White smoke at UEFA.

After playing the white riders against the super villains of the Super League, the European body has ratified its (controversial) reform of the Champions League, supposed to offer more matches to broadcasters.

The new version C3 will start from the 2024-2025 season with an 8-day mini-championship with 36 teams, compared to 32 clubs currently playing the group stage over 6 days.

At the end of its Executive Committee meeting in Vienna, the European body adopted the outlines of this overhaul, also with two additional places allocated to the two best European nations over the previous season, a kind of catch-up net for the big names, and a third club qualified for the fifth nation in the UEFA index, currently France.

More matches so more flouze

This reform, the most radical for twenty years, was therefore validated a year after the storm of the Super League, this ephemeral project of private competition launched by several rebellious clubs, including Real Madrid and Liverpool, who will face each other on 28 May in the Champions League final.

“We are convinced that the formula chosen is harmonious, that it will improve the balance of the competitions and will ensure solid income which can be redistributed (…), while increasing the attractiveness and the popularity of our interclub competitions”, s' is congratulated the boss of UEFA, Aleksander Ceferin, quoted in a press release.

By stretching the first phase, the objective is to satisfy both the broadcasters, with 225 matches in total instead of 125 today, the clubs, assured of higher ticketing income – even in the event of early elimination – , and viewers looking for prestigious posters.

On this last point, we will allow ourselves for the moment to remain a tad skeptical as the football offer has continued to grow in recent years, to the point of causing an overdose among viewers.

The C3 and the C4 housed in the same boat

Two subjects raised questions, in European football with an already saturated calendar and precarious economic balances.

First the number of mini-championship days, initially set at ten but finally reduced to eight, then the allocation of two of the four additional tickets for the benefit of the UEFA coefficient of each non-qualified club, a proposal which favored the championships the most affluent.

The continental body accepted a concession on the two points, by awarding two additional tickets via the classification of the championships concerned, and not directly to the best clubs.

The first eight teams at the end of the first phase will qualify for the round of 16, while the teams who will be classified from 9th to 24th place will go through play-offs in the home and away format.

UEFA has also announced that apart from the final, all matches will continue to be played in the middle of the week, a confirmation awaited by the national leagues which usually play at weekends.

The Europa League and the Europa League Conference are also affected by this reform, with a format modeled on that of the new Champions League.

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