Ajax Start the Champions League in the Third Qualifying Round. Is That Fair?

 Ajax celebrate a Dusan Tadic goal in their win at Real Madrid in March. The Amsterdam side’s run to the Champions League semi-finals will only count towards the Dutch coefficient from next season. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
Ajax celebrate a Dusan Tadic goal in their win at Real Madrid in March. The Amsterdam side’s run to the Champions League semi-finals will only count towards the Dutch coefficient from next season. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
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Ajax Start the Champions League in the Third Qualifying Round. Is That Fair?

 Ajax celebrate a Dusan Tadic goal in their win at Real Madrid in March. The Amsterdam side’s run to the Champions League semi-finals will only count towards the Dutch coefficient from next season. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
Ajax celebrate a Dusan Tadic goal in their win at Real Madrid in March. The Amsterdam side’s run to the Champions League semi-finals will only count towards the Dutch coefficient from next season. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

Ajax were one of the most entertaining and successful sides of the Champions League last season, beating Real Madrid and Juventus on their way to the semi‑finals, where only a ludicrous late comeback from Tottenham denied them a trip to Madrid and the chance to pip Liverpool to the trophy. On Tuesday their European campaign gets under way in the third qualifying round, against the Greek champions PAOK.

This seems quite the humbling for a side good enough to reach the final four just a few months ago, but when it came to deciding at which stage they would enter this year’s competition their efforts last season counted for nothing. Harsh as this seems, it is not entirely without rational explanation: Uefa allocated places for this season’s European competitions based on the rankings as they stood a year ago, so that teams started their domestic campaigns last August knowing precisely how many places they were vying for and how they would be distributed.

Thus the places for 2020-21 are already known. Thanks to Ajax’s efforts last season, whoever wins the Dutch league this year will enter the Champions League in the play-off round, just one two-legged victory from the all-important league stage. Nothing short of winning either of Uefa’s two showpiece competitions this season will change that.

That the triumphs of last season have no impact on when the Dutch champions enter the Champions League this year certainly seems imperfect, but in practice it is justifiable. What seems harder to explain, however, is what does. For example, one of the principal reasons why Ajax have been forced to enter European competition so early is that Milan got a stoppage‑time penalty in a game played six years ago.

At this point it is sadly necessary to go into the details of how Uefa calculate their coefficients. After the qualifiers, when points are halved, teams get two points for a win and one for a draw, plus a four-point bonus for reaching the Champions League group stage, a five-point bonus for making the round of 16, and a one-point bonus for each subsequent round, and for each round of the Europa League from the quarter-finals onwards.

The points won by all the clubs in each association in a season are then added up and divided by the number of clubs involved to give a single figure, correct to three decimal places. That figure plus those for the four previous seasons will be added together to give a final points tally, which is what is used for the rankings.

So the rankings used to determine this season’s European places used results from 2013-14 to 2017-18, bringing us back to Massimiliano Allegri’s Milan team. In August 2013 the Rossoneri comfortably beat PSV Eindhoven in the Champions League play-offs and were then placed in Group H, along with Ajax. When they travelled to Amsterdam that October they earned a draw thanks to that 94th-minute Mario Balotelli penalty; in the return fixture in December Riccardo Montolivo was sent off in the 22nd minute and Ajax launched an assault on the home goal. The Dutch side had 64% of possession and 23 shots, 11 of them on target, to Milan’s combined total of three, but none went in and the game ended goalless. If they had won either of those games, Ajax would have progressed from the group stage.

So results last season, results that speak directly to the quality of this Ajax team, are not taken into account. But had PSV somehow beaten Milan in that play-off; if Balotelli’s penalty had been skewed wide; or if just one of those chances at the San Siro had found its way past Christian Abbiati – in a game played nearly six years ago and featuring only two players who were still at Ajax last season, one of whom had spent four years at Manchester United in the intervening period – the Netherlands would have had enough additional ranking points for Ajax to enter this year’s Champions League one round later.

Equally, the fact that Young Boys enter this year’s Champions League in the play-off round is almost entirely down to Basel’s run to the Europa League quarter-finals in 2013-14. For next season, when those points no longer count, Switzerland will plunge five places down the rankings and their champions will go into the second qualifying round.

It is hard to argue that this system is completely unfair, but there are certainly some quibblesome elements. Most obviously, it discriminates against good teams from poor leagues, who are forever hobbled by the underperformance of their compatriots, some of which occurred quite a long time ago.

It is hard to argue that this year’s Ajax team should be in any way disadvantaged by Utrecht’s Europa League defeat to Zenit St-Petersburg two years ago, let alone the same team’s abject humbling by Luxembourg’s Differdange way back in the 2013-14 qualifiers. Meanwhile the top four nations, who automatically get four places in the Champions League, immediately start racking up massive bonuses, making them extremely hard to dislodge.

