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Super League backer JPMorgan says ‘clearly misjudged’ football impact

US investment bank JPMorgan, which agreed to financially back the breakaway European football Super League, said Friday it had "clearly misjudged" the failed project's impact.

(FILES) In this file photo the logo of Chase bank is seen in Manhattan on June 30, 2020 in New York City. – JPMorgan Chase reported a surge in first-quarter earnings on April 14, 2021 following hefty reserve releases in the recovering economy and a blowout performance in investment banking. Earnings came in at $14.3 billion at the big US bank, about five times the level from the year-ago period. The result included $5.2 billion in releases of funds set aside earlier in the pandemic due to fears of bad loans. (Photo by Johannes EISELE / AFP)

US investment bank JPMorgan, which agreed to financially back the breakaway European football Super League, said Friday it had “clearly misjudged” the failed project’s impact.

“We clearly misjudged how this deal would be viewed by the wider football community and how it might impact them in the future. We will learn from this,” it said in a brief statement.

To get the ball rolling, JPMorgan had agreed a pot 3.5 billion euros ($4.2 billion) to be shared among the first dozen teams to sign up plus another three clubs that had been expected to join them.

But in the space of 48 hours this week, European football’s governing body UEFA, aided by fans and politicians, quelled a mutiny by the English, Spanish and Italian clubs who presumed to form their own quasi-closed tournament.

Nine clubs, including all six in England, subsequently withdrew and even if Juventus, Barcelona and Real Madrid, whose president Florentino Perez led the attempted secession, are still refusing formally to capitulate, their proposal no longer looks credible.

UEFA meets on Friday with revenge on some members’ minds following the attempted breakaway, while the fate of a handful of European Championship host cities is also on the agenda.

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