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⚽ A ‘Super’ Soccer Spectacle Awaits

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Thu, May 26, 2022 10:56 PM

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As the UEFA Champions League final approaches, it is worth considering whether a de facto Super Leag

As the UEFA Champions League final approaches, it is worth considering whether a de facto Super League is already here. [View in browser]( [FOX SPORTS INSIDER WITH MARTIN ROGERS] In today’s FOX Sports Insider with Martin Rogers: The UEFA Champions League final has become a version of the dreaded European Super League ... Los Angeles Chargers QB Justin Herbert is just getting started ... and more! When the plot for soccer’s European Super League emerged just over a year ago, to be instantly decried as arrogant, imperialistic, ill-thought and clumsy, the reaction felt like a victory for soccer’s pure soul. The idea, you’ll remember, was for 15 of the biggest (aka richest) teams in Europe to break away from their existing competitions and take part in a closed-shop that would ensure they got bigger and richer forever. Manchester United, plus five other English teams, would no longer be in the English Premier League. Real Madrid (and Barcelona) would no longer compete in La Liga. Super League all the way. No prospect of falling out of the elite inner circle. No chance for the geyser of profit to stop gushing. The response sent the idea tumbling faster than a failed cryptocurrency. People power won the day. Fans from the teams involved revolted. Fans of every other team were disgusted. Politicians at the highest level heard the outcry, and vowed to put a spike in the Super League, using whatever legislative means were necessary. [STORY IMAGE 1] And so the ESL was flattened. No dominance for soccer’s most minted owners, who had long looked with envy at the American pro sports system and its self-contained nature. A fair and open playing field, where everyone would have a chance, would continue to be enshrined. Or would it? As preparations for Saturday’s UEFA Champions League final wind up, it is worth considering whether a kind of de facto Super League is already here. The finalists of the Champions League are Liverpool and Real Madrid, two of the primary Super League agitators. Liverpool chairman Tom Werner admitted this week that for his club at least, the Super League is doomed, and forgotten. Real Madrid’s Florentino Perez insists the concept could still have a viable future. But while a breakaway won’t fly with the public, the big clubs already have the kind of dominance that they want, so much so that you kind of wonder why a Super League was necessary to begin with. “The protests that surrounded the collapse of the proposed European Super League a year ago hinted at a desire for another world, for a way of doing things that wasn’t just about commerce,” wrote renowned soccer author Jonathan Wilson in the Guardian. “But it was a moment that vanished on the wind.” [STORY IMAGE 2] The Super League would have guaranteed unassailable advantages for the leading teams, but the Champions League already provides many of them. Real Madrid has won the competition 13 times, more than any other club. Liverpool is bidding for its seventh, which would tie it with AC Milan for second place all time. Champions League spots are not etched in stone, they must be re-earned each year. Yet the system is skewed, because of money. The payouts from the Champions League are not even, they are weighted to provide additional reward to teams who have appeared in the event most often. As Wilson pointed out, had English team West Ham reached the Champions League next season by winning the second-tier Europa League (it eventually lost in the semis), the payout would be a mere 4% of what Chelsea will receive. [STORY IMAGE 3] The huge payouts allow for vast discrepancies in budget. The top teams can simply buy up the best players of any imposter threatening to break into the top circle. Imagine an NFL where a handful of teams had a salary cap 10 times the size of everyone else’s. The principle of “any given Sunday” might suddenly feel quite different. It is no surprise then, that clubs from the most lucrative leagues dominate time and again in the Champions League. Over the past 20 seasons, here is a breakdown of the Champions League semifinalists. A total of 26 of them have come from Spain, 24 from England, 11 from Germany, 10 from Italy and six from France. The only break from the clutches of the five biggest leagues came when Portugal’s Porto sprung a huge upset to win the whole thing in 2005, and Dutch teams Ajax and PSV Eindhoven each made a single semi, 14 years apart. When so much money is collected in the hands of a few, it gives the whole thing an All-Star feel. Liverpool and Real Madrid are both truly outstanding teams, packed with quality at every position. [STORY IMAGE 4] Liverpool’s Mo Salah is one of the very best players in the world, and certainly among the most exciting to watch. Madrid has forward Karim Benzema operating at the peak of his powers at age 34, and midfield wizard Luka Modric doing the same at 36. The matchup will be a repeat of the 2018 final in the Ukraine capital of Kyiv, won 3-1 by Real Madrid. It will be a spectacle once again, a grand show, the best of what club soccer has to offer. It will indeed be “super” soccer, to be thoroughly enjoyed. But it will also, if we are being honest, be the final of a competition that has become a version of the dreaded Super League, in all but name. [STORY IMAGE 5] [IN OTHER WORDS] - Justin Herbert set records for passing yards and TDs in his first two seasons, but he's just getting started, [writes Eric D. Williams](. - Ex-‘Bama star Bo Scarbrough has brought sizable talent and a winning mentality to the Birmingham Stallions, [RJ Young writes](. - With Trea Turner's Dodgers in D.C. this week, [Jordan Shusterman reports on the key players in last year's blockbuster trade](. [VIEWER'S GUIDE] Dallas Mavericks vs. Golden State Warriors (TNT, 9 p.m. ET) Steph Curry and the Warriors look to close out the series against Luka Dončić and the Dallas Mavericks. Edmonton Oilers at Calgary Flames (ESPN, 9:30 p.m. ET) Holding a 3-1 series edge, Edmonton tries to wrap things up in Calgary. [BET OF THE DAY] [BET OF THE DAY] Odds provided by [FOX Bet]( New Jersey Generals at Tampa Bay Bandits: Generals -4 From FOX Bet commercial manager Jacob Blangsted-Barnor: The Generals and Bandits game sees the second-best scoring defense of the Generals facing the third-worst scoring offense of the Bandits,. The Generals are rightly favored, and low totals means a smaller spread than you may normally expect for a mismatch like this. [FOLLOW FOX SPORTS] [Twitter]( [Facebook]( [YouTube]( [Instagram]( Download FOX Sports App: [Fire TV]( [Roku]( [Google Play]( [App Store]( [Fire TV]( [Roku]( [App Store]( [Google Play]( Also available on these devices: [fireTV | AppleTV | ROKU | Google Chromecast | XBOX ONE | SAMSUNG Smart TV] [fireTV | AppleTV | ROKU | Google Chromecast | XBOX ONE | SAMSUNG Smart TV] Trademark & Copyright Notice: ™ and © 2022 Fox Media LLC and FOX Sports Interactive Media, LLC. All rights reserved. Please do not reply to this message. If you do not wish to receive emails like this in the future, please [unsubscribe](. FOX Sports respects your privacy. Click [here]( to view our Privacy Policy. Fox.com Business & Legal Affairs - Manager Digital Media P.O. Box 900 Beverly Hills, California 90213-0900

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