Editor's note: This report compiles the most relevant legal
news, events and materials on International and European Sports Law based on
the daily coverage provided on our twitter feed @Sportslaw_asser.
The Headlines
WADA Conference and the Adoption
of 2021 WADA Code Amid Calls for Reform
On November 5-7, WADA held
its Fifth World Conference on Doping in Sport where it faced a busy schedule,
including the adoption of the revised 2021 World Anti-Doping Code and the
election of a new WADA President and Vice-President by the Foundation Board. Concerning
the latter, Witold Bańka, Poland’s Minister of Sport and Tourism, was elected
as WADA President and Yang Yang, a former Chinese speed skater, elected as
Vice-President, replacing Sir Craig Reedie and Linda Helleland respectively. As Helleland leaves her position, she has expressed
some strong views on the state of sport governance, particularly that ‘there is an absence of good governance,
openness and independence in the highest levels of international sports’. Helleland was not the
only one to recently voice governance concerns, as Rob Koehler, Director
General of Global Athlete, also called for a ‘wholesale
structural change at WADA’, which includes giving ‘independent’ athletes a vote
in WADA’s Foundation Board, ensuring a greater ‘separation of powers’ and
ensuring greater protection of athletes’ rights.
In the midst of the calls
for reform, the amended 2021 WADA Code and the amended International Standards were also adopted after a two year, three stage code
review process. Furthermore, a major milestone in athletes’ rights was
achieved with the adoption of the Athletes’ Anti-Doping Rights Acts (separate from the WADA
Code), which enumerates certain basic rights to help ‘ensure that Athlete rights within anti-doping are
clearly set out, accessible, and universally applicable’. On the other hand,
the Act ‘is not a legal document’, which clearly circumscribes some of the
potential effects the Act may have. Nonetheless, athlete representative groups have
‘cautiously welcomed’ some of the changes brought by the 2021 WADA Code, such as
the ‘modified sanctions for substances of abuse violations’.
Sung Yang’s Historical Public
Hearing at the CAS
After much anticipation,
the second public hearing in CAS history occurred on November 15 in Montreux,
Switzerland in the Sun Yang case (details of this case were discussed in August and September’s monthly report), which was livestreamed
and can be seen in its totality in four different parts (Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4). This was an extremely unique opportunity, which hopefully
will become a more common occurrence, to see just how CAS hearings are
conducted and perhaps get a taste of some of the logistical issues that can
emerge during live oral hearings. One of these problems, accurate
translations, rapidly became apparent as soon as Sun Yang sat in the
witness chair to give his opening statements. The translators in the box seemed
to struggle to provide an intelligible English interpretation of Sun Yang and
other witnesses’ statements, while Sun Yang also seemingly had trouble understanding
the translated questions being posed to him. The situation degenerated to such
an extent that ultimately one of WADA’s officials was called to replace the
translators. However, the translation drama did not end there, since during Sun
Yang’s closing statements an almost seemingly random person from the public
appeared next to Sun Yang who claimed to have been requested from Sun Yang’s
team to ‘facilitate’ the translation. Franco Frattini, president of the panel, questioned
the identity of the ‘facilitator’ and explained that one could not just simply
appear before the court without notice. Interestingly, Sun Yang’s legal team also
rapidly intervened claiming that it had not been made of aware of the inclusion
of the supporting translator, further complicating the matter. In the end, Sun
Yang concluded his statements with the translation from the WADA official.
While it was Sun Yang’s
legal team that had provided the original translators in the box, it still raises
the question as to how translation at CAS could be improved to ensure a certain
standard of translators. After all, quality translation is critical to the parties’
right to be heard under Article 6 (e) ECHR. Regardless, in the end,
neither parties made an objection that their right to be heard was violated.
