clubs and their franchise model.
    Guaranteed top dollar without the need for sporting excellence is the American sporting dream.
    This was the endgame of every pre-season tour to the States or the Far East, the endgame for all those boasts about ‘global social-media reach’ and ‘official noodles partners’.
    Arsenal backer Stan Kroenke and his like always had the endgame of developing a global base rather than building on the traditions of the gameCredit: EPA
    Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich is another of the money-men who could take the game away from its competitive instinctsCredit: PA
    Those ‘Unity Is Strength’ banners at Anfield can be tossed away.
    They were a joke ever since the Liverpool and United-led attempt to carve up Premier League power in the hands of the few materialised in those Project Big Picture proposals earlier this season.
    Abramovich, the Abu Dhabi paymasters of City and Joe Lewis of Spurs were never going to stand by and watch the other three break away without them.
    Suspicion of foreign ownership of English football clubs was rarely based on xenophobia but on fears of eventualities such as this, which would tear up more than 130 years of English league football history and traditions.
    There should be embarrassment at City, Arsenal and Tottenham — three clubs without a single European Cup between them — that they are even part of such a scheme.
    City were playing Macclesfield in the league less than a quarter of a century ago. Spurs this week marked 60 years since they were last champions of England.
    Arsenal are mid-table and facing the prospect of no European football whatsoever next term.
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    HOW THE SUPER LEAGUE WOULD WORK
    THE European Super League will be made up of fifteen ‘founder members’ – starting with Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool, United, City and Spurs from England, with Atletico and Real Madrid, Barcelona, Juventus, AC Milan and Inter Milan.
    Bayern Munich, Borussia Dortmund and PSG are likely to complete the list founders, who cannot be relegated.
    Five extra teams will be invited to compete each year with a provisional kick-off from the start of the 2022-23 season.
    Teams will be split into two groups of ten and play nine opponents home and away in a midweek league, with the top four from each group qualifying for end of season play-offs.
    United and Liverpool will bag up to £310m up front. The other four Prem teams would each get £200m.
    Total £4.6billion pot, initially backed by JP Morgan will mean a minimum £130m each year even if one of the ‘founders’ loses EVERY game.
    Overall winners could earn up to £212m extra if they win every game.

    These clubs are scared witless by the likes of Leicester and West Ham threatening to break up the Big Six cartel.
    The Premier League, with its relatively equitable distribution of TV cash, is far too fair and open for their liking.
    hether they are genuinely ready to go through with a breakaway — or whether it ultimately proves to be just another power squabble between Uefa and many of Europe’s richest clubs — the resistance of English football supporters must start here.
    ⚽ Read our Football live blog for the very latest news from around the grounds
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    Gary Neville wants Man Utd, Liverpool & Arsenal to be RELEGATED and have titles stripped as Euro Super League announced

    GARY NEVILLE called for Manchester United, Liverpool and Arsenal to be RELEGATED and have their titles stripped as plans for a breakaway to a European Super League emerged.The Red Devils legend let rip on Sky Sports slamming the ‘criminal’ behaviour of the clubs and demanding serious punishment ahead of the clubs’ official statement of intent, which was released on Sunday night.
    Gary Neville called for Manchester United, Arsenal and Liverpool to be RELEGATEDCredit: Sky Sports
    Neville said clubs should have points DEDUCTED for the scandalous breakaway moveCredit: Getty
    😡 | “I’m a #MUFC fan and I’m absolutely disgusted.”💥 | “They are an absolute joke.”@GNev2 gives a brutally honest reaction to reports that England’s biggest clubs are expected to be part of plans for a breakaway European Super League. pic.twitter.com/VfJccHgybc— Sky Sports Premier League (@SkySportsPL) April 18, 2021

    Neville blasted the owners of the Big Six, labelling them ‘impostors’ and ‘bottle merchants’ and called for them all to have points deducted this season, incur large fines and have honours wiped the moment they announced the plan.
    The Premier League’s top sides signed up to the rebel move less than 24 hours before Uefa were due to release its own planned revamp of the Champions League and could earn up to £310million as an initial ‘golden hello’ plus a minimum £130m each season from their share of a £4.6billion total pot.
    The plans, pushed by Real Madrid, Liverpool, Manchester United and AC Milan, are backed by the financial muscle of US investment giant JP Morgan.
    After coverage of United’s 3-1 win over Burnley at Old Trafford, Neville said: “If they announce a letter of intent has been signed they should be punished heavily.
    “Massive fines, points deductions, take the titles off them – who cares? Give the title to Burnley, Fulham. Let Fulham stay up.
    Relegate United, Liverpool and Arsenal because those three clubs are the history of this country they should be the ones to suffer most.”Gary NevilleHow European Super League would work?

