Chaired by Nasser al-Khelaifi, the 37-strong ECA Board met on Wednesday at the Civitas Metropolitan Stadium, Madrid, hosted by ECA Board and ExCo member Miguel Ángel Gil.
In attendance at the Board was La Liga President Javier Tebas, who spoke on the common ambition to protect football and jointly face the challenges that lie ahead, including the threat to football posed by the theft of audio-visual rights, quoting estimated revenue losses of 30-35%.
In his opening address, ECA Chairman Nasser al-Khelaifi commended the rapid growth in ECA membership as the Association continues adding new members daily, including women’s clubs and clubs from all first divisions across Europe.
Commenting on the meeting and growth of membership, ECA Chairman al-Khelaifi said: “ECA continues to go from strength to strength. As well as seeing our membership grow to 620 clubs, up from 266 members in July, we have advanced our key strategic joint ventures with UEFA and FIFA, while also building on our offering to clubs through delivering a number of new and exciting events and services.
“However, there is still much to be done, with many ongoing strategic initiatives that will enable us collectively to build an ECA that is better placed than ever to serve and defend European clubs of all sizes.”
ECA membership has reached the milestone of 620 clubs, up from 266 clubs since the start of the 2023/24 season, an amazing growth rate of over 130%, now spanning all 55 UEFA national associations including 100% membership in 15 countries.
The Board reviewed the ongoing internal governance reforms that will include evolving the current membership structure of the ECA Family to a more comprehensive and inclusive model under the banner ‘Membership for All’.
This will allow all top division clubs, irrespective of their size or country, to become ECA Members and participate in genuine decision-making.
Any eventual changes to the membership structure will require further amendments to the ECA Statutes to be submitted for approval at ECA’s General Assembly later this year.
The preliminary findings from ECA’s ongoing Strategic Review were presented to the Board concerning ECA’s overall strategic direction and how the organisation needs to evolve operationally to better serve its growing membership base and to further evolve to keep clubs at the heart of football, now and in the future.
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