Russian Doping Saga
Continues: WADA Compliance Review Committee Recommends Strong Sanctions
As was already discussed
in August and September’s monthly report, WADA uncovered numerous
inconsistencies concerning data taken from the Moscow Laboratory. After further
investigation, WADA’s Compliance Review Committee has recommended that the Russian Anti-Doping Agency (RUSADA)
be found non-compliant with the WADA Code. Accompanying the recommendation, the
Compliance Review Committee also suggested several sanctions, which include prohibiting
Russian athletes from participating in major events like the Olympic Games and ‘any
World Championships organized or sanctioned by any Signatory’ for the next four
years unless they may ‘dmonstrate that they are not implicated in any way by
the non-compliance’. It would also see an embargo on events hosted in Russia during
the same period. However, these sanctions did not go far enough for some, like Travis Tygart, chief executive
of USADA, who wishes to prevent a repeat of Rio 2016 and PyeongChang 2018 ‘in
which a secretly-managed process permitting Russians to compete – did not work’.
On the other hand, the IOC has advocated for a softer,
individual based approach that pursues ‘the rules of natural justice and
respect human rights’. In the midst of these developments, the Athletics
Integrity Unit also decided to charge several members of
the Russian Athletics Federation (RusAF), including its President Dmitry
Shlyakhtin, after a 15 month investigation for ‘tampering and complicity’
concerning a Russian athlete’s whereabouts violations.
Following many calls for
strong consequences, the WADA Executive Committee met on December 9th
and adopted the recommendations of the Compliance Review Committee. Athlete
representatives have expressed their disappointment with
the sanctions, calling the decision ‘spineless’ since it did not pursue a
complete ban on Russian participation at events such as Euro 2020 and the 2020
Olympics. At this point, RUSADA has sent notice to WADA that it will be disputing
the decision of WADA’s Executive Committee’s decision at the CAS.More...
Editor’s note:
Thomas Terraz is a fourth year LL.B. candidate at the International and
European Law programme at The Hague University of Applied Sciences with a specialisation
in European Law. Currently he is pursuing an internship at the T.M.C. Asser
Institute with a focus on International and European Sports Law.
1. Introduction
The UCI may soon have to navigate treacherous legal
waters after being the subject of two competition law based complaints (see here and here) to the European Commission in less than a month over rule changes and
decisions made over the past year. One of these complaints stems from Velon, a private
limited company owned by 11 out of the
18 World Tour Teams,[1]
and the other comes from the Lega del Ciclismo Professionistico, an entity
based in Italy representing an amalgamation of stakeholders in Italian
professional cycling. While each of the complaints differ on the actual
substance, the essence is the same: both are challenging the way the UCI exercises
its regulatory power over cycling because of a growing sense
that the UCI is impeding the development of cycling as a sport. Albeit in different ways: Velon sees the UCI infringing on its ability
to introduce new race structures and technologies; the Lega del Ciclismo
Professionistico believes the UCI is cutting opportunities for
semi-professional cycling teams, the middle ground between the World Tour Teams
and the amateur teams.
While some of the details remain vague, this blog
will aim to unpack part of the claims made by Velon in light of previous case
law from both the European Commission and the Court of Justice of the European
Union (CJEU) to give a preliminary overview of the main legal issues at stake
and some of the potential outcomes of the complaint. First, it will be crucial
to understand just who/what Velon is before analyzing the substance of Velon’s
complaint. More...
Editor's note: This report compiles the most relevant legal
news, events and materials on International and European Sports Law based on
the daily coverage provided on our twitter feed @Sportslaw_asser.
The Headlines
International Sports Law
Journal (ISLJ) Conference 2019
The T.M.C. Asser Institute
and the Asser International Sports Law Centre held the third International
Sports Law Journal (ISLJ) Conference on October 24-25. The Conference created a
forum for academics and practitioners to discuss, debate and share knowledge on
the latest developments of sports law. It featured six uniquely themed panels,
which included topics such as ‘Transfer systems in international sports’ and ‘Revisiting
the (in)dependence and transparency of the CAS’ to ‘The future of sports:
sports law of the future’. The ISLJ Conference was also honored to have two
exceptional keynote speakers: Moya Dodd and Ulrich Haas. To kick off the conference,
Moya Dodd shared her experiences from an athlete’s perspective in the various
boardrooms of FIFA. The second day was then launched by Ulrich Haas, who gave
an incredibly thorough and insightful lecture on the importance, function and legal
basis of association tribunals in international sport. For a detailed overview
of this year’s ISLJ Conference, click here for the official conference
report.
