Sport
Mega Champions League cash breakdown for Rangers
The last time both Celtic and Rangers competed in the Champions League in the same season in 22/23, Celtic earned around €30m from participation while Rangers only earned around €20m – despite Celtic only picking up only two points more than Rangers’ zero.
This was attributable to the distribution of funds through the 10-year coefficient, as Rangers had the second lowest 10-year ranking in the tournament and so received only €2.3m; while Celtic, even with the eighth lowest ranking, still received a huge €9.1m. Should both qualify for the new 36-team league phase next season then this distribution will be markedly different, as UEFA have announced their budget for 2024/25 – following its successful sign-off by the member associations. It seems like we are gearing up for the first genuine title race between the Old Firm in the Scottish Premiership since season 2010/11 when Rangers won the league by one point on the final day of the season.
Of course, for the fans of both sides – the prestige and glory of winning the league trophy far outweighs the financial rewards their club will reap. However, the financial importance of the automatic Champions League place that comes with winning the title cannot be overstated – with the new format bringing more guaranteed money than ever before. With Southampton receiving over £100m in TV money for finishing bottom in the EPL, our top sides are heavily dependent on Champions League qualification to narrow the economic gap between themselves and most other European Leagues.
Celtic have been a financially very well-run club for years and had more cash in the bank – £72million – than almost all English Premier League clubs. However even they are well aware of the impact of not making the Champions League, with Peter Lawwell stating in the Celtic annual reports that the enormous cash buffer was in place because “history tells us that we will not always qualify for the Champions League”
We now have a better idea of just how much the impact of qualification will be as UEFA have stated their conservative estimate for total men’s club competition revenue is a massive €4.5billion (up from €3.5 BILLION this year) – although they do caveat these figures should be treated with caution due to “the sales process still ongoing and contracts yet to be concluded for some important markets”.
Not all of that €4.5billion will be distributed to the competing clubs, as there are several deductions that must be accounted for first, for example UEFA’s own cut of course increases, with their organisational costs rising from €323m to €387, and the money “reserved for European Football to remain with UEFA” increasing from €188m to €230m.
In promising news for all Scottish clubs, firstly the money for clubs eliminated in qualifying will rise 25 per cent from €105m to €132m. The solidarity payments – money awarded to ALL clubs that DON’T participate in league phase football – goes up a massive 120 per cent, from €140m to €308m. This should mean as much as £1.5m for every SPFL club that doesn’t reach a European League phase next season.
That still leaves a massive €3.3bn available to the competing clubs, with Champions League clubs taking a massive 75 per cent of the funds, with the Europa League receiving only 17 per cent. The Conference League is thrown relative crumbs – amounting to only eight per cent of the total.