UEFA Approves Entry of 2 Red Bull Teams in Champions League

Next
season’s Champions League could feature the first competitive meeting
between RB Leipzig, the surprise runner-up in last year’s German
Bundesliga, and its Austrian cousin, Red Bull Salzburg, after UEFA
announced on Tuesday that it had cleared both clubs to take their places in soccer’s most exclusive club tournament.
Leipzig’s
second-place finish in its first season in Germany’s highest division
meant it qualified automatically for the Champions League’s group stage,
while Salzburg’s eighth Austrian championship in 11 years guaranteed it
a place in the competition’s final qualifying round.
The
links between the clubs, however, had placed Leipzig’s participation in
jeopardy. Under UEFA rules, no “individual or entity” can have a
“decisive influence” over the activities of more than one club in its
tournaments.
Red
Bull, the energy-drink company, holds a majority stake in Leipzig and
has long been Salzburg’s primary sponsor. The company’s logo dominates
both teams’ crests and jerseys, and its name adorns both teams’
stadiums. The teams also once shared some executives, furthering the impression that the clubs were linked.
Despite
that, UEFA, European soccer’s governing body, which runs the Champions
League, confirmed on Tuesday that its investigation had found no reason
to believe that its regulations on the integrity of the competition
would be breached by both teams entering the Champions League. It
concluded that a series of “significant and substantial” changes made by
the clubs ensured that they fulfilled UEFA’s eligibility criteria.
The
issue has hung over the competition for months, potentially affecting
not only RB Leipzig and Red Bull Salzburg but also several teams that
stood to benefit financially from their inclusion had Leipzig been
disqualified.

Last
month, once they had confirmed their places in the field, both Salzburg
and Leipzig submitted to UEFA their applications to compete in the
Champions League, complete with documentation detailing their ownership
models. Those files were then passed to the UEFA Club Financial Control
Body investigatory chamber for assessment.
Though Leipzig and Salzburg made some changes to their corporate structures
to comply with UEFA regulations — while Red Bull owns Leipzig, it is
officially only a title sponsor of Salzburg — they were confidentially
informed on May 26 that not enough had been done to separate the clubs
and that the case had been referred to the Club Financial Control Body
adjudicatory chamber. The two chambers are independent entities, staffed
largely by legal experts and judges.
Had
the adjudicatory chamber reached the same conclusion as the initial
review, Leipzig would have been barred; UEFA’s regulations state that in
such conflicts, the team that has finished higher in its domestic
competition takes priority.
The
teams won their appeal after a host of changes, particularly at
Salzburg, allowed the clubs to convince UEFA that they were no longer
linked. A number of Red Bull employees who held management positions at
Salzburg departed, meaning there were no longer any individuals who
could exert influence on both clubs. Red Bull also reviewed and reduced
the scope of its financial commitment to the Austrian club. The company
is expected to announce an extended sponsorship deal — lasting until
2022 — on reduced terms in the coming days, a move that it successfully
argued would diminish its influence over the team’s activities.
Those changes meant the adjudicatory chamber could find no legal reason to deny each team its place in the competition.
The
decision could be appealed by any club that stood to benefit from
Leipzig’s absence: Hoffenheim, which would have been handed an automatic
Champions League slot; Cologne, which would have been placed in the
Champions League qualifying round; and Werder Bremen, which would have
taken Cologne’s place in the second-tier Europa League.
Hoffenheim
and Cologne confirmed on Tuesday that they had no intention of
appealing the decision, and UEFA said it had not had contact from any
other team indicating an intention to challenge it.
Comments
Post a Comment
add your comments