Leeds United: Cellino denies trying to derail TV agreement
The club issued a clarification in response to a report in the Mail on Sunday which said Cellino was attempting to free Leeds from the existing contract between the Football League and Sky and secure his own TV deal.
The suggestion came as it emerged that the Football League had been forced to seek a legal injunction to ensure that tonight’s game between Leeds and Middlesbrough went ahead.
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Hide AdThe Mail on Sunday said the governing body took the extraordinary step to prevent United from refusing to honour the rearranged date of Boro’s visit to Elland Road.
That clash is the latest step in a bitter fight over televised matches and fixture disruption, and the injunction came after Sky angered
Leeds by choosing to move their meeting with Boro from the original date of Saturday afternoon to this evening.
United tried to oppose that switch but were pressurised into accepting the new date as a fierce dispute over television rights and the club’s repeated appearances on Sky intensified.
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Hide AdLeeds have been selected for live broadcast on 13 occasions this season, a figure which the club sees as excessive and unfairly disruptive.
United have not commented on whether it was served with an injunction by the Football League and a spokesman for the League said legal reasons prevented it from commenting but Leeds dismissed the claim that Cellino was attempting to break Sky’s £100m-a-year deal.
A move in that direction would potentially increase United’s annual revenue but threaten the income of many of the Football League’s other 71 clubs.
In a post on Twitter, Peterborough United chairman Darragh MacAnthony called the idea “madness”.
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Hide AdBut United executive director Paul Bell, who represented Leeds at a Football League meeting in Milton Keynes on Thursday, said: “I would like to make it clear that Leeds United is not seeking, or taken legal action, to dismantle the
collective selling of TV rights as has been suggested.
“This model has proven extremely successful for some of the biggest leagues around the world, none more so than the Premier League.
“The club has, however, made it clear to both Sky and the League that it opposes the degree of control exercised by
Sky over the league fixture list, and seeks transparency as to how these rights have been sold.
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Hide Ad“Today’s article seeks to position Leeds United as a lone, isolated voice. However, this is far from the truth and there is
a growing number of clubs who now understand and share our desire for transparency.
“It is our duty to protect the long-term interests of the club
and our passionate supporters. Therefore, we will continue to pursue these issues with the
Football League.”
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Hide AdThe conflict between Cellino and the Football League – played out against the backdrop of the organisation’s attempt to ban Cellino from running Leeds for a second time – boiled over in December when the Italian threatened to shut Sky out of a televised game against Derby County at Elland Road.
He “reluctantly” relented at the last minute but vowed that the broadcaster would not be allowed into the stadium again this season.
Tonight’s clash with Boro, however, was then rearranged for television purposes last month, less than four weeks
in advance. The late change led to criticism of Sky and the Football League from supporters of both clubs but the governing body indicated at the time that legal action launched by United had delayed a rearrangement which Sky originally wanted to confirm before Christmas.