Knowledge

EU status (football)

Source đź“ť

122:
and Croatia they could field four; Denmark could field only three, but treated Cotonou players as EU players. French first division clubs could sign four non-EU players, while its second and third divisions were limited to two; Romanian, Swiss, Israeli and Greek first division teams could have five non-EU players, and in their second divisions they could have three. Similarly, in Hungary clubs had no registration limits but first division teams could field five non-EU players, with second division teams able to play three. Russian clubs had no registration limits, with its first division teams able to field seven non-EU players, and the second division could field three. Turkish first division clubs could sign eight foreign players and field six, while its second division could only sign two foreign players under the age of 21. Norway allowed up to eleven non-Norwegian players of any origin, providing the club had at least two homegrown players in its remaining squad. In 2008, the Netherlands, Serbia, Poland, Portugal, the Republic of Ireland, Northern Ireland, Wales, Scotland and England had no restrictions on non-EU players. Following Brexit, all non-British players must meet requirements of a points-based system to play in British leagues.
118:
on the pitch, while there were no restrictions in its second division. Conversely, clubs in Bulgaria's second division could not have any non-EU players; in its first division they could register five non-EU players and all could play. Italy's third division did not allow non-EU players, while its second division clubs could sign one and in the first division they could have five. Spain's third division did not allow non-EU players except those already registered in teams that were relegated; first division teams could have three players and second division teams could have two.
31:(EU) for the purposes of labour law within domestic European football leagues. There are different rules for which players are eligible for EU status in different European leagues, and leagues have different rules on how many players from outside the EU may be registered. Players within European league systems who are not considered European citizens are known as " 121:
In Finland, Iceland and the Czech Republic, there were no registration limits for professional non-EU players, but a club could only field three. Ukraine had no registration limits; its first division clubs could field seven non-EU players and its second division clubs could field three. In Slovakia
117:
Various European leagues maintain rules related to EU status: as of 2008, Swedish teams may only have three non-EU players on the pitch, and German lower divisions could only have three non-EU players. The same year, clubs in Belarus' first division could register four non-EU players and have three
98:, but its players are not automatically considered EU qualified. In EU leagues that do not recognise British and Swiss as EU, young players may be restricted on joining, and players who join will take an international squad spot. 237: 306:"Kolpak ruling: Tottenham target applies for Nigerian passport amid interest from Monaco, Inter:: All Nigeria Soccer - The Complete Nigerian Football Portal" 214: 64: 332: 386: 238:
https://westminsterresearch.westminster.ac.uk/download/875c1622cdebb31d8ea5930360bf62e4bbe28d7a13ea6b585cfa48208c56ca64/348568/IJHS%200716.pdf
86:
reportedly applied for a Nigerian passport so that he could transfer to an EU league, while in 2022 dual-national England international
482: 75: 95: 477: 410: 56: 109:
The concern of EU status predominantly affects young players who may otherwise find it hard to meet visa requirements.
67:. A major football market to recognise the Cotonou Agreement as EU qualifying is Spain; it was ratified in Spain when 99: 48: 447: 287: 141: 103: 24: 361: 250: 55:
ruled in favour of EU status in sports applying also to EU-based citizens of nations which have an
215:"How many non-EU community players can there be in each LaLiga club; how many does each one have?" 136: 91: 167: 82:, British players are not automatically considered EU qualified: in 2023, British footballer 305: 20: 8: 448:"Plan agreed on entry requirements for overseas players in England post-Brexit in 2021" 195: 258: 199: 187: 60: 387:"Italian FA to Treat Football Players From UK & Switzerland Same as EU Citizens" 179: 83: 51:, restrictions on foreign EU players in EU national leagues were banned. The 2003 131: 28: 471: 262: 191: 52: 44: 430: 333:"FC Barcelona: El Barça, en cuadro y Bronze y Geyse, no inscritas todavía" 87: 59:
with the EU but are not members; the major effect of this was due to the