The Asser International
Sports Law Centre was delighted to have been able to host another great edition
of the ISLJ Conference and is thankful to all the participants and speakers who
made this edition such a success.
Moving towards greater
transparency: Launch of FIFA’s Legal Portal
On October 31, FIFA announced that it was introducing a
new legal portal on its website that will
give greater access to numerous documents that previously were kept private. FIFA
explains that this is in order to help increase its transparency, which was one
of the key ‘Guiding Principles’ highlighted in FIFA 2.0: The Vision for the Future released in 2016. This
development comes as many sport governing bodies face increasing criticism for
the opacity of its judicial bodies’ decisions, which can have tremendous
economic and societal impacts. The newly available documents will include: ‘decisions
rendered on the merits by the FIFA Disciplinary Committee and the FIFA Appeal
Committee (notified as of 1 January 2019); decisions rendered on the merits by
the FIFA Ethics Committee (notified since 1 January 2019); decisions rendered
on the merits by the FIFA Players’ Status Committee and the FIFA Dispute
Resolution Chamber; non-confidential CAS awards in proceedings to which FIFA is
a party (notified since 1 January 2019); list of CAS arbitrators proposed by
FIFA for appointment by ICAS, and the number of times they have been nominated
in CAS proceedings’. The list of decisions from all the aforementioned bodies
are updated every four months, according to their respective webpages. However,
time will ultimately tell how consistently decisions are published.
Nevertheless, this move is a major milestone in FIFA’s journey towards
increasing its transparency.
Hong Kong Protests, Human
Rights and (e)Sports Law: The Blizzard and NBA controversies
Both Blizzard, a major
video game developer, and the NBA received a flurry of criticism for their
responses to persons expressing support for the Hong Kong protests over the
past month. On October 8, Blizzard sanctioned Blitzchung, a professional
Hearthstone player who expressed support of the Hong Kong protest during a
post-match interview, by eliminating the prize money he had won and suspending him
for one year from any Hearthstone tournament. Additionally, Blizzard will cease
to work with the casters who conducted the interview. With mounting disapproval
over the sanctions, J. Allen Brack, the president
of Blizzard, restored the prize money and reduced
the period of ineligibility to 6 months.
The NBA controversy
started when Daryl Morey, the general manager of the Houston Rockets, tweeted his support for the protests in Hong
Kong. The tweet garnered much attention, especially in China where it received
a lot of backlash, including an announcement from CCTV, the official state
broadcaster in China, that it was suspending all broadcasts of the NBA
preseason games. In attempts to appease its Chinese audience, which is a highly
profitable market for the NBA, Morey deleted the tweet and posted an apology, and the NBA responded by
saying that the initial tweet was ‘regrettable’. Many scolded these actions and
accused the NBA of censorship to which the NBA Commissioner, Adam Silver, responded that the NBA remains
committed to freedom of expression.
Both cases highlighted how
(e)sport organizations may be faced with competing interests to either
guarantee greater protection of human rights or to pursue interests that
perhaps have certain financial motivations. More...
On October 24th and 25th
2019, the T.M.C. Asser Institute and the International Sports Law Centre hosted
the International Sports Law Journal (ISLJ) Conference for a third year in a
row, bringing together a group of academics and practitioners from around the
world. This year’s conference celebrated the 20th year of the International Sports Law Journal,
which was originally started by Robert Siekmann. Over the past 20 years, the
ISLJ has aimed to be a truly international journal that addresses global topics
in sports law while keeping the highest academic standards.
With this background, the conference
facilitated discussions and exchanges over six differently themed panels on international
sports law’s most pertinent issues and gave participants wide opportunities to
engage with one another. Additionally, this year’s edition also had the great
honor of hosting two distinguished keynote speakers, Moya Dodd and Ulrich Haas,
who were able to share their wealth of experience and knowledge with the
conference participants.
