Paulie Gualtieri
R.I.P. Tony Sirico
- May 18, 2016
- 12,366
- 3,077
Crazy that the overwhelming social media reaction was still negativeA new study shows there were hundreds of bot accounts and thousands of troll farm twitter accounts working to push the Super League after it was announced, kinda interesting
Edited to add a link: Study: Bots Used to Manipulate Social Media in Favor of European Super League
A new study shows there were hundreds of bot accounts and thousands of troll farm twitter accounts working to push the Super League after it was announced, kinda interesting
Edited to add a link: Study: Bots Used to Manipulate Social Media in Favor of European Super League
Crazy that the overwhelming social media reaction was still negative
But that was the point. Maybe they try and gaslight everyone with a "success review period" for promotion over 20 years or something lol.I still wonder if they could've gotten away with it if they had proposed a viable relegation/promotion mechanism. I suspect that the SL feeling like a closed-loop which would create a permanent footballing upper-class, motivated people even more than these clubs "betraying" their domestic leagues and that the response might not have been intense enough to kill it had the SL been able to sell to people that other clubs would be able to work their way up and failing SL clubs would be able to fall out of it.
Of course, the big domestic leagues would never agree to work with the SL to make such a promotion/relegation mechanism possible...but it is something I wonder about; were we only saved by the greed of our national FAs?
But that was the point. Maybe they try and gaslight everyone with a "success review period" for promotion over 20 years or something lol.
Laporta speaks which language again?Explains why on Barcelona's social media page most of the voices in favour were from let's say non-traditional football markets such as Pakistan.
Agreed.I still wonder if they could've gotten away with it if they had proposed a viable relegation/promotion mechanism.
I suspect that the SL feeling like a closed-loop which would create a permanent footballing upper-class, motivated people even more than these clubs "betraying" their domestic leagues...so I have to wonder whether the backlash might not have been intense enough to kill it, had the SL been able to sell to people that other clubs would be able to work their way up and failing SL clubs would be able to fall out of it.
Of course, the big domestic leagues would never agree to work with the SL to make such a promotion/relegation mechanism possible...but it is something I wonder about; were we only saved by the greed of our national FAs?
Laporta speaks which language again?
Sounds like it'll be re-launched soon.
I guess I'm part of a dying breed. I want clubs owned by the members playing domestic competitions and with 1-2 European tournaments - which you have to qualify to through the domestic competitions. If a big club misses out and therefore suffers financially - deal with it - it is part of the game.
Really confused how promotion/relegation works if they want to cut out UEFA...From what I read, they are proposing a completely new format. An open one, with promo/rel. No more guarantees for anybody.
The goal here is really to cut out the middle man, UEFA.
Is it a good thing? No, because it will impact the rest of the football pyramid. Is it a GOOD business move for the giants? Probably.
Some version of this I'm almost convinced will happen, unfortunately. Part of the fun is seeing teams like Ajax, Porto, Monaco etc. going on runs no-one expected. That will more or less be gone.
- 20 participating clubs with 15 Founding Clubs and a qualifying mechanism for a further five teams to qualify annually based on achievements in the prior season.
- Midweek fixtures with all participating clubs continuing to compete in their respective national leagues, preserving the traditional domestic match calendar which remains at the heart of the club game.
- An August start with clubs participating in two groups of ten, playing home and away fixtures, with the top three in each group automatically qualifying for the quarter finals. Teams finishing fourth and fifth will then compete in a two-legged play-off for the remaining quarter-final positions. A two-leg knockout format will be used to reach the final at the end of May, which will be staged as a single fixture at a neutral venue.