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Posted: 2022-12-14 00:07:48

Let's set the scene.

A new football entity wants to create a competition format that rivals some of the biggest and most popular that already exist in a crowded market.

The idea had been proposed years earlier, largely in secret, and involved only a select few decision-makers at the highest levels of certain clubs.

It was driven primarily by the need for revenue — something that was exacerbated by the financial hit many of them took during the COVID-19 pandemic.

They signed a lucrative, multi-year offer with an organisation that was willing to invest a seemingly unignorable sum of money to kickstart the project.

A black banner with white writing protesting a European Super League hangs on railings outside Liverpool's home ground
A handful of football clubs were involved in the doomed European Super League project, which received immediate backlash from fans.(AP: Jon Super)

Its launch was framed around taking the sport in brave new directions and appealing to a previously untapped market: tearing up old traditions in order to create new ones, making changes to the few that would ultimately benefit the many.

However, the response from the many was not enthusiastic acceptance. It was, instead, almost universal outrage; not just at the decision itself, but also being kept in the dark about it.

Boycotts, walkouts, and membership cancellations were all used to protest what was viewed as an elitist, out-of-touch "cash-grab" from people in power who have lost sight of what makes the game they govern unique.

Sound familiar?

Monday's decision by the Australian Professional Leagues (APL) to sell the grand final hosting rights of the A-League Men, A-League Women and E-League to Destination NSW, the tourism arm of the NSW government, has a number of parallels to the abandoned (but still potentially re-emerging) European Super League (ESL) that consumed club football just over a year ago.

While it took years to develop, the rapid nature of the fallout from the ESL offered a stark reminder that modern sport operates in two different worlds — the world where decisions are made, and the world where decisions are felt.

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