Editor’s
note: Stefano Bastianon is Associate
Professor in EU Law and EU sports law at the University of Bergamo and lawyer
admitted to the Busto Arsizio bar.*
1. Introduction.
The so-called specificity of sport represents one of
the most debated, if not the most debated, but still undefined issue under
European Union (EU) law. A noteworthy peculiarity is that the specificity of
sport is frequently mentioned in several legislative and political documents
issued by EU institutions, however it is not expressly referred to in any
judgment by the European Court of Justice (ECJ).Conversely, the Court of
Arbitration for Sport (CAS) case-law on Art. 17 of FIFA Regulations on status
and transfer of players (RSTP) has repeatedly and expressly referred to the
specificity of sport.[1] Apparently, the concept of
specificity of sport has different meanings and purposes in the ECJ and CAS
jurisprudence. In this blog (divided in two parts), I will try to analyse those
two different meanings and to what extent the CAS case-law is consistent with
the concept of specificity of sport as elaborated under EU law. More...