    THE European Super League will be made up of fifteen ‘founder members’ – starting with Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool, United, City and Spurs from England, with Atletico and Real Madrid, Barcelona, Juventus, AC Milan and Inter Milan.
    Bayern Munich, Borussia Dortmund and PSG are likely to complete the list founders, who cannot be relegated.
    Five extra teams will be invited to compete each year with a provisional kick-off from the start of the 2022-23 season.
    Teams will be split into two groups of ten and play nine opponents home and away in a midweek league, with the top four from each group qualifying for end of season play-offs.
    United and Liverpool will bag up to £310m up front. The other four Prem teams would each get £200m.
    Total £4.6billion pot, initially backed by JP Morgan will mean a minimum £130m each year even if one of the ‘founders’ loses EVERY game.
    Overall winners could earn up to £212m extra if they win every game.

    “Relegate United, Liverpool and Arsenal because those three clubs are the history of this country they should be the ones to suffer most.
    “Deduct them all points tomorrow – put them at the bottom of the league and take the money off them.
    “Seriously you have got to stamp on this, it’s criminal. It is a criminal act against football fans in this country.
    “Make no mistake about it. This is the biggest sport in the world, in this country and it’s a criminal act against the fans, simple as that.
    “They are bottle merchants, you never hear from the owners of these clubs. They are absolute bottle merchants – they’ve got no voice.
    “And they’ll probably hide in a few weeks and say it was nothing to do with them and they were only talking about it.
    “It’s pure greed. They are impostors. They are impostors. The owners of this club [United], the owners of Liverpool, the owners of Chelsea, the owners of Manchester City are nothing to do with football in this country.”

    Just seven players have managed to score a hat-tricks of CL hat-tricksFULL GARY NEVILLE RANT

