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European Leagues

Everything to know about new UEFA champions league format

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UEFA has announced the new Champions League format, which will come into effect starting from the 2024-25 season.

The football governing body in Europe highlighted that the revised format prioritises selection based on playing “merit,” leading to top teams facing each other more often.

According to a statement released on UEFA’s website on Monday, UEFA President Aleksander Čeferin, said, “I am really pleased that it was a unanimous decision of the UEFA Executive Committee, with the European Club Association, European Leagues and national associations all agreeing with the proposal made. Another proof that European football is more united than ever.”

Below are the highlights of the new format, according to UEFA:

  • The current Champions League group stage features 32 teams split into eight groups of four. Starting from the 2024/25 season, 36 clubs are set to take part in the Champions League league phase (formerly known as the group stage), providing four additional teams with the chance to challenge Europe’s top clubs.
  • These 36 clubs will take part in a unified league competition where all 36 clubs are ranked together.
  • Teams will now compete in eight matches during the league phase, which was previously known as the group stage.
  • They are changing their schedule to play against eight different teams, with half of the matches at home and the other half away, instead of playing three opponents twice.
  • In order to identify the eight different opponents, the teams will first be ranked into four seeding pots. Every team will be drawn to compete against two opponents from each of these pots, facing one team from each pot at their home stadium and one away.

How will the four extra Champions League group stage spots be allocated?

  • Qualification for the Champions League will continue to be open and depend on a club’s final position in the previous season’s domestic league competition combined with each association’s position in the association club coefficient ranking.
  • The access list will maintain its current structure for the upcoming season, with an additional four slots being distributed for the 2024/25 season as outlined below:
  • Slot one: This place will go to the club ranked third in the championship of the association in fifth position in the access list, which is determined by the UEFA association club coefficient ranking.
  • Slot two: This place will be awarded to a domestic champion by extending from four to five the number of clubs qualifying via the Champions path of the competition’s qualifying process, which will consist of four qualifying rounds.
  • Slots three and four: These places will go to the associations with the best collective performance by their clubs in the previous season (i.e. the association club coefficient of the previous season, which is based on the total number of club coefficient points obtained by each club from an association divided by the number of participating clubs from that association). Those two associations will each earn one automatic place in the league phase (‘European Performance Spot’) for the club ranked next-best in their domestic league behind those clubs that have already qualified directly for the league phase.

How will teams reach the Champions League knockout phase and will the format for the knockout phase change?

  • Each match outcome will determine the final ranking in the league, following the traditional point system of three points for a win and one point for a draw.
  • The teams ranked in the top eight positions will secure direct qualification to the round of 16, while those placed between 9th and 24th will participate in a two-legged knock-out phase play-off to earn their spot in the last 16 of the competition. If teams finish 25th or lower, they will be eliminated without any chance to participate in the UEFA Europa League.
  • The updated structure, where all teams are ranked in one league, will increase the stakes for every team until the last night of the league phase.
  • In the knockout phase, the teams which finished between 9th and 16th will be seeded in the knockout phase play-off draw, meaning they will face a team placed 17th to 24th – with, in principle, the return leg at home.
  • The eight clubs which prevail in the knockout phase play-offs will then progress to the round of 16, where they will each face one of the top-eight finishers, who will be seeded in the round of 16.
  • The pairings of the knockout phase will also be partly determined by the league phase rankings, with a draw which likewise determines and lays out the route for teams to reach the final.
  • From the round of 16 onwards, the competition will continue to follow its existing format of knockout rounds leading to the final staged at a neutral venue selected by UEFA.
  • All games before the final will continue to be played in midweek, recognising the importance of the domestic calendar of games across Europe, while the final will continue to be played on a Saturday.

Will the Europa League and Europa Conference League formats change from 2024/25 too?

  • In a similar manner, adjustments will be made to the UEFA Europa League (eight matches against eight different opponents in the league phase) and UEFA Europa Conference League, which will be known as the UEFA Conference League starting from 2024/25 (six matches against six different opponents in the league phase). Both tournaments will include 36 teams in the league phase.

How will the calendar look for the new format of the three competitions?

  • The matches for the Champions League and Europa League are scheduled from September to January, with the Europa Conference League matches set to take place from September to December. Every UEFA club competition will feature a unique matchweek, with the other two competitions not having any matches during that time.
  • During a standard week, Champions League games are scheduled for Tuesdays and Wednesdays, with Europa League and Europa Conference League matches taking place on Thursdays.
  • During the Champions League exclusive week, matches will take place on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday.
  • During the Europa League exclusive week, matches are scheduled for Wednesday and Thursday. During the Europa Conference League week, matches will be held on Thursday.
  • During the final matchday of each league phase, all games will be played at the same time.

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LaLiga

Barcelona Reveal Club Behind $211 Million Lamine Yamal Bid

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Barcelona Confirms Club Behind $211 Million Lamine Yamal Bid

FC Barcelona executive Enric Masip revealed which club recently offered $211.65 million (€200 million) for its wonderkid Lamine Yamal, while appearing on popular Spanish television program El Chiringuito, as reported by Forbes

Masip was first asked if the teenager, who won the Euros with Spain last summer and has continued in fine form under Hansi Flick that has helped Barca top La Liga by six points.

