Uefa didn't produce the structure, that's the way the structure developed and Uefa was formed to administer it. The argument then is, UEFA already has an uneven structure and protects it, therefore it cannot protest at other unevenness developing. That the gap between the big clubs from the top leagues and the big clubs from the small leagues, should be allowed to increase, no holds barred.Quote:
Dupont says “Under Uefa rules, each national football association must organise its competitions within its boundaries. By maintaining those rules, Uefa denies top club football to places like Dublin, Brussels [and] Vienna. Consequently, Uefa cannot use the “integrity argument” regarding FFP since it has itself produced a structural playing field that’s uneven to begin with.”
However, there are degrees of unevenness. It's just in the last decade in an era of little regulation, that the gap has widened so much between top clubs from the leagues of Holland/Belgium/Portugal/Scotland and the top clubs from the large leagues of Spain/England/Germany/Italy. The clubs from the big leagues have always generally been dominant in the CL, but < 2004, clubs from the small leagues have won the CL/European Cup on 13 occasions and runner up 9 times. Unevenness has always existed but it was only post 2004 that inequality widened to such an extent that it's 99% inconceivable at present that a small league club can compete for the CL. Uefa through FFP are trying to put limits on the ever widening gap and at least allow for some possibility that a Porto or an Ajax could climb the ladder with regular CL income to help their competitiveness. The place where a club from a small league can try and compete with the the big league teams, is in the CL and EL structure.Just because he speculates that a common league would improve that situation, does not make it a worthwhile argument to support his case. A halfwit lawyer on the other side could render that argument totally worthless inside 10 seconds and nuke its value as a support to the main argument.Quote:
Dupont says: “If tomorrow, Scotland and Ireland would decide to have a common Premier League, would it improve (even slightly) the level of football in both territories? I think it would. This example is just to show that even small changes would make a difference.”
Maybe he believes in the drip down theory of benefits, who knows what his beliefs are, but do they have any relation to the factors that would contribute to improving the levels of football from infancy onwards in Ireland. A belief needs a foundation in order to regarded as an argument.
It's an attack on the football structure by financial interests, who, if it's required, will trample on the most treasured values of football clubs in order to be allowed to do what they want.