G-14

G-14

The G-14 was an organisation of European football clubs, that existed between 2000 and 2008.

Composition

The G-14 clubs were spread across seven different countries, and had won around 250 national league titles between them. Three came from the top division of Italy; England, France, Germany, the Netherlands and Spain all featured two, and one came from Portugal. G-14 members had won the European Cup/Champions League 41 times out of 51 seasons.

The 2004 Champions League final was the first in that competition since 1992 in which neither of the finalists was a G-14 member; the 2004 final featured member Porto and non-member AS Monaco. There have been only three Champions League or European Cup finals where both teams were non-members of G-14 (1970, 1979 and 1980).

History

The G-14 was founded in September 2000 by 14 leading clubs to provide a unified voice in negotiations with UEFA and FIFA. New members could join by invitation only. In August 2002, four more clubs joined, taking the membership to 18, although the organisation retained its original name.

As the leading clubs in European Football, their power on the world stage was best demonstrated during the 2006 FIFA World Cup where they provided 22% of participating players.Fact|date=January 2008 This supported their assertion that national associations should pay players wages whilst on international duty and provide compensation in the case of injuries. In April 2004, G-14 initiated a preliminary investigation into FIFA by the Swiss Competition Commission, when they complained of FIFA's requiring their players to be available for FIFA international competitions without compensating the clubs. FIFA president Sepp Blatter refused to negotiate with the G-14 on the matter.Fact|date=January 2008

On September 5 2005 the G-14 clubs decided to take FIFA to court over paying players for internationals after the Belgian club Charleroi lost Abdelmajid Oulmers in November for eight months when he was injured playing for Morocco.Fact|date=January 2008

Prior to the 2006 FIFA World Cup the G-14 members demanded a 'fair percentage' of receipts from tournaments, such as the World Cup, to compensate for the clubs releasing players to compete in these tournaments. [cite news
last=Nisbet
first=John
url=http://sport.independent.co.uk/football/news/article353005.ece
title= G14 clubs demand share of World Cup gate receipts
work=The Independent
date=2006-03-23
accessdate=2007-05-24
]

The last president of the group was Olympique Lyonnais chairman Jean-Michel Aulas, who replaced David Dein who stepped down after six months of a two year presidency after leaving Arsenal. Aulas was elected president on May 16, 2007, after securing unanimous agreement from member clubs to the principle of expanding the G-14's membership. Aulas announced his intention to consider inviting a further 16 teams to join, stating that he wanted the G14 "to expand geographically and be strengthened by other clubs." [cite news
last=Esplin
first=Ronnie
url=http://soccernet.espn.go.com/news/story?id=430900&cc=3436
title=New G-14 boss may swell lobby group to 32
work=ESPNsoccernet
date=2007-05-17
accessdate=2007-05-24
] [cite news
url=http://www.rte.ie/sport/soccer/2007/0516/g14.html
title=G14 looks set to expand
publisher=RTÉ Sport
date=2007-05-16
accessdate=2007-08-07
] In October 2007, 22 additional European clubs were invited to participate in talks towards expansion. [ cite news
last=
first=
url= http://www.eveningtimes.co.uk/sport/display.var.1798438.0.celts_get_g14_slot_but_gers_snubbed.php
title=Celts get G14 slot but Gers snubbed
work=Evening Times
date=2007-10-31
accessdate=2007-10-31
]

On 28 May 2007, at an extraordinary congress in Zurich, UEFA President Michel Platini called upon G-14 to disband, declaring that they were "elitist" and that club grievances could be aired through a new UEFA body, the Professional Football Strategy Council. [cite news
url=http://soccernet.espn.go.com/news/story?id=434567&cc=4716
title=Platini calls for disbandment of 'Elitist' G14
publisher=ESPNsoccernet
date=2007-05-28
accessdate=2007-05-29
]

On 15 January 2008 the G-14 and UEFA came to an agreement. FIFA and UEFA would pay compensation for international injuries and selection after a World Cup or European Championship and, in return, the G-14 agreed to disband on February 15 2008. However a new European Club Association which will feature 103 teams from all 53 UEFA nations, with at least one team from each country, will be set up in its place. [cite news
title = G14 to disband after compromise
url = http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/europe/7190186.stm
publisher = BBC Sport
date = 2008-01-15
accessdate = 2008-01-15
]

Members

;Founding members, 2000
*flagicon|ENG Manchester United (England)
*flagicon|ENG Liverpool (England)
*flagicon|ITA Juventus (Italy)
*flagicon|ITA Milan (Italy)
*flagicon|ITA Internazionale (Italy)
*flagicon|FRA Marseille (France)
*flagicon|FRA Paris Saint-Germain (France)
*flagicon|GER Bayern Munich (Germany)
*flagicon|GER Borussia Dortmund (Germany)
*flagicon|NED Ajax (Netherlands)
*flagicon|NED PSV Eindhoven (Netherlands)
*flagicon|POR Porto (Portugal)
*flagicon|ESP Barcelona (Spain)
*flagicon|ESP Real Madrid (Spain)

;New members, 2002
*flagicon|ENG Arsenal (England)
*flagicon|FRA Lyon (France)
*flagicon|GER Bayer Leverkusen (Germany)
*flagicon|ESP Valencia (Spain)

References

ee also

*European Club Association

External links

* [http://www.g14.com/ Official Website]
* [http://www.g14latest.eu/ Unofficial G-14 Member News]


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