“I would say that right now he is the most decisive player, yes. Let’s see. I don’t think that talking about a 17-year-old boy as the best in the world is good for him, okay?

“For us, yes… For us to think that we have the best in the world I think is nice,” Masip added.

Masip noted that while Lamine debuted as a 15-year-old in the spring of 2024, it has been in “the year where Mbappe decides to go to Madrid”, that “you get a 16-year-old boy who wins the European Championship, who becomes a world phenomenon in a very short time and suddenly you stand in a league that starts as Mbappé’s La Liga and a 17-year-old boy appears who begins to play in a happy way, who overflows, a different player”.

Masip said that this has been “like the icing of the cake” for Barca, and that while Vinicius Jr and Mbappe can “play with that speed, with that quality”, what Lamine does “is something that you saw in [Lionel] Messi”, “something different”.

“Can he be the best in the world? Yes, but it’s good that we stay calm,” Masip reiterated.

Masip accepted that comparisons between Messi and Lamine, which go beyond a viral photo of the Argentine “blessing” the winger when he was barely six months old, and accepted that “it’s going to be like that because the boy doesn’t leave you indifferent either”.

“In other words, every game he does something that leaves you with your mouth open. It’s a privilege for La Liga and Barca to have a player like that.”

Masip, one of the most trusted confidants Laporta has, further opened his mouth about the monstrous offer that came in for Lamine which Laporta himself confirmed during an episode of his podcast.

“The president has already said that he had an offer of €200 million that he rejected and that he never considered it,” Masip stated.

Then when asked where the bid came from, Masip answered: “It was from France”.

El Chiringuito host Josep Pederol said that Lamine would have been “the perfect substitute” for Mbappe, pushing Masip further to confirm that it was Paris Saint-Germain which tabled the offer.

Masip smiled, and said: “Well, when you have money and you have a way to pay for it [i.e. such a big transfer], then you can aspire to try to sign everyone”.

And though Masip didn’t mention PSG’s name outright it is only the Parisians that have that kind of cash and perhaps only them and Manchester City worldwide that boast it to come near smashing the world transfer record.

 

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Serie A

Lookman Tipped For African Footballer Of The Year Award 2024

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African Footballer of the Year award

Atalanta star Ademola Lookman has been named as one of the candidates for the African Footballer of the Year award, where he is the hot favourite.

The other nominees for the award are Simon Adingra (Brighton and Hove Albion and Ivory Coast), Serhou Guirassy (Borussia Dortmund and Guinea), Achraf Hakimi (PSG and Morocco) and Ronwen Williams (Mamelodi Sundowns and South Africa).

The winner in 2023 was Napoli and Nigeria striker Victor Osimhen, who was fresh from securing the Scudetto as Serie A Capocannoniere.

Lookman was crucial in helping La Dea win the Europa League over the summer, scoring a sensational hat-trick in the Final 3-0 victory over Bayer Leverkusen in Dublin.

He was also instrumental in Atalanta’s push to the Coppa Italia Final, losing 1-0 to Juventus, and fourth place in Serie A with qualification for the Champions League.

The 27-year-old scored 17 goals with 10 assists in 45 club games last season.

He contributed three goals and an assist in Nigeria’s run to the Final of the Africa Cup of Nations, losing 2-1 to the Ivory Coast.

This all allowed Lookman to finish 14th in the Ballon d’Or tally for 2024.

Although born and raised in England, Lookman opted to represent Nigeria at international level.

 

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European Leagues

‘I Thought I Was Going To Die’: Why Player Quit Belgium

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'I Thought I Was Going To Die': Why Player Quit Belgium

Former Belgium, Tottenham Hotspur and Ajax defender Toby Alderweireld has revealed that he decided to end his international career after believing he was “going to die”.

The 35-year-old Alderweireld, who still plays for Royal Antwerp in the Belgian league, quit international soccer in March 2023 after winning 127 caps.

He was part of the so-called “Golden Generation” of players who finished third at the 2018 World Cup. He also took part in the 2014 and 2022 editions.

Alderweireld said a first serious warning about his health came after a defeat in a Belgian Cup match against Union Saint-Gilloise.

“That’s why I quit the Devils,” he told Belgian media VRT.

“I couldn’t sleep that night and went to the club early the next morning to do a strength session,” he recalled. “Before I left, I took a caffeine pill because I don’t like coffee. When I was in the car, my heart suddenly started beating at a rate of a thousand an hour. I thought: I’m going to have a heart attack. I’m done for, I’m never going to see my children again. I pulled over, walked into a furniture store and asked if they could call 911.”

Some time later, Alderweireld said panic took over him again, this time at night.

“It turned out that all the stress made my heart pound,” he told the broadcaster. “That gave me a panic attack, which made my heart beat even faster. You actually drive yourself crazy. And at a certain point you think you’re going to have a heart attack and die.”

Alderweireld later underwent medical examinations.

“We did extreme tests, but everything was okay,” he said. “Then I started talking to people and they said it was due to too much stress. Purely a panic attack. Now I still suffer from that sometimes, but I can accept that because I know it’s nothing.”

The West Australia

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