UAE Pro League Committee

The UAE Pro League Committee (Arabic: لجنة دوري المحترفين), commonly known as PLC, is the organizing body of football leagues of the United Arab Emirates.

UAE Pro League Committee
AbbreviationPLC
FormationFebruary 2007
TypeSports association
HeadquartersDubai, UAE
Region served
United Arab Emirates
Membership
20 football clubs
Chairman
Tariq Bin Humaid Al Tayer
Vice Chairman
Matar Rashid Al Darmaki
Websitewww.proleague.ae

History

The Pro League Committee was established in February 2007, with a resolution issued by the UAE Football Association General Committee. It was originally initiated by Abdullah Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Minister of Foreign Affairs, with the aim to set a committee to establish a professional league according to the AFC regulations.

In June 2008, the General Authority of Youth and Sports Welfare officially announced another formation under the name of “UAE Football League (UFL)”. Since the two bodies have the same job profile, the Pro League Committee (PLC) replaced the “UFL” according to the General Authority of Youth and Sports Welfare resolution approved in a meeting attended by all members in June 2011.

The committee receives supervision from the UAE Football Association, it organizes UAE Pro-League, Etisalat Cup, UAE Super Cup and Etisalat Reserve League (competed by the reserve teams of the Pro-league clubs). The PLC has all the commercial rights.[1]

Controversies

The Pro League Committee has been criticized for racism and reviving the Persian Gulf naming dispute by renaming their league to the UAE Arabian Gulf League[2]after a 70 million AED one-year renewable partnership deal with Arabian Gulf Development to be named Official Title Partner.[3] On 12 August 2006, the Iranian league was renamed from the Iran Pro League to the Persian Gulf Cup, while in May 2013, the Emirati league was renamed from the UAE Pro-League to The Arabian Gulf League.[4][5]

Competitions

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gollark: If people want to for whatever insanely bizarre reason, I don't see why not.
gollark: If you force the price to be fixed low, you just get a shortage where the quantity actually sold is below the quantity demanded.
gollark: No, markets in the economicsy sense.
gollark: Limiting purchase numbers seems like a bad hack to prevent the market from working properly but at least make some people vaguely happy since they're paying the normal price.

See also

References

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