The following report aims to give an
overview of the ISLJ Conference 2019 to extract and underline the fundamental
ideas raised by the different speakers.More...
Editor's note: This report compiles all relevant news, events
and materials on International and European Sports Law based on the daily
coverage provided on our twitter feed @Sportslaw_asser. You are invited to complete this
survey via the comments section below, feel free to add links to important
cases, documents and articles we might have overlooked.
The Headlines
Another Russian Doping
Crisis? Inconsistencies Uncovered in the Data from the Moscow Lab
Storm clouds are brewing
once more in the Russian Doping Saga, after several inconsistencies were
uncovered by WADA from data retrieved from the Moscow
Laboratory. More specifically, a certain number of positive tests had been
removed from the data WADA retrieved from the Moscow Laboratory compared to the
one received from the original whistleblower. WADA launched a formal compliance
procedure on 23 September, giving three weeks for Russian
authorities to respond and provide their explanations. WADA’s Compliance Review
Committee is set to meet on 23 October in order to determine whether to
recommend declaring Russia non-compliant.
Russian authorities are
not the only ones now facing questions in light of these new revelations. Criticism
of WADA’s decision to declare Russia compliant back in September 2018 have been
reignited by stakeholders. That original decision had been vehemently criticized (see also Edwin Moses’ response), particularly by athlete
representative groups.
The fallout of these data
discrepancies may be far reaching if Russian authorities are unable to provide
a satisfying response. There are already whispers of another impending Olympic
Games ban and the possibility of a ban extending to other sports signed to the
WADA Code. In the meantime, the IAAF has already confirmed that the Russian
Athletes would compete as ‘authorised neutral athletes’ at the World Athletics
Championship in Doha, Qatar.
Legal Challenges Ahead to
Changes to the FIFA Football Transfer Market
FIFA is set to make amendments to its player
transfer market that take aim at setting new boundaries for football agents.
These changes will prohibit individuals from representing both the buying and
selling club in the same transaction and set new limits on agent commissions (3
percent for the buying club and player representative and 10 percent for the
selling team). FIFA is already in the process of creating a central
clearinghouse through which all transfer payments would have to pass through,
including agent commissions. FIFA will be making a final decision on these
proposed changes at the FIFA Council meeting on 24 October.
If these proposed changes
are confirmed, they will almost certainly be challenged in court. The British
trade organization representing football agents, Association of Football
Agents, has already begun its preparations for a costly legal battle
by sending a plea to its members for donations. It claims that it had not been
properly consulted by FIFA before this decision had been made. On the other
hand, FIFA claims that ‘there has been a consultation process with a
representative group of agents’ and that FIFA kept ‘an open dialogue with
agents’. Regardless, if these proposed changes go through, FIFA will be on
course to a looming legal showdown.
CAS Public Hearing in the
Sun Yang Case: One Step Forward for Transparency?
On 20 August, 2019, the Court of Arbitration for Sport
(CAS) announced that the hearing in the appeal procedure of the Sun Yang
case will be held publicly. It will be only the second time in its history that
a public hearing has been held (the last one being in 1999, Michelle Smith De
Bruin v. FINA). WADA has appealed the original decision of the FINA Doping
Panel which had cleared Sun Yang from an alleged anti-doping rule violation.
The decision to make the hearing public was at the request of both parties. The
hearing is set to take place November 15th and is likely to be an
important milestone in improving the CAS’ transparency.
Sun Yang, who has already served a doping ban for a previous violation
in 2014, has also been at the center of another controversy, where Mack Horton,
an Australian swimmer, refused to shake hands and stand on
the podium with Sun Yang at the world championships in Gwangju. More...
Editor's note: Sofia Balzaretti is a Graduate research assistant and a PhD candidate at
the University of Fribourg (Switzerland) where she is writing a thesis on the Protection against Gender Stereotypes in
International Law. In addition to research in human rights and feminist
legal theory, she has also carried out some research in legal philosophy and on
the relationship between gender and the law.
