Italian clubs to face Serie A ban if they resurrect plans for breakaway league as new rule passed  

Italian clubs to face Serie A ban if they resurrect plans for the breakaway league after the new rule is passed

  • New rules to come into force to prevent Italian clubs from joining a Super League
  • Juventus, AC Milan and Inter Milan were among those who tried to form one

Italian clubs wishing to participate in a breakaway Super League would be barred from playing in Serie A under new rules set to come into force this summer.

Three of the country’s biggest clubs – Juventus, AC Milan and Inter Milan – were among the 12 sides who announced on April 18 they were forming a new competition.

The breakaway league collapsed within 72 hours after the six English sides withdrew.

The British Government was credited by UEFA with playing a key role in persuading the Premier League clubs to back down.

However, on Monday Downing Street denied reports the Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, spoke to Manchester United executive vice-chairman Ed Woodward about the Super League and had given him the impression he would back it when they briefly met on April 14.

Football authorities at national and continental level are looking at ways to strengthen their rulebooks to prevent a renewed breakaway attempt, and the federal council of the Italian football federation (FIGC) has moved quickly to approve new licensing rules.

“Those who plan to participate in competitions not authorised by the FIGC, FIFA or UEFA will lose their membership,” the Italian federation’s president, Gabriele Gravina, told its official website, figc.it.

He added: “It is clear that if, on June 21, the deadline for registration applications, someone wants to participate in competitions of a private nature, they will not take part in our championship.”

In England, Football Association chief executive Mark Bullingham has warned: “nothing is off the table” as it seeks to prevent any fresh attempt at a breakaway.

It is believed the game’s authorities would prefer to avoid sanctions that punish supporters of the clubs involved after those fans were credited with forcing the withdrawals that happened on Tuesday and the early hours of Wednesday.

The Government has promised support to the football authorities in strengthening anti-competition regulation against any future breakaway attempts.

The Prime Minister was understood to have promised in a meeting on Tuesday – before the withdrawals began – that he would drop a “legislative bomb” on the clubs if they pressed ahead with their plans.

There were concerns among leading figures in the game about how successful any attempt to block a breakaway would have been within existing competition law, so the game’s authorities are still hoping updated legislation can be brought forward.

Sports bettings

Sports events gather a huge audience of people. Football is especially popular and football fans always fill the stadiums and look forward to the outcome of the match.

Fans of certain teams or ordinary lovers to spend their free time with a glass of cold beer gather in local sports bars, where people like them watch the matches. Sports betting is a no less popular activity among football fans.

The number of bookmakers around the world is increasing every year. People are increasingly betting their money on the outcome of sports. This is due to the opportunity not only to enjoy watching matches, fights of your favourite teams but also to get additional fun and maybe also income.

In Germany, for a long time, there have been problems with the legalization of bookmakers. Today, online sports bets, the so-called sportwetten online, is quite popular among German fans.

 

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