McTavish
Well-known member
- Nov 5, 2014
- 1,587
I think some sort of ESL is inevitable. It is now as easy to get to Rome or Madrid from London as it is to get to Newcastle; and usually cheaper (or at least it was pre-Covid). The pressure from the top teams to get a bigger slice of the money that they overwhelmingly generate is similar to the pressure that resulted in the Premier League.
A lot of fans would welcome a return to a more competitive league in England (and probably other countries as well). Most people will agree that the football was more exciting in the Championship even if the quality wasn't of the same level.
A league of 20 teams with two each from England, Germany, Spain and Italy; one from France, Holland, Belgium and Portugal with the other 8 decided on some sort of qualifying tournament for the first year (which could include more teams from the previous 8 countries). The key difference between this and the current ESL proposal being that there would be relegation and promotion - details to be worked out - so there would still be the (vanishingly small) possibility of any club getting to the top.
This is obviously not what "the Big Six" want as there won't be six of them and they can still get relegated but it would be a compromise that gives the very top clubs the money that they are looking for whilst still retaining some competitive integrity.
Yes, money will drain out of the Premier League; it won't cure overspending and stupid salaries (just look at the Championship) but this is not going to go away so better to do it in an orderly fashion that works in some way for everyone.
A lot of fans would welcome a return to a more competitive league in England (and probably other countries as well). Most people will agree that the football was more exciting in the Championship even if the quality wasn't of the same level.
A league of 20 teams with two each from England, Germany, Spain and Italy; one from France, Holland, Belgium and Portugal with the other 8 decided on some sort of qualifying tournament for the first year (which could include more teams from the previous 8 countries). The key difference between this and the current ESL proposal being that there would be relegation and promotion - details to be worked out - so there would still be the (vanishingly small) possibility of any club getting to the top.
This is obviously not what "the Big Six" want as there won't be six of them and they can still get relegated but it would be a compromise that gives the very top clubs the money that they are looking for whilst still retaining some competitive integrity.
Yes, money will drain out of the Premier League; it won't cure overspending and stupid salaries (just look at the Championship) but this is not going to go away so better to do it in an orderly fashion that works in some way for everyone.