Spain's 42 professional
soccer clubs have rowed back from a threat to go on strike and
will give the government more time to push through a law
mandating collective bargaining for TV rights.
Club officials meeting in Barcelona at a professional soccer
league (LFP) extraordinary general assembly decided to give the
government 10-12 days more leeway to make progress on the law,
LFP president Javier Tebas told reporters.
"There needs to be a (law) that regulates the sale of
television rights," Tebas said.
"Without it, the reality is that Spanish football will drop
to fifth or sixth in the European ranking," he warned.
Many clubs in La Liga, including champions Atletico Madrid,
Espanyol, Valencia and Sevilla, are hopeful a collective deal
would enable them to demand more cash from broadcasters which
could then be shared out more equitably.
La Liga is the only top European league in which clubs
negotiate their own TV contracts and Spanish teams are under
pressure to boost revenue after the English Premier League last
month agreed a new collective TV rights deal for 2016-19 worth
about five billion pounds ($7.5 billion).
Real Madrid, the world's wealthiest club by income, and
Barcelona, the fourth richest, together take about half of the
annual La Liga TV money of about 650 million euros -- one reason
they usually finish far ahead of their domestic rivals.
According to Esteve Calzada, CEO of Barcelona-based
consulting firm Prime Time Sport, the ratio in England between
the team that makes the most TV money and the one that makes the
least is about 1.5:1 while in La Liga it is 10:1.
Club officials and the LFP have accused the government of
dragging its feet in pushing through a new sports law that would
include mandated collective bargaining.
"We are working on it, it's what the sector wants," Miguel
Cardenal, president of the government sports council (CSD), was
quoted as saying on Tuesday.
"It's a complex regulation," he added. "In addition, there
are a lot of interested parties who want to have their say. We
have not put the issue on ice and we are working on it."
The LFP, the Spanish soccer federation (RFEF) and the CSD
are due to meet on Thursday to discuss the TV rights issue,
local media reported.
(Reuters)
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