I'm not missing the point. You're talking last me entirely.
Forget the flipping super league. I'm not talking about that right now.
I'm talking about the remaining clubs and the two outstanding European competitions and what happens there.
Let sjust agree the super league is awful, let's say its terrible that clubs can't get into it. Cool, agreed.
That still leaves us with the reality though that clubs like Everton etc will now be qualifying for the champions league with a regularity that they simply never has done. My question is this - could the fact that they play in a European competition with regularity ALBEIT A LESS PRESTIGIOUS VERSION, still be a good thing for those clubs?
If Everton qualified for the new champions league 10 times in 20 years, is that not better than them qualifying once as a freak result for the current champions league and only once?
That's my question. If you carry on going on abojt qualification for the super league then you're literally just not reading what I am saying. For the sake of discussions, let's just say it's bad they can't make it there. That isn't simply the be all and end all though.
What happens with the Europa and the champions league now? Does this become filled with new teams, teams who previously never qualified? If so, is there a discussion to be had about possible positives of this for those clubs?
I don't know how to word this any clearer. Do Everton stand to make more money because of future European football they likely would not have qualified for otherwise? I DON'T KNOW, THIS IS WHY I AM DISCUSSING IT AND TRYING TO HAVE A CONVERSATION. It might be that it doesn't but we're not even getting there, all anyone is stuck at is this new, third European competition. There's still two others to discuss.
As far as I know this does not replace the champions league or the Europa League. What do these competitions now look like?