    “WELL the reaction to it is that it’s been damned. And rightly so.
    “I mean I am a Manchester United fan and have been for 40 years of my life but I’m disgusted, absolutely disgusted.
    “I’m disgusted with Manchester United and Liverpool most. I mean Liverpool they pretend you know – ‘You’ll never walk alone’, the people’s club, the fan’s club.
    “Manchester United 100 years born out of workers around here (Old Trafford). And they are breaking away into a league without competition, that they can’t be relegated from. It’s an absolute disgrace.
    “Honestly, we have to wrestle back the power in this country from the clubs at the top of this league and that includes my club. And I’ve been calling for 12 months as part of another group for an independent regulator to bring checks and balances in place to stop this happening.
    “It’s pure greed. They are impostors. They are impostors. The owners of this club, the owners of Liverpool, the owners of Chelsea, the owners of Manchester City are nothing to do with football in this country.
    “There’s 100-odd years of history in this country from fans that have lived and loved these clubs. And they need protecting, the fans need protecting.
    “I’ve benefitted from football hugely, I’ve made money out of football, I invest money into a football club. Now, I’m not against money in football. But the principles and ethos of fair competition and the rights to play the game – so Leicester win the league and they go into the Champions League.
    “Manchester United aren’t even in the Champions League! Arsenal aren’t even in the Champions League, watched them earlier on today, they are an absolute shambles of a football club at the moment. Tottenham aren’t in the Champions League. And they want a God-given right to be in there.
    “They’re an absolute joke and honestly the time has come now, independent regulator, stop these clubs having the power base. Enough is enough.
    “You know what the motivation is, greed. My reaction earlier on wasn’t an emotional reaction. Deduct them all points tomorrow – put them at the bottom of the league and take the money off them.
    “Seriously you have got to stamp on this, it’s criminal. It is a criminal act against football fans in this country. Make no mistake about it. This is the biggest sport in the world, in this country and it’s a criminal act against the fans, simple as that. Deduct points, deduct their money and punish them.
    “They are bottle merchants, you never hear from the owners of these clubs. They are absolute bottle merchants – they’ve got no voice. And they’ll probably hide in a few weeks and say it was nothing to do with them and they were only talking about it.
    “Seriously, in the midst of a pandemic, an economic crisis. Football clubs at National League level going bust nearly, furloughing players. Clubs on the edge in League One and Two and these lot are having Zoom calls about breaking away and basically creating more greed… joke.
    “They’ll be amending that statement as we speak because they’ll have seen the reaction. Not just of people on this channel, on social media, or the government. They’ll be backtracking down the road because they are bottle merchants this lot. Let’s make no mistake about it.
    “It’s the same with Big Picture – they bottled out of that a week later. You talk about big clubs, Manchester United have acted like a small club for eight to ten years.
    “They’ve been a small club in mentality, Arsenal act like a small club. Being a big club is not just having the global fanbase, it’s acting proper at the right time.
    “I’m not against the modernisation of competitions but this is a grab, an absolute grab. The timing is hideous. What world are these people living in to think that they could bring this forward at this moment of time.
    “No loyalty to this country and these leagues, enough is enough. There won’t be a football fan that isn’t seething at this.
    “This is disowning your own club stuff this. How could you even think to come and watch the Super League here when you’ve left your 14 Prem clubs behind to play against each other.
    “Your Championship club is dead, League One and League Two club is dead. Pyramid system that you’ve fought for for 150 years has gone because of six clubs?! Absolutely embarrassing, it’s never going to happen.
    “Let them breakaway but punish them straightaway. If they announce a letter of intent has been signed they should be punished heavily. Massive fines, points deductions, take the titles off them – who cares
    “Give the title to Burnley, Fulham. Let Fulham stay up. Relegate United, Liverpool and Arsenal because those three clubs are the history of this country they should be the ones to suffer most.
    “Yeah, Chelsea, City are the new money in the game they’ve come forward – I’m not happy with them either let’s be clear. Tottenham I’m not really that bothered about.”

    The group or elite clubs formally announced the breakaway on Sunday night, with 12 of the 15 founding members named as United, Manchester City, Liverpool, Arsenal, Tottenham, Chelsea, Real Madrid, Barcelona, Atletico Madrid, Juventus, AC Milan and Inter Milan.
    Bayern Munich, Borussia Dortmund and PSG are likely to complete the founders, who cannot be relegated with five extra teams joining them each year.
    Teams will be split into two groups of ten and play nine opponents home and away in a midweek league, with the top four from each group qualifying for end of season play-offs.
    Winners could earn £212m, on top of their up-front fee – if they win every game, while ‘founders’ will still cash in £130m even if they get thumped every game.
    Man Utd chairman Joel Glazer said: “By bringing together the world’s greatest clubs and players to play each other throughout the season, the Super League will open a new chapter for European football, ensuring the world-class competition and facilities, and increased financial support for the wider football pyramid.”
    Real Madrid president Florentino Perez added: “We will help football at every level and take it to it’s rightful place in the world.
    “Football is the only global sport in the world with more than four billion fans and our responsibility as big clubs is to respond to their desires.”
    While the clubs’ proposal insists the midweek fixtures could run alongside domestic competitions, the Premier League, Serie A and LaLiga earlier stated that any club taking part would be “banned from playing in any other competition at domestic, European or world level.”
    And Neville slammed Liverpool and United for presenting themselves as clubs of the people while agreeing to the lucrative breakaway plans.
    He raged: “I’m not against the modernisation of football competitions.
    “But I am disgusted, absolutely disgusted. And I’m disgusted with Manchester United and Liverpool most.
    “Liverpool pretend ‘You’ll Never Walk Alone’, that they’re the people’s club, the fan’s club.
    “Manchester United, 100 years born out of workers around here. And they’re breaking away into a league that they can’t be relegated from? It’s an absolute disgrace.”

