German clubs vote against changing investor rule
BERLIN (AP)—Bundesliga clubs voted down a proposal to scrap a rule that prevents outside investors from taking a majority stake in German soccer teams.
Martin Kind, the president of first-division Hannover, had argued to abolish the so-called “50+1” rule, which stipulates that clubs must keep a majority of their own shares.
However, representatives of first- and second-division clubs shot down the motion by a 32-1 margin, with three abstentions.
League president Reinhard Rauball said “Bundesliga is staying true to itself” and counting on factors that contributed to its past success such as “stability, continuity and closeness to fans.”
Kind had hoped to change the rule, arguing that the move would help make clubs more competitive.
- Defoe scores 5 in Tottenham's 9-1 win over Wigan
- AC Milan and Totti shine in Serie A
- Ajax beats Heerenveen 5-1 in Dutch league
- Mystery Serb placenta healer goes underground
- Kashima reclaims top spot in the J-League
- De Nigris marks brother's death with winning goal
- Auxerre beats Monaco 2-0 to take French lead
- Zidane: Henry 'is not a cheat'
- Injured Messi doubtful for Barcelona's Inter match
- Leverkusen regains Bundesliga lead
- Dundee United beats Celtic 2-1
- Thun bans player implicated in match-fixing probe
- Melbourne wins to claim A-League lead
- Mubarak won't tolerate attacks on Egypt
- Real Madrid leads in Spain as Barcelona slips up
- Chelsea stays 5 clear after 4-0 win over Wolves

0 Comments