The International
Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF), the monitoring body of track and
field athletics, regularly submitted South African middle distance runner and
Olympic gold medalist Mokgadi Caster Semenya to sex verification tests when it
began questioning her sexual characteristics and speculating whether her body
belonged on the Disorder of Sex Development (DSD) spectrum. DSD Syndrome is often
defined as an “intersex condition” which affects the clear development of
either/or genitalia, gonads and chromosomes into one distinctive sex or
another. The spectrum of the intersex condition is particularly wide, and the
disorder can sometimes be minimal - some cases of female infertility can actually
be explained by an intersex condition.
The IAAF deemed the
controversial sex verification tests necessary on the grounds that it was
required to prove Semenya did not have a “medical condition” which could give
her an “unfair advantage”. It was eventually found that, because of an intersex
trait, Semenya did have abnormally high levels of testosterone for a woman,
which, in the IAAF’s opinion, justified a need for regulatory hormonal adjustments
in order for her to keep competing in the women’s category. The IAAF also funded
research to determine how ‘hyperandrogenism’ affects athletic performance. In 2018,
it issued Eligibility Regulations on Female Classification (“Athlete with
Differences of Sexual Development”) for events from 400m to the mile, including
400m, hurdles races, 800m and 1’500m. The IAAF rules indicated that in case of
an existing high level of testosterone, suppression or regulation by
chemotherapy, hormonal castration, and/or iatrogenic irradiation was mandatory
in order to take part in these events.
Semenya and her
lawyers challenged the IAAF Regulations in front of the CAS, who, in a very
controversial decision, deemed the Regulations a necessary, reasonable
and proportionate mean “of achieving the aim of what is described as the
integrity of female athletics and for the upholding of the ‘protected class’ of
female athletes in certain events” (§626). More...
Editor's note: This report compiles all relevant news, events and
materials on International and European Sports Law based on the daily coverage
provided on our twitter feed @Sportslaw_asser. You
are invited to complete this survey via the comments section below, feel free
to add links to important cases, documents and articles we might have
overlooked.
The Headlines
The European Court of Justice finds that rule of a
sports association excluding nationals of other Member States from domestic
amateur athletics championships may be contrary to EU law
On 13 June 2019,
the European Court of Justice (ECJ) delivered a preliminary
ruling at the request of the
Amtsgericht Darmstadt (Local Court Darmstadt, Germany) filed in the course of the
proceedings involving Mr Daniele Biffi, an Italian amateur athlete residing in
Germany, and his athletics club TopFit based in Berlin, on the one hand, and
the German athletics association Deutscher Leichtathletikverband, on the other.
The case concerned a rule adopted by the German athletics association under
which nationals of other Member States are not allowed to be awarded the title
of national champion in senior amateur athletics events as they may only
participate in such events outside/without classification. The ECJ’s task was
to decide whether or not the rule in question adheres to EU law.
The ECJ took the
view that the two justifications for the rule in question put forward by the
German athletics association did not appear to be founded on objective considerations
and called upon the Amtsgericht Darmstadt to look for other considerations that
would pursue a legitimate objective. In its judgment, the ECJ analysed several
important legal questions, including amongst others the applicability of EU law
to amateur sport or the horizontal applicability of European citizenship rights
(for detailed analysis of the judgment, please see our blog written by Thomas Terraz).
Milan not featuring in this season’s edition of Europa
League following a settlement with UEFA
On 28 June 2019,
the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) rendered a consent
award giving effect to a
settlement agreement between UEFA and the Milan Football Club, under which the
Italian club agreed to serve a one-year ban from participation in UEFA club
competitions as a result of its breaches of UEFA’s financial fair play
regulations over the 2015/2016/2017 and the 2016/2017/2018 monitoring periods,
while the European football’s governing body agreed to set aside previous
decisions of the Investigatory and Adjudicatory Chamber of its Club Financial
Control Body which had found Milan guilty of the respective breaches.