    His old boss Sir Alex Ferguson warned: “Talk of a Super League is a move away from 70 years of European club football.
    “Everton are spending £500million to build a new stadium with ambitions to play in the Champions League. Fans all over love the competition as it is.”
    While ex-United star Rio Ferdinand raged: “This is a war on football, — a disgrace. It’s a closed shop for bigwigs, The rich getting richer and the rest not even being considered.”
    Roy Keane raged at the greed of the Prem’s big clubsCredit: Sky Sports
    Speaking on Sky Sports at half-time in United’s game, Keane fumed: “It’s all about money.
    “It doesn’t sound good and let’s hope it is stopped in it’s tracks because it’s greed, pure greed.”
    Former Manchester City defender Micah Richards was similarly unimpressed.
    He added: “What happens about fans and the memories fans have had over the years?
    “Does all that go away because of money? I think it’s a disgrace.”
    Neville’s initial reaction came on on co-commentary duty where he labelled the move ‘a joke’ and called for teams to be deducted points for making the controversial move mid-season.
    He said: “I can’t focus on the game. They should deduct points from all six teams that have signed up to it. Deduct points off them all. To do it during a season? It’s a joke.”
    Arsenal, Chelsea, Manchester City and Spurs are understood to have signed up despite reservations as they do not want to be left behind by a breakaway.
    Gunners boss Mikel Arteta was asked about the controversial proposal after his side rescued a point against Fulham thanks to Eddie Nketiah’s 97th minute equaliser.
    The Spaniard said: “I don’t know anything about it. Once I know every detail and have all the information then I can evaluate the situation and give you my opinion.”
    Micah Richards called the shock move ‘a disgrace’Credit: Sky Sports
    United boss Ole Gunnar Solskjaer was similarly non-committal when pressed on the plans.
    He said: “I’ve seen this morning the news and speculation. I can’t really say too much because my focus has been on this game.
    “I haven’t looked into it, I’ve just been focused on this game so I need to sit down and see what it is.”
    On Sunday, Uefa, the FA, the Premier League, the Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF), LaLiga, the Italian Football Federation (FIGC) and Lega Serie A released a damning joint statement.
    It reads: “UEFA, the English Football Association and the Premier League, the Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) and LaLiga, and the Italian Football Federation (FIGC) and Lega Serie A have learned that a few English, Spanish and Italian clubs may be planning to announce their creation of a closed, so-called Super League.
    “If this were to happen, we wish to reiterate that we – UEFA, the English FA, RFEF, FIGC, the Premier League, LaLiga, Lega Serie A, but also FIFA and all our member associations – will remain united in our efforts to stop this cynical project, a project that is founded on the self-interest of a few clubs at a time when society needs solidarity more than ever.
    “We will consider all measures available to us, at all levels, both judicial and sporting in order to prevent this happening. Football is based on open competitions and sporting merit; it cannot be any other way.
    “As previously announced by FIFA and the six Federations, the clubs concerned will be banned from playing in any other competition at domestic, European or world level, and their players could be denied the opportunity to represent their national teams. 
    “We thank those clubs in other countries, especially the French and German clubs, who have refused to sign up to this.
    “We call on all lovers of football, supporters and politicians, to join us in fighting against such a project if it were to be announced. This persistent self-interest of a few has been going on for too long. Enough is enough.”
    We call on all lovers of football, supporters and politicians, to join us in fighting against such a project. This persistent self-interest of a few has been going on for too long. Enough is enough.”Joint statement from Uefa, FA, Prem, LaLiga, Serie A and more
    A Prem statement also read: “A European Super League will undermine the appeal of the whole game. It will have a deeply damaging impact on prospects of the Premier League and all those who rely on our funding and solidarity to prosper. We will work with fans, the FA, EFL, PFA and LMA, as well as other stakeholders, at home and abroad, to defend the integrity of English football.
    The Premier League added: “This attacks the principles of open competition and sporting merit which are at the heart of domestic and European football.
    “Fans of any club in England and across Europe can currently dream that their team may climb to the top and play against the best.
    “We believe the European Super League would destroy this dream.”
    The European Club Association, officially led by Juventus chairman Andrea Agnelli, held a summit in response to the breakaway, confirming the plan “would be strongly opposed” and backing the Uefa proposals.
    Neither Agnelli, nor representatives of the other 11 rebels even attended, with the Italian expected to be stripped of his position.
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