

England’s football chiefs are set to face members of parliament next week to discuss why no agreement has been reached on a bail-out package for lower-tier clubs facing financial strain amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
The English Football League (EFL), representing the three divisions below the Premier League, last month rejected a Sh7 billion offer from the top flight saying it wanted a deal which covered all of its teams.
The Premier League said its offer was for League One and League Two and not for second-tier Championship clubs.
British media reported that Premier League chief executive Richard Masters, EFL chairman Rick Parry and Football Association chairman Greg Clarke will meet a Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) committee on Tuesday.
“It’s a very unedifying sight when you’ve seen other sports coming together in order to find a way through this crisis,” DCMS chair Julian Knight told Sky Sports.
“Football just had a transfer window where they’ve spent 1.2 billion pounds where we have 12-15 EFL clubs in the emergency ward … that are in a situation where they could go under.
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“You never know, they could be now on the cusp of putting a deal together and we can explore that deal in the committee.”
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