Don’t imagine that American globalisers and fans of some form of super league have gone away or given up the chance of remoulding European football, even if fans in the Bundesliga have fought back successfully.
European football needs more matches with drama and
competitive tension to keep fans interested and attract new audiences to the
sport, according to the chief of the US investment group that has backed top
Spanish clubs Real Madrid and FC Barcelona. Alan Waxman, a former Goldman Sachs
partner and co-founder of Sixth Street, which manages more than $75bn in
assets, said the sport needed to innovate in order to appeal to a wider
audience. “There are more and more forms of entertainment that people,
especially younger demographics, can consume,” he told the Financial Times.
“If you don’t create
more drama . . . you can start to lose the core and once that starts, it’s hard
to get people back in. That’s why the best businesses innovate before that
happens,” he assured the Pink ‘Un.
The San Francisco-based investment group executed deals in
2022 with La Liga giants Barça and Real Madrid. The two clubs are backers of a
plan to create a new European Super League to replace the Uefa Champions
League, Europe’s most prestigious club competition.
Waxman, who declined to comment on the ESL, expects to see
“more structural change in European football” in the search for more games of
consequence that can excite fans. Next season Uefa is overhauling the Champions
League format, with the aim of reducing the number of inconsequential matches.
Waxman warned that unless football clubs with global brands continued to
invest, they were at risk of losing their lustre.
Clubs that may have had global recognition historically
could become “melting ice cubes because they don’t do the right things from a
business and fan perspective and they don’t invest in the experience”, he said.
The opportunity for clubs is to tap into new technology that allows fans to
follow them from wherever they are in the world, Waxman said,
in a continued
diversification of revenues in addition to ticket sales and traditional
television deals. Waxman, who co-founded Sixth Street in 2009, also highlighted
the urgent need to upgrade stadiums and other infrastructure to give fans a
“centre of gathering”.
Real Madrid and Barça are investing heavily in their
stadiums. Sixth Street took a majority stake in a company that owns 25 per cent
of Barça’s La Liga television rights for 25 years, allowing the member-owned
club to generate capital gains and pay down debt.
eparately, Sixth
Street and Legends, the live events business in which it has a majority stake,
struck a deal with Real Madrid, which received €360mn to invest across the
business. The investments are part of a surge of private capital into the
world’s most popular sport.
Private equity firm CVC Capital Partners has financed the
Spanish and French football leagues, while US investors have bought famous
clubs, including Italy’s AC Milan and Premier League side Chelsea.
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