Expanded Club World Cup in 2025 faces legal challenge by players' unions
UNB
Publish: 13 Jun 2024, 11:15 PM
DUSSELDORF,
Germany, June 13 (AP/UNB) - The world soccer players' union filed a legal claim
against FIFA for expanding the Club World Cup, FIFPRO said on Thursday.
The 32-team event, up
from seven teams, is slated for June-July 2025 in the United States. It is
traditionally staged in December.
FIFPRO is concerned
about the physical and mental demands on players.
It said unions in
England and France filed a claim at the Brussels Court of Commerce, which also
challenged FIFA's "decisions to unilaterally set the international match
calendar," determining the schedule for international games and
competitions.
FIFPRO said unions
believe decisions like the expanded Club World Cup "violate the rights of
players and their unions."
The Brussels court is
being asked to refer the case to the European Court of Justice.
"Players and their
unions have consistently highlighted the current football calendar as
overloaded and unworkable," FIFPRO Europe said in a statement.
FIFA revealed details of
its expanded Club World Cup in December. FIFPRO quickly opposed the plans,
which it said showed a "lack of consideration for the mental and physical
health of participating players, as well as a disregard for their personal and
family lives."
FIFA said the timing of
the month-long tournament, during the offseason for many major leagues around
the world, would ensure sufficient rest for players.
That assertion is
disputed.
"Once preparation
periods and travel are included, the tournament is likely to create up to six
weeks of additional work to be added to an already crowded schedule," it
said. "The role of FIFPRO Europe and its members is not to favor or oppose
one competition over another. However, in the wider context of the global
football calendar, the new FIFA Club World Cup is seen by players and unions as
representing a tipping point."
FIFA says the
international match calendar is published after consultation with the relevant
stakeholders.
Staging the Club World
Cup in 2025 means top players face three straight years of major competitions
during the usual offseason, given the European Championship and Copa America
are being staged this year and the next World Cup is in 2026.
"Since all attempts
at dialogue have failed, it is now up to us to ensure that the fundamental
rights of players are fully respected by taking the matter to the European
courts and thus to the ECJ," FIFPRO Europe president David Terrier said. "It's
not a question of stigmatising a particular competition, but of denouncing both
the underlying problem and the straw that broke the camel's back."
Despite the opposition
of FIFPRO, the European Clubs Association has said the Club World Cup was
"fantastic news for club football in general."
The Associated Press
contact FIFA for comment.
End/UNB/AP/HM