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Monday, July 15, 2024

Football doesn’t know about Brexit

Barcelona thrashed by Liverpool, Tottenham decimating Ajax, seems like Football doesn’t recognize Brexit. English teams won all their matches against European teams. Sport experts call it all a “Money game”.

AFP |

The Premier League has marked its return to prominence on the European stage as stunning Champions League comebacks from Liverpool and Tottenham Hotspur to make the final was followed by Arsenal and Chelsea booking their place in the Europa League final. For the first time ever all four finalists will come from the same country, prompting concerns on the continent over the Premier League’s wealth and status thanks to huge television rights deals.

The English sweep on the football field comes, ironically, as the United Kingdom wrestles with Brexit, the painful and protracted withdrawal from the European Union. Only twice before in European football – the 1972 UEFA Cup and 2008 Champions League – had two English teams contested a final. But now two will take place in the space of four days as Arsenal and Chelsea square off in a London derby, 4,500 km (2,800 miles) from home, in Baku on May 29 before Liverpool and Tottenham clash in Madrid on June 1.

“A full English,” ran the headline on the back of British newspaper the Daily Mirror, while Spanish sports daily AS said: “Football does not know about Brexit.” Liverpool, last year’s runners-up to Real Madrid, ended Spain’s five-year grip on the continent’s top club prize as they shocked Lionel Messi and Barcelona with a stunning 4-0 win at Anfield to overturn a 3-0 first leg deficit.

Valencia’s defeat ended Spanish participation in both competitions and a run that had seen La Liga sides win nine of the past 10 combined Champions League and Europa League titles.

Tottenham drew inspiration from the Reds to also come back from a 3-0 aggregate deficit as Ajax led 2-0 on the night in Amsterdam before Lucas Moura’s second-half hat-trick sent Spurs into their first Champions League final. “We enjoyed a lot watching the tie against Barcelona. They are heroes too and, of course, it is going to be an amazing final between two English teams that for sure we are going to enjoy,” said Spurs boss Mauricio Pochettino.

Premier League clubs accumulated revenues of £4.8 billion ($6.2 billion) last season, largely thanks to £2.4 billion in television revenue, and have spent over £1 billion on transfer fees in each of the past three summer windows.

Yet, despite bringing in billions from around the globe, English clubs have been out-thought and out-played at Champions League level over the past decade. However, the Premier League now has the world’s best managers to go with the best players. Jurgen Klopp is in his fourth season at Liverpool and Pochettino near the end of season five at Spurs.

Read more: What is behind Real Madrid’s inability to score a goal?

Arsenal’s Unai Emery is a Europa League specialist having won the competition three times before at Sevilla and despite being questioned during his first season at Stamford Bridge, Chelsea’s Maurizio Sarri is still coveted for jobs in Serie A should he wish to return to Italy. “An English lesson,” wrote Italian sports paper Gazzetta dello Sport. “The money flowing and the best coaches: that’s how the Premier League takes it all.”

Premier League Truly is Premier

“Here the level is very high. To get to the final in the League Cup we beat Liverpool and Tottenham who are in the Champions League final, and in the final, we played against the best team in Europe in my opinion, Man City,” said Sarri. “At the moment the Premier League is the best championship in Europe and as a consequence, in the world.”

Chelsea needed a penalty shoot-out to beat Eintracht Frankfurt in their Europa League semi-final, while a Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang hat-trick took the Gunners to a 4-2 win over Valencia for a 7-3 aggregate. Valencia’s defeat ended Spanish participation in both competitions and a run that had seen La Liga sides win nine of the past 10 combined Champions League and Europa League titles.

“The Premier League has the most money, and when four English teams are in the finals, it is not good for football,” said Bayer Leverkusen coach and former Ajax boss Peter Bosz.

“It does not surprise me to see the English clubs,” said Real Madrid coach Zinedine Zidane, who led the Spanish giants to three consecutive Champions League titles in 2016, 2017 and 2018. “The coaches who are in charge of these teams bring something new, their know-how, which is different.”

Barcelona, Juventus and Bayern Munich have dominated at home in recent years, but no club has retained the Premier League title since 2009. The constant grind of England’s top six vying every season for just four Champions League places allows nobody to rest on their laurels, on the pitch or off it in the recruitment process.

“The English have the most money and are now spending it sensibly,” said German newspaper Zeit Online. “Ten years ago, it started to go downhill, but now, at the very moment they want to leave the EU, they are back.”

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However, the English revival has not pleased everyone and may only embolden plans to radically change the format of the Champions League from 2024 to avoid prolonged Premier League domination. “The Premier League has the most money, and when four English teams are in the finals, it is not good for football,” said Bayer Leverkusen coach and former Ajax boss Peter Bosz.

AFP with additional input by News Desk.