Six English Premier League clubs — Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool, Manchester City, Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur — announced their withdrawal on Tuesday. Italian giants Inter Milan and AC Milan and current Spanish league leaders Atletico Madrid followed suit on Wednesday.
“I don’t think that project is now still up and running,” Andrea Agnelli, chairman of Italian club Juventus and one of the plan’s key architects, said on Wednesday.
The 12 teams that tried to form the doomed league have been accused of seeking to orchestrate a massive cash grab by walling themselves off from competition, a goal that runs counter to the traditions of European football.
How did JPMorgan get it so wrong?
That bank said on Friday it “clearly misjudged” how the proposed Super League would impact football.
“We clearly misjudged how this deal would be viewed by the wider football community and how it might impact them in the future. We will learn from this,” a JPMorgan Chase spokesperson told CNN.
A source familiar with the discussions said the bank’s involvement was vetted by an internal committee that assesses potential deals for reputation or credit risks. The lender predicted there could be controversy, but in the end, it would be a matter “for the football world to decide.”
“There’s always a large emotional component to [sports],” the source said. “When you’re making a financial decision on a loan, you have to try to put emotion aside.”
The source said discussions about forming a league had been underway for a number of years, though JPMorgan was not involved in any negotiations between clubs.
The bank had existing relationships with many of the teams involved. It provided stadium financing for Real Madrid, whose president Florentino Perez was also set to lead the Super League.
The debt financing agreement was a long term bet, with funding set to be paid off over 23 years and secured against the competition’s future broadcasting rights, which were expected to be extremely lucrative.
But JPMorgan clearly underestimated the magnitude of the backlash, which the source admitted had been “extraordinary.”
The bank will not suffer a financial loss if the project doesn’t go ahead. But among some fans of the sport, its image has taken a major hit.
“If it had, calls for a boycott would probably be heard already,” wrote financial editor Nils Pratley.