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What Impact Could The Super League Have Had On European Competition?

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There’s no real doubt that the proposition of a Super League has to be one of the most divisive issues that modern football has thrown up in recent years. Now, the project appears to be dead, with nine of the proposed twelve original founding members having pulled out, including all six Premier League clubs. It is still worth pondering though the impact that the Super League could have had on European competition.

The proposed Super League, if it had gone ahead, would have changed the face of European competition for a rather long time. By having what would have essentially been a closed-shop competition, it would have involved the same teams every week which would have meant that the Super League could have easily got stale. With the reforms to the Champions League too bringing the total number of teams to 36 by 2024, compared to even five years ago, the state of play in European football would have been virtually unrecognisable. 

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The idea of Super League, it must be noted, wasn’t actually a new idea. Whilst the current form had been played in at least some way since 2018 when reports first broke out. It was first floated as a solution to the then older form of the Champions League, the European Cup in 1998, which only allowed one team from each nation to qualify for the actual competition. A Super League then arguably made more sense as the pre-Champions League world of European football was hardly as far as it is today. In the modern age, however, the tables have turned, and whilst the creation of a Super League twenty years ago could have encouraged competition, its modern form would have discouraged exactly that.

One of the major points to note is that, outside of the spheres of European competition, if the Super League had gone ahead in its original form, there would have been hits on a club’s respective reputation for not just fans, but also their various sponsors as well. In more recent years, those Big Six clubs in the Premier League for instance have built up sponsorships in several different sectors, including that of betting. That industry itself would have experienced a massive shake-up with regards to the odds that were being offered, although, given the distinct lack of real competition in any proposed Super League, this may cause any betting sponsors of specific clubs to pull out completely. 

In itself, the gambling industry is one that rakes in a fair amount of revenue for the sport, not only thanks to individual firms’ sponsorships of those Big Six clubs, but in the cumulative income from betting in general. As any industry grows, of course, it’s customary for them to diversify and offer slightly different things to usual. This has indeed been the case in the betting industry as providers are offering more options and different markets than just the typical ones, such as just football. There are many providers to choose from, so you might be wondering which one is the best for beginners? In some instances, providers have diversified into the more classic options such as online slots, and there are useful sites like the one linked that offer a comparison of them. This site also shows the different deposit methods that individuals can use when playing online to add an extra layer of safety.

Source: Pixabay

It’s fair to say that if the Super League had gone ahead that, if the initial reception was to be believed, would not have been popular with fans. As an uncompetitive closed-shop type competition, it stood for everything that, in the eyes of fans, that football didn’t, and hopefully UEFA will be able to win people in the following years with a revamp of Europe’s premier club competition. 

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