• Loading stock data...
Sunday, August 10, 2025
Tuned In returns to NYC on September 16. Hear from the biggest names in sports media. Click here to get your spot
Law

Premier League, LaLiga, Unions to FIFA: There Are Too Many Games

  • European Leagues, FIFPRO, and LaLiga argue that FIFA breaks EU competition law.
  • FIFA is expanding both the next World Cup and Club World Cup to include more matches.
Jessica Alcheh-USA TODAY Sports

The groups representing all European soccer leagues—including the major leagues in England, Spain, Germany, France, and Italy—and players made a legal move against FIFA on Tuesday, announcing they will file a joint complaint to the European Union over the governing body’s expanded international calendar.

European Leagues and FIFPRO Europe said they’ve asked FIFA for years to make a more tenable schedule. “Regretfully, FIFA has consistently refused to include national leagues and player unions in its decision-making process,” they claim.

Instead, FIFA in December revealed its plans for an expanded Club World Cup in 2025, which prompted soccer bodies around the world to blast the decision for “overloading” players’ schedules. The 2026 World Cup will also be expanded to 104 matches after just 64 were played in 2022, as the number of teams is increasing to 48 from 32.

“The international match calendar is now beyond saturation and has become unsustainable for national leagues and a risk for the health of players. FIFA’s decisions over the last years have repeatedly favoured its own competitions and commercial interests, neglected its responsibilities as a governing body, and harmed the economic interests of national leagues and the welfare of players,” the leagues and unions said in Tuesday’s joint statement. “​​Legal action is now the only responsible step for European leagues and player unions to protect football, its ecosystem and its workforce from FIFA’s unilateral decisions.”

The two organizations warned FIFA in May that legal action could follow. Their complaint, which Spain’s LaLiga also joined, will now go before the European Commission arguing FIFA violates EU competition law by acting as both the sport’s regulator and organizer for international competition. The players’ unions of England, France, and Italy took similar legal action last month.

FIFA responded with a statement on social media: “The current calendar was unanimously approved by the FIFA Council, which is composed of representatives from all continents, including Europe, following a comprehensive and inclusive consultation, which included FIFPRO and league bodies. FIFA’s calendar is the only instrument ensuring that international football can continue to survive, co-exist, and prosper alongside domestic and continental club football.” 

FIFA also attacked European leagues’ calendars of international summer friendlies as profit-seeking ways they tire out players.

“Some leagues in Europe – themselves competition organisers and regulators – are acting with commercial self-interest, hypocrisy, and without consideration to everyone else in the world,” the international governing body said.

The UEFA Champions League also announced in May that it will increase its number of games starting next season, which are sprinkled throughout the club schedule.

One reason this is all coming to a head this summer is that the Africa Cup of Nations was pushed back from next summer to December 2025 to avoid conflict with the Club World Cup. That timeline falls directly in the middle of the European league season.

“These are big, potentially career-altering decisions being made without proper consultation or negotiation,” Maheta Molango, CEO of England’s players’ union, told CBS Sports about the AFCON change. “It’s just not tenable to continue to argue that this approach to the fixture calendar is working. As always, it’s the players who are expected to bend. As we have seen, eventually they will break. It has to stop.”

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Everyone in Sports Wants to Be an Owner

The new brass ring for everyone in sports.

LAFC’s Record Son Deal Brings Global Buzz and Local Pride

Los Angeles has the largest Korean community in the country.
Italian soccer players

Serie A Players Agree to Automatic 25% Pay Cuts If Relegated

The new rule applies to all contracts signed after Sept. 2.

Featured Today

Dec 14, 2019; Philadelphia, PA, USA; President Donald Trump wave during the second quarter of the game between the Navy Midshipmen and the Army Black Knights at Lincoln Financial Field

‘Political Gold’: Trump Putting His Stamp on College Sports 

Trump has embraced executive action on hot-button college sports issues.
August 3, 2025

Inked Under Anesthesia: Athletes Getting $50,000 Tattoos

High-end studios, elite artist teams, and hours under anesthesia.
Coco Gauff at New York Liberty
August 2, 2025

How the New York Liberty Became the Hottest Ticket in Town

Once banished to the burbs, the Libs are now Brooklyn’s marquee attraction.
Las Vegas sign
July 29, 2025

College Sports Embracing Vegas After Years of Cold Shoulder

The Big Ten became the latest newcomer to Sin City.
NC State

NC State ‘Cardiac Pack’ Team Loses NCAA Suit for NIL Back Pay

The 1983 team was among college basketball’s greatest Cinderella stories. 
A general view as athletes compete in the women’s 10,000m final during the Paris 2024 Olympic Summer Games at Stade de France in Saint-Deanis, France, Friday, Aug. 9, 2024.
August 5, 2025

Trump Order Leads to Visa Ban for Trans Athletes in Women’s Sports

“Men do not belong in women’s sports,” a USCIS spokesperson said.
WNBA
August 7, 2025

Crypto Group Says It’s Behind WNBA Dildo Epidemic

The group backs a memecoin that launched last week.
Sponsored

Hottest Matchups Following NFL Schedule Release

The NFL released the 2025 regular-season schedule, and anticipation is already building in the ticket marketplace with four months to go.
Josh Donaldson
August 5, 2025

Josh Donaldson Settles With Mold Landlord for $729K

Donaldson vacated the Greenwich, Ct., mansion shortly after moving in.
Feb 20, 2011; Calgary, AB, Canada; Canadian hockey fans wave a flag and display a banner before the Heritage Classic between the Montreal Canadiens and the Calgary Flames at McMahon Stadium. The Flames beat the Canadiens 4-0
August 1, 2025

Where Does Hockey Go After the Hockey Canada Verdict?

After the sexual assault trial, hockey is split over the path forward.
Troy Taylor
July 31, 2025

Ex-Stanford Coach Troy Taylor Sues ESPN for Defamation

Taylor was fired after a pair of 3–9 seasons.
Gilbert Arenas
July 31, 2025

Gilbert Arenas Charged With Running Illegal Poker Operation With ‘Organized Crime Figure’

The former NBA player allegedly ran a poker club from his house.