• @wjrii
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    27 months ago

    The main issue will simply be getting outcompeted in UEFA competition by a few continental clubs who can and will outspend them. If it’s a hard cap, and it’s set high enough that the big English cups will still go far in UCL, I doubt there will be any major blowback, and it might actually be helpful for competitive balance at the top of the Premier League.

    American sport has many issues of its own, but it’s always interested me how the problems and solutions go in different directions based on the early history of Association football in England and baseball in the US.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      27 months ago

      Considering the level of debt that the big La Liga sides are in, I don’t think there’s much to worry about there. The same goes for Italy. The only real concern is France and that league isn’t competitive enough.

      • @wjrii
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        27 months ago

        Yeah, you’re probably right. I guess the devil is in the details with the cap that gets set, but even if most them want some cap, can’t imagine the PL owners pulling in one direction hard enough to give it much teeth, especially, as you say, with financial turmoil in Spain and Italy and only a couple of oil-money clubs in France. Throw in something fairly close to actual reasonable governance in Germany, and you start to see why this passed now.