Blatter claims victory in foreign players battle
Friday 27 February 2009
Latest in News & Comment
Related articles
On Facebook
Sport blogs
iBet: Serena Williams looks hungry again
Serena Williams has looked right back to her best in recent weeks and more importantly she looks hun...
Manchester City top the ‘injury league’, with Manchester United bottom
The results of new research into every significant injury suffered by every Premier League footballe...
Stereotypical Germany? With the defence ‘forgotten’, think again
The blunt exposure of Germany's defensive problems in their last two friendlies has certainly served...
The president of Fifa, Sepp Blatter, has claimed a victory in his battle to limit the number of foreign players in matches. A report by the Institute for European Affairs (Inea) – commissioned by Fifa to study the issue – claims the idea of restricting foreign players in League games through the "6+5" rule does not fall foul of EU rules on free movement of workers.
Blatter was delighted at the findings, saying: "This study confirms that we are not breaching European law in defending the 6+5 rule. On behalf of Fifa and its member associations, I would like to express my pleasure at this finding. Through 6+5 we wish to encourage the development of young players, protect national teams and maintain competitiveness and the unpredictability of results. This is why 6+5 is beneficial to football."
The findings by Inea will now form the basis of fresh talks between Fifa and the European Commission. The study was carried out by five professors, all experts in European law, and the chairman of Inea, Professor Jurgen Gramke, insisted the report, although commissioned by Fifa, was entirely independent.
The key point is that under the 6+5 proposals, each club must field at least six players eligible for the national team in the starting XI, but there is no limit on substitutes being foreign, or on numbers of foreigners in a squad.
So far, the EC and most EU governments say it would amount to discrimination at work and a restriction on the free movement of workers.
Gramke said, however: "There is no conflict with European law." He added: "We took no instructions from Fifa. Inea accepted this commission on condition that our requirements of complete independence were met."
The report says that, under EU law, the "regulatory autonomy" of sporting associations is recognised and supported. "The key aim of the 6+5 rule in the view of the experts is the creation and assurance of sporting competition," it says. "The 6+5 rule does not impinge on the core area of the right to freedom of movement. The rule is merely a rule of the game declared in the general interest of sport in order to improve the sporting balance between clubs and associations."
At the moment, quota systems in football are outlawed, thanks to the 1995 European Court ruling known as the Bosman Case. It declared illegal the system, then in operation in many national leagues and in Uefa club competitions, which allowed only three "foreign" players in a team.
The Bosman judgment had a dramatic effect on football, said the Inea report, opening up the use of foreign players to such a degree that up to 56 per cent of players are now not eligible to play for the national team of the league in which they play.
- 1 Serena struck down by brave Razzano and umpire furore
- 2 Olympians: They're fit and don't we just know it
- 3 McIlroy misses another cut and admits 'taking my eye off the ball'
- 4 'I'm joining Chelsea', says £40m Lille playmaker Eden Hazard
- 5 Hodgson urges squad to attempt to 'enjoy' Euros
- 6 Club-by-club guide: Players available on a free transfer this summer
- 7 Marathon men: Are Spain running out of puff?
- 8 Sports caption competition winners
- 9 Rodgers veers towards taking Liverpool job
- 10 United close in on Kagawa after missing out on Hazard
- 1 Summer 2012: Money no object
- 2 Anger over Lagarde's tax-free salary
- 3 Sex in dressing rooms and Play School presenters 'stoned out of their minds' - inside BBC Television Centre
- 4 Mark Neary: The father who opened up secret courts
- 5 'Hello mum, this is going to be hard for you to read ...'
- 6 Image released of naked cannibal killed by Miami police as he ate homeless man's face
- 7 Israel hints it may be behind super-virus targeting Iran
- 8 Queen's legacy: sex and drugs and rock'n'roll
- 9 Coke reveals its secret: It may need to carry a cancer warning
- 10 French in uproar over oral sex anti-smoking posters
Experience the Heineken Hub
Get free wi-fi and exclusive i content while you enjoy a tasty pint of Heineken at participating pubs.
Can you imagine a career in teaching?
Be inspired to teach - let real teachers show you how rewarding the job can be.
Playing a game-changing role during the Games
Cisco is providing the solutions for London 2012's complex IT needs.
Enter the latest Independent competitions
Win anything from gadgets to five-star holidays on our competitions and offers page.
Business videos from commercial thought leaders
Watch the best in the business world give their insights into the world of business.
Career Services
Day In a Page
Grace Dent
Ireland's austerity D-Day: How much pain can it take?
Is doctors' fixation on treatment making us ill?
Return of the unacceptable face of capitalism?
Off the rails in Bermuda





Comments