Uefa ‘reluctantly’ approves European league games in US, Australia

Uefa ‘reluctantly’ approves European league games in US, Australia

The European football body found no clear Fifa rules to oppose La Liga and Serie A matches held outside their home countries.

Uefa president Aleksander Ceferin said the decision to let the La Liga and Serie A games proceed was exceptional and should not set a precedent. (Reuters pic)
LAUSANNE:
Uefa on Monday said it had “reluctantly” approved the staging of a La Liga and a Serie A match in the United States and Australia respectively despite fan protests.

“While it is regrettable to have to let these two games go ahead, this decision is exceptional and shall not be seen as setting a precedent,” Uefa president Aleksander Ceferin said in a statement.

Uefa made its ruling after Spain’s La Liga agreed to move a game scheduled for late December between champions Barcelona and Villarreal to Miami, Florida.

Italy’s Serie A also decided to stage the encounter between AC Milan and Como on Feb 8 in Perth, Australia, to avoid a clash with the Winter Olympics opening ceremony at Milan’s San Siro stadium.

But that sparked protests from European supporters groups who branded the moves “absurd, unaffordable, and environmentally irresponsible”.

In its statement, Uefa said that it had “reiterated its clear opposition to domestic league matches being played outside their home country”.

But despite “the widespread lack of support that had already been raised by fans, other leagues, clubs, players and European institutions”, Uefa said that it had found no clear regulatory framework in Fifa’s statutes that would allow it to oppose the moves.

“The Uefa Executive Committee has reluctantly taken the decision to approve, on an exceptional basis, the two requests referred to it,” European football’s governing body said in its statement.

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