Angry football fans are calling for English clubs involved in the formation of the now scrapped European Super League to be punished, insisting their own clubs have been fined or had points deducted for lesser offences. Every member of the Premier League’s
The Big Six rebels have lost tens of millions between them in their disastrous attempts to set up a European Super League, which ended in a humiliating defeat, Sportsmail can reveal The 12 Founding Clubs who announced the venture on Sunday evening
Juventus chairman and Fiat family billionaire Andrea Agnelli finally admitted his ‘beautiful’ European Super League is sunk after six English clubs withdrew in three hours while his estranged British wife also stuck the boot in. A ‘dirty dozen’ joined up to the
Meanwhile Manchester United executive vice-chairman Ed Woodward resigned, suggesting his club was pulling out too. The drama came just two days after six leading English clubs were revealed to be joining the European Super League (ESL). Around 1,000 angry fans protested outside
Liverpool’s American billionaire owner John W Henry today apologised for the ‘hurt’ caused by plans to join the hated European Super League as the Premier League considers how to punish the rebels with fans baying for blood. The businessman, who also owns
Manchester United’s stock market value plunged by around £150million as plans for a European Super League crumbled. The Premier League side had seen the price of its shares sky-rocket by around the same value after the announcement of the new breakaway league.
Super League crumbles: ALL SIX English clubs QUIT the hated competition after Manchester City became first to walk away – with shamed Arsenal APOLOGISING to fans following days of anger By James Robinson for MailOnline Published: 18:02 EDT, 20 April 2021 |
The Prime Minister took today’s Covid briefing as an opportunity to slam moves by some of the biggest clubs in Europe to create a new competition to rival the Champions League. Boris Johnson previously condemned the European Super League (ESL) proposals when the
British football fans were left stunned as Education Secretary Gavin Williamson was unable to explain how the Government could prevent the European Super League from occurring. While speaking on Sky News with Stephen Dixon, Mr Williamson repeatedly said the Government would support
You hate our club. Sports writers get that a lot. The accusation that we’re biased against a team. Any team. Doesn’t matter what team really. West Brom, once. I don’t even know why anyone would think I cared about, let alone hated,