Puts pressure on Putin won't it when their sports teams are denied revenue from international sporting tournaments
No it doesnt. If I sneak into the backyard of Lord Bigcastle and steal two deposit bottles, it does not put pressure on him. If you think the money from international sports tournaments matter to the Russian government... then I dont think you are seeing the big picture.
Apologies if you've posted it elsewhere, but given the situation as it is now, how would you suggest the world approaches it, assuming a swift end to this war is the end goal?
I don't have a magic answer by any means, but I do think that it's pressure from within Russia that's likely to bring about the best (i.e. least bloodshed & no nukes) conclusion to all of this - whether that's an uprising of the general population, or the Oligarchs and other power-brokers in the Kremlin turning on Putin.
Whilst the suffering of innocent Russian citizens should not be taken lightly, I'm not sure the inconvenience of having the club they support thrown out of Europe, or the re-locating of the Champions League final stacks up as 'suffering' in anywhere near the same stratosphere as what the Ukrainians are going through, or what will happen to the Russian population if Putin carries on down this path.
If such sanctions make it hit home to more of the Russian population (or the 'elites' that no doubt own the clubs concerned, or Gazprom that misses out on its marketing opportunity) that they need to do something about Putain, then I'm absolutely for it.
More innocent Russians will suffer in far worse ways if the situation escalates, so non-violent 'suffering', whether its Russian kids being kicked out of UK private schools, or Zenit St Petersburg fans annoyed at being thrown out of the Europa League (though didn't Betis do that on the pitch last night?) is a better outcome in my opinion.
My approach at this point would be to let civilian Russia keep interacting with the world as much as possible. If you start punishing the innocent - like banning their athletes or throwing them out of Eurovision - they are more likely took take the "us against the world" stance than go against their leadership. There is a rift between our worlds and making it wider through essentially telling them that "culturally, you dont deserve to be with the rest of the world" is not a wise move.
Generally in psychology, if you freeze someone out they are more likely to isolate themselves and develop negative feelings towards the community they are frozen out from rather than to fight their way back in.
IMO the best solution (at this point, there was better ways earlier) to end things quickly is to a) negotiate what can be negotiated (might be limited opportunities for that) b) allow the war to be a war about Ukraine and not a clash of cultures eg. punishing Russians that have nowt to do with it c) if making moves (warfare, economical sanctions etc) against Russia, target things that affect their government and military rather than civilians.
Moving the Champions League final is obvious for security reasons. But why throw out Russian teams out of UEFA competitions? If the Russians dislike what their government is doing, footballing circumstances has historically been one of the best opportunities to voice that dissent. Back in the Franco days, Basque and Catalan people couldnt protest on the streets so they made sure to make their voices heard in the stadiums.