This was not the
first intervention of the CAS related to Milan’s (non-)compliance with UEFA’s
financial fair play regulations. In July 2018, the CAS annulled the decision of the Adjudicatory Chamber of the UEFA
Club Financial Control Body of 19 June 2018 which was supposed to lead to the
exclusion of the Italian club from UEFA club competitions for which it would
otherwise qualify in the next two seasons (i.e. 2018/2019 and 2019/2020
seasons). Following such intervention of the CAS – which concerned the
2015/2016/2017 monitoring period – it may have appeared that Milan would
eventually manage to escape a ban from participation in UEFA club competitions
for breaches of UEFA’s financial fair play regulations. However, Milan’s case
was again referred to the Adjudicatory Chamber of the UEFA Club
Financial Control Body in April 2019 – this time its alleged breaches of UEFA’s
financial fair play regulations concerned the 2016/2017/2018 monitoring period –
and such referral apparently forced Milan into negotiations with UEFA which led
to the settlement agreement ratified by the CAS.
Swiss Federal Tribunal gives Caster Semenya a glimmer
of hope at first but then stops her from running at the IAAF World
Championships in Doha
Caster Semenya’s
legal team brought an appeal to the Swiss Federal Tribunal in late May against the
landmark ruling of the CAS which gave the IAAF the green light to apply its
highly contentious Eligibility Regulations for Female Classification (Athlete
with Difference of Sexual Development) preventing female athletes with
naturally elevated levels of testosterone from participating in certain
athletic events unless they take medication to supress such levels of
testosterone below the threshold of five nmol/L for a continuous period of at
least six months. The appeal yielded some positive partial results for Caster
Semenya early on as the Swiss Federal Tribunal ordered the IAAF on 3 June 2019 to suspend the implementation
of the contested regulations. However,
the Swiss Federal Tribunal overturned its decision at the end of July which means that
Caster Semenya is no longer able to run medication-free and this will most
likely be the case also when the 2019 IAAF World Athletics Championships kick
off in Doha in less than one month’s time. The procedural decisions adopted by
the Swiss Federal Tribunal thus far have no impact on the merits of Caster
Semenya’s appeal.More...
Editor’s
note: Thomas Terraz is a third year LL.B.
candidate at the International and European Law programme at The Hague
University of Applied Sciences with a specialisation in European Law. Currently
he is pursuing an internship at the T.M.C. Asser Institute with a focus on
International and European Sports Law.
1.
Introduction
The
organizational structure of sports in Europe is distinguished by its
pyramid structure which is marked by an open promotion and relegation system. A
truly closed system, without promotion and relegation, is unknown to Europe,
while it is the main structure found in North American professional sports
leagues such as the NFL, NBA and the NHL. Recently, top European football clubs
along with certain members of UEFA have been debating different possibilities
of introducing
a more closed league system to European
football. Some
football clubs have even wielded the threat of
forming an elite closed breakaway league. Piercing through these intimidations
and rumors, the question of whether a closed league system could even survive
the scrutiny of EU competition law remains. It could be argued that an
agreement between clubs to create a completely closed league stifles
competition and would most likely trigger the application of Article 101 and
102 TFEU.[1]
Interestingly, a completely closed league franchise system has already
permeated the European continent. As outlined in my
previous blog, the League of Legends European
Championship (LEC) is a European e-sports competition that has recently
rebranded and restructured this year from an open promotion and relegation
system to a completely closed franchise league to model its sister competition
from North America, the League Championship Series. This case is an enticing
opportunity to test how EU competition law could apply to such a competition
structure.
As
a preliminary note, this blog does not aim to argue whether the LEC is a ‘real’
sport competition and makes the assumption that the LEC could be considered as
a sports competition.[2]
More...
Editor's Note:
Dr. Despina Mavromati, LL.M., M.B.A., FCIArb is an
Attorney-at-law specialized in international sports law and arbitration (SportLegis)
and a Member of the UEFA Appeals Body. She teaches sports arbitration and
sports contracts at the University of Lausanne (Switzerland) and is a former
Managing Counsel at the Court of Arbitration for Sport.
This comprehensive book of more than 500
pages with contributions by 53 authors and edited by Nick De Marco QC “aims to embody the main legal principles
and procedures that arise in football law”. It is comprised of 29 chapters
and includes an index, a table of football regulations and a helpful table of
cases including CAS awards, UEFA & FIFA Disciplinary Committee decisions
and Football Association, Premier League and Football League decisions.
