State aid in Spanish football - EU General Court overrules European Commission on Barcelona and Real Madrid decisions

On 4 July 2016, the European Commission hit a number of Spanish clubs – Real Madrid and FC Barcelona being the most prominent – with State aid decisions finding that they had received illegal subsidies.1 There were in fact three separate cases concerning alleged tax breaks, property transactions and loan guarantees that were all wrapped up in what broadcaster Sky Sports might have billed as “Super State Aid Day”.2 For the full background to these decisions, please see the author’s 2016 analysis, available here3.
The EU General Court has however now reversed two of these decisions in a series of judgments this year. This article provides an overview of the rulings to date and what lessons sports organisations can draw from them. Specifically, it looks at:
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A primer on EU State aid law.
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FC Barcelona’s appeal – relating to the "selective advantage" they were deemed to receive via their exemption from the new Spanish sports tax regime.
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Real Madrid’s appeal – relating to the "Las Tablas" property deal, wherein a land swap with Madrid City Council was deemed to constitute State aid.
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- Tags: Anti-Trust | Competition Law | EU General Court | European Commission (EC) | European Union (EU) | Football | Spain | Spanish Sports Tax | Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU)
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Written by
Benoît Keane
Benoît Keane is a Solicitor-Advocate specialising in European sports law. Based in Brussels, he acts in cases before the European Commission and European Court of Justice as well as in cases before national courts where there is an EU/competition law dimension. He has acted in landmarkEU/competition cases, notably the Super League case and the pending cases on football agents and sports arbitration. He has appeared as a legal expert and counsel before the Court of Arbitration for Sport. He also advises on the commercial aspects of sport from an antitrust perspective. He is recognised by legal directories as a “worldwide leading expert in sports-related EU law matters” and the “best of the best when it comes to the application of competition law”. He acts as an independent lawyer and is a consultant to Northridge LLP.