The Super League project is “very much alive” according to Bernd Reichart, the new CEO of A22 Sports Management, the company promoting the revamped plan.
The breakaway competition, which included 12 elite European clubs, was launched in April 2021 but collapsed 48 hours later after English Premier League clubs pulled out due to a widespread public backlash and political opposition.
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Real Madrid, Barcelona and Juventus, who were among the 12 founding clubs, have not withdrawn from the project.
“It’s very much alive, there are some who want to declare that it is dead, but if they say it a lot, there is much to suspect,” Reichart told Cadena Ser.. “There are clubs in Europe that surely share the vision of Juventus, Real Madrid and Barcelona and now they have the opportunity to share what they think.
“There is a broad consensus that football needs reform. Football cannot continue as it is designed now.”
Football’s governing bodies UEFA and FIFA are against the creation of the Super League.
“Nobody wants it except the few who think that football is all about money,” UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin said about the Super League earlier this year.
A Madrid court stopped UEFA from punishing the breakaway clubs and the case was referred to the Luxembourg-based European Court of Justice (ECJ).