Short of switching to knockout competitions with unseeded draws, it is not obvious what Uefa could do to remedy this situation. At least Ajax now know that with one more run to the semi-finals this year the Dutch champions will, almost certainly, finally earn an automatic place in the Champions League group stage – even if they will have to wait until 2021 to make use of it.



Xhaka Lifts Sunderland into Fourth after Everton Draw

Granit Xhaka scored Sunderland's equalizer. ANDY BUCHANAN / AFP
Granit Xhaka scored Sunderland's equalizer. ANDY BUCHANAN / AFP
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Xhaka Lifts Sunderland into Fourth after Everton Draw

Granit Xhaka scored Sunderland's equalizer. ANDY BUCHANAN / AFP
Granit Xhaka scored Sunderland's equalizer. ANDY BUCHANAN / AFP

Sunderland climbed into the Premier League's top four after Granit Xhaka's deflected strike salvaged a 1-1 draw at home to Everton on Monday.

The Black Cats would have moved up to second with victory, but were outplayed in the first half and trailed to Iliman Ndiaye's brilliant individual effort, said AFP.

Everton were left to regret not making more of their first half dominance as Thierno Barry missed a glorious chance and Jack Grealish hit the post.

Sunderland took less than a minute of the second period to hit back when Xhaka's strike flicked off James Tarkowski to beat England goalkeeper Jordan Pickford on his return to the Stadium of Light.

The home side then looked the more likely to claim all three points but Wilson Isidor fluffed Sunderland's best chance to snatch victory.

"The first 25 minutes was not good enough," Xhaka told Sky Sports. "At this level, you get punished but the second half was very good."

A point at least maintains Sunderland's unbeaten home record and their impressive start to a first top flight campaign in eight seasons.

Everton edge five points clear of the bottom three in 14th, but the Toffees glaring lack of a prolific number nine again cost them victory.

"For 20 to 30 minutes I thought I'd be disappointed going home with a point. By the end of the game, I was pleased we got a point from it," said Everton boss David Moyes.

"We missed a big chance to make it 2-0 and because we don't get that it gave Sunderland a bit of confidence and gave the crowd something to get behind."

A moment of magic gave the visitors the lead on 15 minutes as Ndiaye danced his way through four Sunderland defenders before firing into the top corner for his fourth goal of the season.

Grealish then hit the post from long range but it is Barry's miss that will live long in the memories of the travelling support heading back to Merseyside.

The Frenchman has still yet to score since his £27 million ($35 million) move from Villarreal in July and will not get a better chance than when he sliced horribly off target with the goal gaping at the back post from Grealish's cross.

Despite a sub-par first 45 minutes, Sunderland were level within 44 seconds of the second half when Xhaka netted his first goal since joining from Bayer Leverkusen.

A share of the spoils takes Sunderland above Tottenham and Chelsea and level on points with Liverpool.

But they will need to be much better to protect their unbeaten run at the Stadium of Light when leaders Arsenal visit on Saturday.


Jobe Bellingham Finding His Feet as Dortmund Head to City

Borussia Dortmund midfielder Jobe Bellingham (L) has improved in recent weeks. INA FASSBENDER / AFP
Borussia Dortmund midfielder Jobe Bellingham (L) has improved in recent weeks. INA FASSBENDER / AFP
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Jobe Bellingham Finding His Feet as Dortmund Head to City

Borussia Dortmund midfielder Jobe Bellingham (L) has improved in recent weeks. INA FASSBENDER / AFP
Borussia Dortmund midfielder Jobe Bellingham (L) has improved in recent weeks. INA FASSBENDER / AFP

Borussia Dortmund midfielder Jobe Bellingham is gradually making his mark after a slow start ahead of his return to England to face Manchester City on Wednesday.

Jobe joined Dortmund in the summer aged 19 for a reported fee of 30.5 million euros ($35 million) from Sunderland, among the most expensive transfers in Dortmund's history.

Jobe followed in the footsteps of his brother Jude, who moved to the Westfalenstadion five years earlier, aged 17, said AFP.

Jude became one of the most sought-after players at Dortmund and is now a true superstar after moving to Real Madrid in 2023.

While Jobe has returned to England to play for the under-21s side he captains, Wednesday's match will be his first on English soil for his new club.

Like City, Dortmund sit in the top eight, having won two and drawn one of their three Champions League games so far.

'Anxieties'

The younger Bellingham understood a move to Dortmund would provoke comparisons with Jude, but felt the club offered the best place for him to develop.

Like he did at Sunderland, the younger Bellingham has 'Jobe' on his jersey rather than his last name, due to his famous brother.

On arriving in Dortmund, Jobe admitted in pre-season comparisons with his older brother were on his mind.

