La Liga officials are exploring ways to make up for the absence
of fans when football returns, and one such idea is to show tweets from fans in
the stadium during the game.
League
president Javier Tebas recently admitted that they were planning some
'interesting and groundbreaking' alternatives to fans for when football
returns on 12 June, but there was no mention of what those ideas were.
Soccerex Europe - Day 1
However, in a video conference call with
the Iberian-American Institute of Sporting Law (via Marca),
Tebas went into more detail on how they will compensate for the lack of fans,
with tweets and innovative camera angles both in their plans.
"Sometimes,
we've watched games behind closed doors where there is an echo or the horrible
sight of empty stands," Tebas said. "We're working on modern,
imaginative ways [of avoiding this].
Does gravity even apply to him? #TuesdayThoughts pic.twitter.com/OgXMZewb0V— FC Barcelona (from 🏠) (@FCBarcelona) May 12, 2020
Tebas also revealed that they are working
closely with EA Sports, creators of the FIFA video game franchise, to
find new and improved camera angles to keep fans entertained while watching the
match from home.
La Liga already
stand to lose around €300m by finishing the season behind closed doors - a fee
which could rise as high as €1bn if the campaign is scrapped altogether - and
Tebas added that financial restrictions will be put in place to stop clubs
spending too much money going forwards.
Clubs in
Spain already have their own specific salary caps, but it now seems as though
those limits could be dropped in an attempt to save money.
🎯 Lionel Messi— LaLiga English (@LaLigaEN) May 12, 2020
🎯 @DaniParejo
🎯 @SergioCanales
📽️🌟 @livescore presents the best free-kicks from this season in #LaLigaSantander?
Which was your favourite? pic.twitter.com/n8GqheKk7B
"We already have the cash flows of
the clubs and right now they have squads that exceed the limits we are going to
set for next season," he said. "That brings consequences.
"They're
going to have to look more at their grassroots football and come up with a
strategy of wage reductions. There's nothing more you can do."



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