• Regular-season fixture could take place as early as this season • El Clásico would remain in Spain under proposals

La Liga is set to stage a regular-season match in the United States, possibly as early as this year, but the prospect of a clásico between Real Madrid and Barcelona outside Spain has been dismissed.

The league said on Thursday it is planning to play a match across the Atlantic as part of a new 15-year partnership with the sports and entertainment group Relevent to promote the game in North America. The group operates the International Champions Cup, the world’s largest summer club tournament. Barcelona and Real Madrid faced each other in the tournament in Miami last year.

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La Liga gave few details on the planned regular-season game. The league president, Javier Tebas, however, dismissed the possibility of taking the clásico away from Spain. The league said it is still making arrangements for the game and though there is no timetable for when it will happen, it could be this season.

The Spanish league has been trying to expand internationally for some time, hoping to grow and keep pace with the Premier League in England. Tebas last year also talked about the league possibly playing a regular-season match in China, and a few days ago the Spanish Super Cup was held in Tangier, Morocco, the first time it has been played outside Spain.

“Joining with Relevent to create La Liga North America is a major milestone in our international expansion strategy,” Oscar Mayo, the league’s international development director, said. “This agreement ensures not only a bright future for soccer in North America, but also for La Liga and our clubs.”

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The league added: “The operation will support the league’s growth in the US and Canada through consumer-related activities including youth academies, development of youth soccer coaches, marketing agreements, consumer activations, exhibition matches and plans to have an official La Liga Santander match played in the US.”

A decade ago, the Premier League tried to introduce an additional international match but plans for each team to play a 39th game overseas were abandoned amid opposition from Fifa and fan groups.

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The Premier League has more exposure than its Spanish counterpart in the US, in part because of a six-year TV deal with NBC worth about $1bn. Since 2012, the Spanish league has been on beIN Sports, which was received by fewer than a quarter of American English-language television households before it was recently dropped by the Comcast Xfinity cable system.

Relevent was founded and is owned by Miami Dolphins owner Stephen Ross, who called the partnership “the next giant leap in growing soccer’s popularity in North America”. He added: “This unique relationship will create new opportunities for millions of North American soccer fans to experience the most passionate, exciting, and highest level of soccer in the world.”

The Spanish league called the agreement “an inflection point for soccer in the US and Canada”, coming in anticipation of the 2026 World Cup that will be hosted in North America.