"It's something you do think about. You have these anxieties, especially me as I'm only young," he told reporters, adding "I'm not perfect. I do think about these things."

With Jude's exploits in black and yellow fresh in the mind, Jobe took longer than many expected to find his feet in Germany.

A decent Club World Cup showing -- Jobe started three games, scoring a goal and assisting another before missing a showdown with his brother due to a yellow card suspension -- was followed by a more difficult time when the season started.

Jobe was hooked at half-time in his opening Bundesliga game. Jobe's father and agent Mark confronted Dortmund sporting director Sebastian Kehl in the player tunnel after the match.

The incident forced Dortmund to publicly reiterate "the active area is and remains reserved for players, coaches and management, not families and advisors."

Jobe started his next league match but was then benched, only picking up minutes in the dying stages of matches and failing to record any goals or assists during his brief cameos.

In mid-October at Bayern Munich, Jobe made a high-profile error, failing to clear the ball off the goal-line, allowing Michael Olise to score what would eventually be the winner.

The setback seemed to spark the midfielder, however.

Three days later, Jobe started in the Champions League at Copenhagen, laying on two assists in a 4-2 win.

On Tuesday, Jobe helped create Dortmund's equalizer in a German Cup clash at Eintracht Frankfurt, which his side won on penalties.

And last Friday, the 20-year-old put his body on the line late to block a potential equalizer in the dying stages of a hard-fought 1-0 win at Augsburg.

A Dortmund source told German tabloid Bild on Monday Jobe was in line to start against City.

'A lot of quality'

While the noise had grown louder around Jobe -- perhaps also from inside the Bellingham family itself -- Dortmund feel his development is not lagging, but actually ahead of schedule.

Speaking on Friday, Dortmund coach Niko Kovac praised the midfielder.

"You could see in our last game against Frankfurt what qualities he has. He's present. He's physical.

"I'm not concerned, on the contrary, I know what he can do.

"We're building him up slowly here and it's going even faster than what I had imagined myself, because the lad really has a lot of quality."

Dortmund goalkeeper Gregor Kobel echoed his coach's words, saying: "Jobe is doing great, he's been good in the last few games too.

"He's getting better week to week -- outstanding."


Alonso Says ‘Special’ Wirtz Helped Him Land Real Job 

Real Madrid's Spanish coach Xabi Alonso attends a press conference at Anfield Stadium in Liverpool in northwest England, on November 3, 2025, on the eve of their UEFA Champions League league phase football match against Liverpool. (AFP)
Real Madrid's Spanish coach Xabi Alonso attends a press conference at Anfield Stadium in Liverpool in northwest England, on November 3, 2025, on the eve of their UEFA Champions League league phase football match against Liverpool. (AFP)
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Alonso Says ‘Special’ Wirtz Helped Him Land Real Job 

Real Madrid's Spanish coach Xabi Alonso attends a press conference at Anfield Stadium in Liverpool in northwest England, on November 3, 2025, on the eve of their UEFA Champions League league phase football match against Liverpool. (AFP)
Real Madrid's Spanish coach Xabi Alonso attends a press conference at Anfield Stadium in Liverpool in northwest England, on November 3, 2025, on the eve of their UEFA Champions League league phase football match against Liverpool. (AFP)

Xabi Alonso credits Florian Wirtz with helping him land the Real Madrid manager's job after they won a German league and cup double together at Bayer Leverkusen, and says the midfielder just needs time to rediscover his best form at Liverpool.

The 22-year-old was named the German top flight's player of the season in the 2023-24 season, when Alonso guided Leverkusen to the Bundesliga title without losing a game.

Liverpool signed Wirtz for a reported fee of 100 million pounds ($134.21 million), with a further 16 million pounds in potential bonuses, in June, the same month Alonso debuted as Real head coach at the Club World Cup.

Wirtz is yet to score for Liverpool in 14 appearances, but Alonso, who played 210 games for Liverpool between 2004-2009, said it would take him time to adjust to life in England.

"It's a big change for him to come here to Liverpool after so many years in Germany, his whole life, and a few years in Leverkusen," Alonso told reporters on Monday ahead of a Champions League group-stage meeting with Liverpool on Tuesday.

"He needs to adapt, but he's a really special player. He has the quality, he has the personality, he's competitive.

"He was so special, and probably one of the reasons that I am here (at Real) is because of Flo. I am thankful for him."

Alonso also weighed in on Real winger Vinicius Jr's angry reaction to being substituted in a 2-1 league victory over rivals Barcelona last month.

The Brazilian international has apologized publicly and Alonso said the team had moved on.

"Important that he spoke to his teammates about it, and it was just left and underlined after that and finished," he added. "We don't want it to happen again ... The chapter has closed."