Written by Mihir VasavdaMumbai | December 26, 2025 08:24 PM IST 3 min readFILE: AIFF presented a 20-year plan to the Indian Super League clubs. (PHOTO: Focus Sports/FSDL)The All India Football Federation (AIFF) presented a 20-year plan to the Indian Super League clubs on Friday in which it would own and operate the top-division, which would run from a June to May cycle, and share half of the central revenue equally among the participating teams.The governing body’s proposal comes days after it rejected the clubs’ blueprint, where they recommended to own the league. The latest suggestion comes following a meeting of the committee in charge to come up with a solution to kick-start India’s stalled domestic season — comprising AIFF and ISL club officials — on Friday.Mandar Tamhane, the chief executive of John Abraham-owned NorthEast United, said the AIFF’s proposal laid a ‘solid foundation’ for further talks. The clubs and the federation will meet again in New Delhi on Monday, December 29.ALSO READ | ISL clubs seek clarity on league structure from AIFF ahead of key meeting“What they have proposed is something the clubs will now discuss internally. Following that, we will get back to the AIFF to fine tune the proposal. There will be a lot of discussions, but prima-facie this lays solid foundation to build something concrete,” Tamhane told The Indian Express.The federation, in its suggestion, said they would keep 10 per cent of the total revenue share — down from the 14 per cent proposed by the Football Sports Development Limited (FSDL) in their plan to renew the deal. Since the ISL came into existence in 2014, it was owned and operated by the FSDL, a Reliance Industries subsidiary. Their deal with the AIFF expired on December 8 and did not submit an official bid when the AIFF floated a tender to find a commercial partner.Under their plan, the AIFF said the first season of the renewed ISL would run with an operational budget of Rs 70 crore. Every club, it added, would pay a ‘standard participation fee’ of Rs 1 crore annually. This amount, the federation added, would be ‘reimbursed’ from the central revenue pool. The league’s governance, it said, would be handled by a board with limited autonomy, while AIFF would retain final financial control. The structure also preserves promotion and relegation to protect sporting merit.Story continues below this adHowever, concerns remain over costs, player salary caps, investment security, and the continued uncertainty around the ISL 2025–26 start date. There are concerns also over broadcast partners and quality, given that Star Sports was a co-owner of the ISL until the agreement expired.Over the course of a 18-year-long career, Mihir Vasavda has covered 2010 FIFA World Cup; the London 2012, Tokyo 2020 and Paris 2024 Olympic Games; Asian Games in 2014 and 2022; Commonwealth Games in 2010 and 2018; Hockey World Cups in 2018 and 2023 and the 2023 ODI Cricket World Cup. ... Read More © The Indian Express Pvt Ltd