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Opinion: Fans will decide 'UEL2' success

Chuck Penfold
December 3, 2018

Just when you thought the European football market was saturated, UEFA has announced a new European competition. Ultimately it will be football fans who decide whether 'UEL2' sinks or swims, writes DW's Chuck Penfold.

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Schweiz UEFA Hauptquartier in Nyon
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/J.-C. Bott

Sunday's announcement that UEFA is set to introduce a new club competition, known provisionally as "UEL2," came as no great surprise, as the Executive Committee of European football's governing body merely confirmed what for months had been widely expected.  But does Europe really need yet another club competition? UEFA President Aleksander Ceferin and the rest of his Executive Committee obviously think so.

Read more: Bundesliga Monday games to be discontinued

Ceferin staying true to his word

UEFA says the move comes at least partly in response to "a widespread demand by all clubs to increase their chances of participating more regularly in European competition." However, you have to think it's come in response to the demands of clubs below Europe's top tier, who saw their chances of qualifying for the lucrative group stage of the Champions League reduced by the latest changes in format to the world's most prestigious club competition.

Penfold Charles Kommentarbild App
DW's Chuck Penfold

Still, with the inception of UEL2, Ceferin, who as a Slovenian, hails from one of UEFA's smaller member nations, has achieved a goal that he has made no secret of since being elected UEFA president in 2016. At last year's Extraordinary Congress of UEFA in Geneva, Ceferin stressed the importance of keeping "the dream alive for all." 

UEL2 promises to go some way to achieving that goal, as, beginning in 2021-22 a minimum of 34 countries are to be represented in the group stages of European club competitions, compared to the current minimum of 26. The number of total teams will increase from 80 to 96.

Back to the good old days?

Some may write all of this off as a new president simply making good on a campaign promise. However, for those who remember the days when it was possible for smaller clubs like Nottingham Forest or Red Star Belgrade to become champions of Europe, trying to reduce the gap between football's haves and have-nots is not a bad thing.

Bildergalerie HSV-Abstieg | Hamburger SV - Nottingham 0:1 - Europapokal
Nottingham Forest beat Hamburg 1-0 in the final of the European Cup Winners' Cup.Image: picture-alliance/dpa/F- Leonhardt

At the same time, football is a business at least as much as it is a sport. As if any reminder was needed, this came in the fact that UEFA stressed that "no changes will be made to the format and access" to European football's biggest cash cow; the Champions League.

Read more: FIFA puts Club World Cup, Nations League plans on hold

But UEFA would do well to remember that football is only a viable business as long as the customers (the fans) are buying it. And there are signs that not all fans are prepared to buy everything football administrators try to sell them.

Prominent German fan group speaks out

Over the past couple of seasons, fan groups in Germany in particular have been voicing their displeasure over what they perceive as the over-commercialization of football, their latest protests coming on Bundesliga Matchday 13. And their protests have not fallen on deaf ears, either.  One German fan group, Unsere Kurve (Our Terrace), has already rejected UEL2 as yet another example of the over-commercialization of the beautiful game.

Read more: Fans stand their ground as Bayern beat Bremen

Following Sunday's announcement, the real question for UEFA will be; whether in an already saturated football market, enough paying customers will be willing to spend their hard-earned cash to watch a third club competition, to make UEL2 financially viable. Ultimately, it will be the fans who decide.