
Originally Posted by
Gerrit
Note that my statements are based on what I hear and read, to have the 100% truth we may better contact FIFA, UEFA and the FAs. I never heard of funds for the tiny nations, doesn't sound like UEFA anyway. The association will rather allow a sixth Spanish team in the Champions League than the actual champions of Latvia and Georgia, because UEFA seems to think the best way to act is to furthen enrichen the already wealthy clubs and protects them, which is why we now have non-champions in the Champions League whereas it used to be only the action champion of every country (the good old days...)
So it would very much surprise me that UEFA would reach out to San Marino, Andorra, Luxembourg, Malta, Liechtenstein and the Faroe Islands (I may have forgotten one...) and give them money for further development. Certainly they won't fund them more than they do the bigger FAs, the big clubs have too much power in the UEFA so they will rather try to keep the mighty clubs mighty rather than to close the gap with the smaller ones. Same goes for national teams I'm afraid. I could be wrong, but I never saw any signs of it, whereas I do remember the words of some actual players of tiny nations. Maybe things changed meanwhile, but it would surprise me really. I just want to stay: don't take my words as a dogma, it could be that I have spoken to the wrong people or heard only one side of the story. But as I said, it would surprise me if it were not like it.
Also, I give an example from the power of the big ones: Gibraltar has every single facility needed to be accepted as a FIFA and UEFA member. However, Spain says if they dare to accept Gibraltar as a seperate entity, they will boycot the World Cup or other big tournaments. UEFA and FIFA will never risk to lose a big country which brings sponsors and money, so they rather just ignore the wish of a smaller nation whose only desire is to just entire the game as well... I could be wrong again, but I'm rather sure if it were Gibraltar suddenly having an objection against the behaviour of Spain, the UEFA's answer would be "you'll just have to take it or leave it".
Maybe I'm being too harsh on the big ones here, and maybe I make some mistakes here in my views on UEFA protecting the big ones. But I just never got a signal to prove my ideas wrong, I have the feeling that double standards are very common in professional football and so far I have found nothing yet to dismantle my own suspicion towards this subject.
Bookmarks