Article contents
Saving Football from Itself: Why and How to Re-make EU Sports Law
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 October 2022
Abstract
EU sports law has conventionally been understood to involve the assembly of the several decisions of the Court of Justice and the Commission that apply free movement and competition law to the practices of governing bodies. The influence of these decisions has generated change in some aspects of sporting governance, in the EU, and beyond. But the EU does not set the terms according to which sport shall be organised. This article makes the case for the EU moving beyond its orthodox approach to sports law, which is rooted in the accidents of litigation, and also choosing to embrace a role as a regulator. This will diminish the autonomy that governing bodies in sport have long prized, but the article asserts the need for this in order to address the conflict of interest to which governing bodies fall prey when they perform regulatory functions while also making commercially significant choices. It is, however, unclear whether the political will needed to propel EU sports law beyond the application of internal market law to embrace also the establishment of mandatory ex ante standards can be assembled.
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- Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Centre for European Legal Studies, Faculty of Law, University of Cambridge
References
1 See eg Olympic Charter of the International Olympic Committee, Art 61, https://olympics.com/ioc/olympic-charter.
2 Court of Arbitration for Sport, https://www.tas-cas.org.
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10 Olivier Bernard, C-325/08, EU:C:2010:143.
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18 Ibid, para 51.
19 Ibid, para 52.
20 International Skating Union v Commission, T-93/18, EU:T:2020:610.
21 Ibid, para 75.
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26 IP/01/314, 5 March 2001.
27 IP/02/824, 5 June 2002.
28 IP/12/264, 21 March 2012.
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30 Union Royale Belge des Sociétés de Football Association ASBL, note 9 above, para 136.
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35 Directive 2014/40 OJ 2014 L127/1.
36 Directive 2015/2302 OJ 2015 L326/1.
37 Directive 2019/882 OJ 2019 L151/70.
38 Regulation 2020/1503 OJ 2020 L347/1.
39 Directive 2019/1937 OJ 2019 L305/17.
40 COM (2021) 731, 25 November 2021.
41 OJ 2019 C416/3.
42 Motosykletistiki Omospondia Ellados NPID (MOTOE) v Elliniko Dimosio, note 17 above.
43 International Skating Union v Commission, note 20 above.
44 European Commission, Staff Working Document, The EU and Sport: Background and Context, accompanying document to the White Paper on Sport (SEC (2007) 935, 11 July 2007).
45 OJ 2021 C501/1.
46 OJ 2022 C224/2.
47 OJ 2022 L281/9.
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50 C(2014) 7378, 14 October 2014; C(2018) 876, 19 February 2018.
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52 Cf note 31 above: another intriguing project for another day would explore analogies with the perceived need for ex ante regulation to supplement competition law in digital markets, where the ‘gatekeeping’ role of powerful suppliers also resonates: an EU Digital Markets Act is under legislative consideration, see https://ec.europa.eu/competition-policy/sectors/ict/dma_en.
53 Note 46 above.
54 Note 45 above.
55 ‘UEFA Governance Model Reinforced by EU Sports Ministers’ (30 November 2021), https://www.uefa.com/insideuefa/mediaservices/mediareleases/news/026f-13d8c2d09775-edd2e5da3016-1000--uefa-governance-model-reinforced-by-eu-sports-ministers/.
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