epa08694556 The European Super Cup trophy is presented between the Europa League and the Champions League trophy prior to the UEFA Super Cup final between Bayern Munich and Sevilla at the Puskas Arena in Budapest, Hungary, 24 September 2020. EPA-EFE/Laszlo Balogh / POOL

Milan and Inter have reportedly signed ‘legally binding commitments’ to be reintegrated into the European Club Association, after abandoning the Super League project.

New York Times reports the two Serie A clubs, Inter and Milan, have joined Atletico Madrid and the six English clubs who immediately left the Super League project, and signed ‘legally binding commitments to be reintegrated into the European Clubs Association’.

Paris Saint-Germain patron Nasser Al-Khelaifi replaced Andrea Agnelli as chief of the ECA and the announcement of the reintegration is expected later today.

Juventus, Real Madrid and Barcelona released a statement on July 30, confirming their intentions of going  ahead with the Super League project after a court in Madrid banned UEFA from prosecuting the clubs connected with the competition.

Juventus, Barcelona and Real Madrid ‘confident in the success of the Super League’

 

One thought on “NYT: Milan, Inter and seven other former Super League clubs re-enter ECA”
  1. Reintegrated back into the status quo. This means absolutely nothing meaningful for Italian clubs. Even if it had failed after a few years, the super league would’ve brought in some much needed income. All we’re doing is signing up to what was already there – imbalance, lack of fairness and cowering to rule breakers.

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