The 29 chapters cover a wide range of
regulatory and legal issues in football, predominantly from the angle of English
law. This is logical since both the editor and the vast majority of
contributing authors are practitioners from England.
Apart from being of evident use to
anyone involved in English football, the book offers additional basic
principles that are likely to be of use also to those involved in football
worldwide, including several chapters entirely dedicated to the European and
International regulatory framework on football: chapter 3 (on International
Federations) gives an overview of the pyramidal structure of football
internationally and delineates the scope of jurisdiction among FIFA and the
confederations; chapter 4 explains European law and its application on football
deals mostly with competition issues and the free movement of workers; and
chapter 29 deals with international football-related disputes and the Court of
Arbitration for Sport (CAS).
In addition to the chapters exclusively dealing
with international football matters, international perspectives and the
international regulatory landscape is systematically discussed – in more or
less depth, as the need might be – in several other chapters of the book,
including: chapter 2 on the “Institutions” (from governing bodies to
stakeholders groups in football); chapter 6 on the FIFA Regulations on the
Status and Transfer of Players (RSTP); chapter 8 dealing with (national and
international) player transfers; chapter 11 (on Third Party Investment) and
chapter 16 on Financial Fair Play (mostly discussing the UEFA FFP Regulations);
chapter 23 on disciplinary matters (very
briefly discussing the disciplinary procedures under FIFA and UEFA Disciplinary
rules); chapter 24 on domestic and international doping-related cases in
football, with an overview of the CAS jurisprudence in this respect; and
finally chapter 23 on corruption and match-fixing (with a very short
description of the FIFA and UEFA regulations).
Furthermore, the book offers extensive
chapters in less discussed – yet of high importance – football topics,
including: chapter 13 on image rights and key clauses in image rights
agreements; chapter 14 on taxation (referring also to taxation issues in image
rights and intermediary fees); chapter 15 on sponsoring and commercial rights,
with a guide on the principal provisions in a football sponsoring contract and
various types of disputes arising out of sponsorship rights; chapter 17 on
personal injury, discussing the duty of care in football cases (from the U.K.);
and chapter 18 on copyright law and broadcasting (with short references to the
European law and the freedom to supply football broadcasting services).
Some chapters seem to have a more
general approach to the subject matter at issue without necessarily focusing on
football. These include chapters 27 (on mediation) and 22 (on privacy and defamation),
and even though they were drafted by reputable experts in their fields, I would
still like to see chapter 27 discuss in more detail the specific aspects,
constraints and potential of mediation in football-related disputes as opposed
to a general overview of mediation as a dispute-resolution mechanism. The same
goes for chapter 22, but this could be explained by the fact that there are not
necessarily numerous football-specific cases that are publicly available.
As is internationally known, “football
law” is male-dominated. This is also demonstrated in the fact that of the 53
contributing authors, all of them good colleagues and most of them renowned in
their field, only eight are female (15%). Their opinions, however, are of great
importance to the book due to the subject matter on which these women have contributed,
such as player contracts (Jane Mulcahy QC), player transfers (Liz Coley),
immigration issues in football (Emma Mason), broadcasting (Anita Davies) or
disciplinary issues (Alice Bricogne).
The book is a success not only due to
the great good work done by its editor, Nick De Marco QC but first and foremost
due to its content, masterfully prepared by all 53 authors. On the one hand, the
editor carefully delimited and structured the scope of each topic in a logical
order and in order to avoid overlaps (a daunting task in case of edited volumes
with numerous contributors like this one!), while on the other hand, all 53
authors followed a logical and consistent structure in their chapters and
ensured an expert analysis that would have not been possible had this book been
authored by one single person.
Overall, I found this book to be a great
initiative and a very useful and comprehensive guide written by some of the
most reputable experts. The chapters are drafted in a clear and understandable
way and the editor did a great job putting together some of the most relevant
and topical legal and regulatory issues from the football field, thus filling a
much-needed gap in the “football law” literature.