European clubs reach agreement with UEFA

Europe’s top football clubs have reached a new cooperation agreement with UEFA to give them a bigger share of European Championship profits and insure salaries for players injured on international duty.

The European Club Association said on Tuesday that the renewed accord runs through May 2018, but “unsatisfactory” talks with FIFA were locked in stalemate.

ECA chairman Karl-Heinz Rummenigge announced the “major breakthrough” with UEFA at a meeting of the 200-club group in Warsaw, Poland.

“The negotiations have not always proved easy, but were always conducted in a fair and respectful manner,” Rummenigge said in a statement, praising UEFA President Michel Platini. “Unfortunately, discussions with the FIFA president have failed to lead to a satisfactory outcome which takes account of the clubs’ demands.”

The ECA was created in 2008 to give clubs a more democratic voice in talks with UEFA and FIFA after years of hostile relations when elite clubs were represented by the G-14 group.

However, talks to renew the ECA’s initial working agreements have exposed problems between Rummenigge and FIFA President Sepp Blatter over insurance policies and the number of fixtures on the FIFA-approved international calendar, when clubs are obliged to release their players to national teams.

The ECA has focused more on relations with UEFA and Platini, who is the favorite to succeed Blatter at FIFA in 2015.

European clubs will share a “substantially increased” sum on the (euro) 55 million ($74 million) previously agreed from Euro 2012 profits, which is distributed on a daily rate for as long as players are involved in the tournament co-hosted by Poland and Ukraine.

“This amount will be substantially increased in time for this year’s Euro with a further increase for the UEFA Euro 2016 in France,” the clubs said. The exact increase will be announced at the UEFA Congress held on March 22 in Istanbul.

Before Euro 2012, UEFA will fund “insurance covering the injury risk of players” who European clubs release to play for any national team.

“This insurance is valid for all players registered with a European club, irrespective of their nationality, and for all matches mentioned in the international calendar, including both official and friendly matches,” the ECA said.

The issue of insurance was highlighted after Rummenigge’s club Bayern Munich lost Netherlands winger Arjen Robben for six months when he returned injured from the 2010 World Cup.

Under the new agreement, UEFA has agreed that “no decision relating to club football will be taken without the consent of the clubs.”

This point was necessary to remove the threat of clubs refusing to play in UEFA’s marquee Champions League, or set up a rival competition.

“This is once more a proof that, in the European football family, solutions can be found in a cooperative and fair way,” Rummenigge said.

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