Boris Johnson’s Chief of Staff gave Manchester United’s Ed Woodward the impression that ministers would support their Super League plans at a meeting before the scheme was revealed, No. 10 sources claim.
Manchester United executive vice chairman Mr Woodward is understood to have met with the PM’s Chief of Staff Dan Rosenfield on Wednesday, April 14.
Mr Rosenfield – a Manchester United fan – reportedly told Mr Woodward that No. 10 would not block the controversial European Super League plan, which were announced the following Sunday.
The meeting went ahead without prior consultation with the Prime Minister, sources told The Sunday Times.
The doomed plans for a breakaway competition was widely condemned by fans, players and politicians alike, including the Prime Minister who said they amounted to a ‘cartel’.
Twelve clubs announced they had signed up to compete on Sunday but by Wednesday afternoon nine had withdrawn, including all six English teams — Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool, Manchester United, Manchester City and Tottenham Hotspur — who had initially backed the project.
Boris Johnson’s Chief of Staff gave Manchester United’s Ed Woodward (pictured) the impression that ministers would support their Super League plans at a meeting before the scheme was revealed, No. 10 sources claim
Manchester United executive vice chairman Mr Woodward is understood to have met with the PM’s Chief of Staff Dan Rosenfield (right, with Boris Johnson) on Wednesday, April 14
Following the meeting, Mr Woodward reportedly told those behind the league that the project had been given the go-ahead by the PM himself.
After news of the Super League broke the following Sunday, Mr Rosenfield is understood to have urged the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) to tone down their condemnation of the plans.
He also reportedly urged Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden to lighten the tone of his reply.
The DCMS deny they faced requests to change their responses, the paper reports.
A No 10 spokeswoman said: ‘Ed Woodward had a meeting in Downing Street last week with officials.
‘The meeting was to discuss the safe return of fans and Covid certification, as part of ongoing work on events pilots.
‘The Super League was not discussed and the PM was not in the meeting.’
In the space of around three hours on Wednesday, all six English clubs involved in the European Super League plans dramatically quit the hated break-away competition following a huge backlash from fans.
Like dominoes, one-by-one clubs fell back into line with their Premier League rivals, a mere 72 hours after proposing a seismic – and much-maligned – change to the game.
The doomed plans for a breakaway competition was widely condemned by fans (protests, pictured), players and politicians alike, including the Prime Minister who said they amounted to a ‘cartel’
In a huge victory for fans, who for days have vented their fury at the proposals, members of the so-called Big Six each released statements – some more grovelling than others – announcing they would be pulling out of the European Super League.
Already mega-rich Manchester City were first to officially break rank by announcing they would turn their back on the £4.6billion proposals.
Then, in a stunning twist to the saga, Arsenal, Manchester United, Liverpool and Tottenham Hotspur suddenly announced they would follow suit.
Meanwhile, Mr Johnson – who had earlier described the project as a ‘cartel’ and threatened to show the plans the ‘straight red card’ – said the decision to quit the breakaway league was ‘the right one’.
The plans for the breakaway league were also ‘unanimously and vigorously’ rejected by the other 14 members of the English top flight following a meeting on Tuesday.
In a huge victory for fans (protests in Wembley, pictured), who for days have vented their fury at the proposals, members of the so-called Big Six each released statements – some more grovelling than others – announcing they would be pulling out of the European Super League
The dramatic collapse led organisers behind the European Super League to announce a suspension to the project.
But, in warning shot that indicated that the saga might not yet be fully over, organisers behind the breakaway competition released a statement saying that ‘status quo of European football needs to change’.
Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden welcomed the collapse of the European Super League following the withdrawal of the so-called ‘big six’ English Premier League clubs
And fans organised mass protests throughout the last week against the owners of the six clubs.
Last night hundreds of Arsenal fans gathered outside the Emirate Stadium in Islington, north London, to demand the club’s owner American Stan Kroenke leaves.
The protests came ahead of Arsenal’s Friday Premier League match against Everton, with fans gathering on the stadium’s concourse more than two hours before kickoff.
Pictured: Arsenal fans protest against owner Stan Kroenke after the failed launch of the European Super League. Hundreds of fans descended on North London’s Emirates Stadium on Friday night ahead of the team’s game against Everton
A review led by Tory MP Tracey Crouch will consider whether new criteria will be introduced for billionaire owners and if fans should be given greater representation at board level.
And pundits and fans have called for the teams to face involved in the league to be deducted points as punishment.
But Leeds head coach Marcelo Bielsa said he is not in favour of the clubs being sanctioned for attempting to form the competition.
Bielsa, whose side play Manchester United on Sunday, has been highly critical of the doomed ESL plans, but feels the current system ‘is not up to standard’.
A line of police face supporters as they protest against Arsenal’s US owner Stan Kroenke, outside English Premier League club Arsenal’s Emirates stadium in London on Friday
He said: ‘I don’t think that the path for a solution is for these clubs to be punished, but to convince what is best and to come up with rules of acceptance in general and make sure these rules are adhered to.
‘When a rule is broken this forces a sanction (and this) means that the process before that was not efficient.
‘And the leadership of the organisation to administer the interests of everybody is to create rules that everyone is able to adhere to as they have all accepted them.
‘I am of the opinion that punishment is more for authority and shows that the quality or the efficiency of the rules was not up to standard.’
In the wake of waves of negative reaction, United, Liverpool, Arsenal, Chelsea, Manchester City and Tottenham all swiftly confirmed they would withdraw from the process.
Newcastle head coach Steve Bruce, whose side tackle Liverpool at Anfield on Saturday, felt the ‘big six’ had ‘taken a slapping’ over the saga.
Bruce warned the football authorities would have to remain on their guard to ensure the proposal is not resurrected in the future.
‘We’ve got to guard against it because this thing must have been rumbling on for years, so we must guard against it so this threatened breakaway doesn’t happen,’ he said.
‘Look, I’ll let the authorities and the Premier League and all the rest of it deal with that, more intelligent people than I am, but they have to guard against it, that’s for sure.’
Bruce added: ‘These big clubs, how much do they need to earn? They already earn hundreds of millions more than, for example, we do and we’re a big club. It baffles me.’
Asked about his emotions as a former Red Devils captain to the Old Trafford club’s involvement in the plan, Bruce replied: ‘It’s all of them, not just Manchester United.
‘I hope they’ve learned from their mistake. They must have been all shocked with what happened so very, very quickly to shut it all down, to withdraw so quickly. Let’s hope not just Manchester United, all of them.’
The Super League clubs resigned from the European Club Association (ECA) at the weekend having announced their intention to break away.
However, a tweet from the ECA on Friday appeared to offer hope of returning to the fold.
‘We want to move past the events of this week and encourage and inspire the global football community, as matches return this weekend,’ it read.
Fans gathered on the Emirates Stadium’s concourse more than two hours before kickoff, banging metal screens above the main box office, lighting flares, setting off fireworks, blaring airhorns and chanting ‘We want Kroenke out,’ and ‘We want our Arsenal back’. The protests came after Arsenal announced it was one of the 12 founding teams of the doomed European Super League
‘Clubs can only succeed both on and off the pitch if we work hand in hand.’
The ECA has traditionally been perceived as an organisation which lobbies UEFA chiefly in the interests of Europe’s elite clubs, and failure of the Super League 12 to gain re-entry could weaken their ability to influence matters at continental level.