183: 168:"Talent development and labour market integration in European football" 146: 411:"Official: FIGC to treat British and Swiss players as EU citizens" 68: 79: 102:
considers Swiss players as EU players and, since July 2023,
71:
allowed teams to have only three non-EU players registered.
63:, which spurred European naturalisation of players from the 166:
Norbäck, Pehr-Johan; Olsson, Martin; Persson, Lars (2021).
106:
has treated both British and Swiss players as EU players.
65:
Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States
165: 469: 47:, the conclusion of a case regarding freedom of 112: 356: 354: 362:"How to get a Work Permit and Visa for Spain" 251:"Spanish grant EU rights to African players" 90:was registered as Portuguese when moving to 351: 327: 325: 23:is whether a football player is considered 435:Rivista di Diritto ed Economia dello Sport 322: 445: 470: 248: 212: 426: 424: 384: 288:"Brexitball: Exporting Young Talent" 282: 280: 278: 74:Though the United Kingdom signed a 13: 421: 14: 494: 275: 483:Association football terminology 213:MartĂ­n, Alejandro (2022-08-30). 96:series of agreements with the EU 439: 403: 76:Trade and Cooperation Agreement 478:Association football in Europe 378: 298: 242: 231: 206: 159: 1: 249:Palmer, Martin (2007-10-07). 152: 339:(in Spanish). 29 August 2022 142:Homegrown Player Rule (UEFA) 113:National league restrictions 7: 446:Association, The Football. 125: 10: 499: 38: 137:EU eligibility in La Liga 132:Non-EU players in Serie A 94:. Switzerland also has a 310:www.allnigeriasoccer.com 78:with the EU following 57:Association Agreement 391:SchengenVisaInfo.com 21:association football 385:Arta (2023-07-27). 184:10.1111/twec.13071 172:The World Economy 61:Cotonou Agreement 490: 462: 461: 459: 458: 443: 437: 428: 419: 418: 407: 401: 400: 398: 397: 382: 376: 375: 373: 372: 358: 349: 348: 346: 344: 329: 320: 319: 317: 316: 302: 296: 295: 284: 273: 272: 270: 269: 246: 240: 235: 229: 228: 226: 225: 210: 204: 203: 163: 84:Tosin Adarabioyo 498: 497: 493: 492: 491: 489: 488: 487: 468: 467: 466: 465: 456: 454: 444: 440: 429: 422: 417:. 26 July 2023. 415:Football Italia 409: 408: 404: 395: 393: 383: 379: 370: 368: 360: 359: 352: 342: 340: 337:Mundo Deportivo 331: 330: 323: 314: 312: 304: 303: 299: 286: 285: 276: 267: 265: 247: 243: 236: 232: 223: 221: 211: 207: 164: 160: 155: 128: 115: 41: 12: 11: 5: 496: 486: 485: 480: 464: 463: 438: 420: 402: 377: 350: 321: 297: 274: 241: 230: 205: 178:(2): 367–408. 157: 156: 154: 151: 150: 149: 144: 139: 134: 127: 124: 114: 111: 40: 37: 29:European Union 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 495: 484: 481: 479: 476: 475: 473: 453: 452:www.thefa.com 449: 442: 436: 434: 427: 425: 416: 412: 406: 392: 388: 381: 367: 363: 357: 355: 338: 334: 328: 326: 311: 307: 301: 294:. 2022-06-06. 293: 289: 283: 281: 279: 264: 260: 256: 252: 245: 239: 234: 220: 216: 209: 201: 197: 193: 189: 185: 181: 177: 173: 169: 162: 158: 148: 145: 143: 140: 138: 135: 133: 130: 129: 123: 119: 110: 107: 105: 101: 97: 93: 89: 85: 81: 77: 72: 70: 66: 62: 58: 54: 53:Kolpak ruling 50: 46: 45:Bosman ruling 36: 34: 30: 26: 22: 18: 455:. Retrieved 451: 441: 432: 431:"I. EUROPE" 414: 405: 394:. Retrieved 390: 380: 369:. Retrieved 366:InterNations 365: 341:. Retrieved 336: 313:. Retrieved 309: 300: 292:Analytics FC 291: 266:. Retrieved 255:The Observer 254: 244: 233: 222:. Retrieved 218: 208: 175: 171: 161: 120: 116: 108: 73: 43:In the 1995 42: 32: 25:a citizen of 16: 15: 88:Lucy Bronze 472:Categories 457:2023-11-06 396:2023-10-08 371:2023-10-08 315:2023-11-06 268:2023-11-06 224:2023-11-06 153:References 343:31 August 263:0029-7712 219:Diario AS 200:230601462 192:1467-9701 92:Barcelona 49:transfers 17:EU status 147:6+5 rule 126:See also 69:La Liga 39:History 261:  198:  190:  80:Brexit 33:non-EU 196:S2CID 104:Italy 100:Spain 345:2022 259:ISSN 188:ISSN 27:the 180:doi 35:". 19:in 474:: 450:. 433:in 423:^ 413:. 389:. 364:. 353:^ 335:. 324:^ 308:. 290:. 277:^ 257:. 253:. 217:. 194:. 186:. 176:44 174:. 170:. 460:. 399:. 374:. 347:. 318:. 271:. 227:. 202:. 182::

Index

association football
a citizen of
European Union
Bosman ruling
transfers
Kolpak ruling
Association Agreement
Cotonou Agreement
Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States
La Liga
Trade and Cooperation Agreement
Brexit
Tosin Adarabioyo
Lucy Bronze
Barcelona
series of agreements with the EU
Spain
Italy
Non-EU players in Serie A
EU eligibility in La Liga
Homegrown Player Rule (UEFA)
6+5 rule
"Talent development and labour market integration in European football"
doi
10.1111/twec.13071
ISSN
1467-9701
S2CID
230601462
"How many non-EU community players can there be in each LaLiga club; how many does each one have?"

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.

↑