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Very good decision
E.U. wants FIFA to abandon foreign player rule
Soccer's international governing body plans to limit the number of imports on club teams
Last Updated: Thursday, May 8, 2008 | 4:17 PM ET
The European Parliament has called on FIFA to scrap its plan to reintroduce limits on foreign players in club competitions.
The world soccer federation has advocated a new regulation in which a team's 11-man starting lineup should include six players from the club's nation. That defies the 1995 so-called Bosman ruling, which said that discrimination on the grounds of nationality within European soccer is illegal.
The EU's employment law upholds the principle of freedom of movement of workers that allows EU soccer players to have equal status regardless of which member nation they play in.
The European soccer federation, UEFA, advocates a system different from the one FIFA wants, seeking to keep local flavour within club teams while adhering to the Bosman law.
Over the past two seasons, teams playing in UEFA's continental competitions have had to include a set number of players who were groomed by the club and another number trained within the national league. By not specifically mentioning a nationality, the regulation sidesteps the Bosman rule.
In a paper on EU sports policy, the European Parliament backed the UEFA approach.
"FIFA wants to oblige clubs to invest more in 'homegrown' talent, a goal which we support 100 per cent. Unfortunately, however, the 'six plus five' rule is not compatible with the free movement of persons in the EU," said Belgian lawmaker Ivo Belet.
"We therefore ask FIFA to join forces with the European Parliament and the European Commission, and fully back the 'homegrown' rule."
E.U. wants FIFA to abandon foreign player rule
Soccer's international governing body plans to limit the number of imports on club teams
Last Updated: Thursday, May 8, 2008 | 4:17 PM ET
The European Parliament has called on FIFA to scrap its plan to reintroduce limits on foreign players in club competitions.
The world soccer federation has advocated a new regulation in which a team's 11-man starting lineup should include six players from the club's nation. That defies the 1995 so-called Bosman ruling, which said that discrimination on the grounds of nationality within European soccer is illegal.
The EU's employment law upholds the principle of freedom of movement of workers that allows EU soccer players to have equal status regardless of which member nation they play in.
The European soccer federation, UEFA, advocates a system different from the one FIFA wants, seeking to keep local flavour within club teams while adhering to the Bosman law.
Over the past two seasons, teams playing in UEFA's continental competitions have had to include a set number of players who were groomed by the club and another number trained within the national league. By not specifically mentioning a nationality, the regulation sidesteps the Bosman rule.
In a paper on EU sports policy, the European Parliament backed the UEFA approach.
"FIFA wants to oblige clubs to invest more in 'homegrown' talent, a goal which we support 100 per cent. Unfortunately, however, the 'six plus five' rule is not compatible with the free movement of persons in the EU," said Belgian lawmaker Ivo Belet.
"We therefore ask FIFA to join forces with the European Parliament and the European Commission, and fully back the 'homegrown' rule."