Real Madrid to Seek Compensation over Super League
Real Madrid claims UEFA breached EU competition law by blocking the Super League and seeks substantial damages following a court ruling on market dominance abuse.
- Real Madrid will seek "substantial damages" from UEFA after a court ruled that UEFA had "infringed the European Union's free competition rules" by trying to block the proposed European Super League in 2021.
- Real Madrid stated that it had held discussions with UEFA in 2025 to seek solutions regarding governance, financial sustainability, player health, and fan experience, but did not reach a compromise.
- UEFA stated that the ruling does not validate the abandoned Super League project, and that its current rules remain in force to assess cross-border competitions based on objective criteria.
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85 Articles
The Real Madrid and A22 demand about 4.5 billion dollars of damage to Uefa, accused of having unfairly sabotaged the Superlega, according to a source at the Afp. Wednesday a Spanish court in fact rejected an appeal of Uefa in yet another judicial episode of the affair. Proposed in 2021 by 12 European clubs d'élite, including Real Madrid and Barcelona, the Superlega project failed because of the strong opposition of fans of English clubs and thre…
Real Madrid and the promoter of the European Superligue of football A22 Sports Management will claim more than €4 billion in damages from UEFA, accused of torpedoing the project, confirmed...
The Provincial High Court published on Wednesday the ruling in the Superliga case in which it dismisses appeals filed by UEFA, RFEF and LaLiga, confirming that the European body committed an "abuse of dominion", a detail by which Real Madrid now plans to claim more than 4 billion euros for the "quantial damages suffered."After the publication of that judgment, the Madrid club pointed out that UEFA "severely infringed the rules of free competitio…
Real Madrid and the promoters of the Super League are demanding more than $4 billion (€3.44 billion) in damages from the European Football Association (Uefa), accusing it of unfairly blocking the proposal for a new competition.
Real Madrid and the organization behind the Super League (A22) plan to file a claim for damages of at least €4 billion with UEFA for preventing the creation of a new football competition. Sources close to Real Madrid told the French news agency AFP.
The initiators of the former Super League record the next legal success.
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- 42% of the sources lean Left, 42% of the sources are Center
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