New Champions League Format Starts Next Season. How Will it Work?

The Champions League trophy at Wembley. Photograph: Hendrik Deckers/Borussia Dortmund/Getty Images
The Champions League trophy at Wembley. Photograph: Hendrik Deckers/Borussia Dortmund/Getty Images
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New Champions League Format Starts Next Season. How Will it Work?

The Champions League trophy at Wembley. Photograph: Hendrik Deckers/Borussia Dortmund/Getty Images
The Champions League trophy at Wembley. Photograph: Hendrik Deckers/Borussia Dortmund/Getty Images

What is the new format?

The group stage is no more. Instead of 32 teams being divided into eight groups, 36 clubs will form a single league. Each side will play eight matches – two more than under the previous concept – against eight different opponents, four at home and four away. The top eight after the first phase will automatically qualify for the last 16, those placed ninth to 24th will face a two-leg playoff to progress, and the bottom eight will be eliminated, sending them out of Europe because they will not drop into the Europa League.

The teams will initially be divided into four pots, based on Uefa seedings. Each participant will play two teams from each pot, one at home and one away. This, in theory, will offer greater possibility for the lowest-ranked teams to reach the knockout stages because they will face two sides of similar quality. Previously they were in a group with three teams from higher pots.

-How will the playoffs and knockout phase work?

The teams finishing ninth to 16th will be seeded in the playoff draw, meaning they will face the teams placed 17th to 24th and will – in principle – get the second leg at home. In the last 16 the teams who automatically qualified will be seeded and will each face a playoff winner.

Knockout games will continue to be played over two legs but for the first time clubs will be able to plot their route to the final once the last-16 draw has been made. The draw from that point would resemble that of a tennis Open with the top two sides from the league phase unable to face one another until the final, although the fine details of how this will be accomplished are still in development. The final will remain the only game not played in midweek.

How long will it take?

More games means the league phase will not be completed before Christmas, forcing each team to play twice in January. The timings of the knockout games remain similar but if a team goes through the playoffs to reach the final, they will end up playing 17 matches. This year’s finalists will have played 13 times each.

Where will Uefa find four more teams?

The two countries whose clubs produced the best collective performance in Uefa tournaments this season – Italy and Germany – will each receive an additional place, described by Uefa as European performance spots. Before this season it was decided that one league phase place would go to the club that finishes third in the country highest on the coefficient list that did not have four guaranteed entrants – the fifth-placed nation, France. The other spot will come via qualifying. Usually four clubs enter through the champions path but instead it will be five.

What’s the knock-on effect in England?

In the Carabao Cup, the Champions League and Europa League clubs will be seeded for the first time to keep them apart to help with fixture congestion. These teams will enter in the third round, to be played over two weeks in September that coincide with designated weeks for European football. The Champions League plays in week one and Europa League in week two of the fortnight assigned for the Carabao Cup third round, meaning if, for example, Manchester City drew Manchester United, finding a date for the fixture would be impossible. Previously, European games were allotted six midweeks between September and December but this will be stretched to 10 midweeks up to January.

There is a potential issue when the Carabao Cup fifth round commences that Chelsea, if they reach that stage, would have a Conference League fixture in the same midweek. The FA Cup has no replays from the first round onwards to free up space in the calendar.

- The Guardian Sport



Real Madrid Defender Antonio Rüdiger Apologizes for Copa del Rey Outburst

Real Madrid’s Antonio Rudiger, left, challenges for the ball with Barcelona’s Ferran Torres during the Spanish Copa del Rey final soccer match between Barcelona and Real Madrid at Estadio de La Cartuja stadium in Seville, Spain, Sunday, April 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Jose Breton)
Real Madrid’s Antonio Rudiger, left, challenges for the ball with Barcelona’s Ferran Torres during the Spanish Copa del Rey final soccer match between Barcelona and Real Madrid at Estadio de La Cartuja stadium in Seville, Spain, Sunday, April 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Jose Breton)
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Real Madrid Defender Antonio Rüdiger Apologizes for Copa del Rey Outburst

Real Madrid’s Antonio Rudiger, left, challenges for the ball with Barcelona’s Ferran Torres during the Spanish Copa del Rey final soccer match between Barcelona and Real Madrid at Estadio de La Cartuja stadium in Seville, Spain, Sunday, April 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Jose Breton)
Real Madrid’s Antonio Rudiger, left, challenges for the ball with Barcelona’s Ferran Torres during the Spanish Copa del Rey final soccer match between Barcelona and Real Madrid at Estadio de La Cartuja stadium in Seville, Spain, Sunday, April 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Jose Breton)

Real Madrid defender Antonio Rüdiger has apologized for his outburst of rage against the referee at the end of his team’s Copa del Rey final defeat to Barcelona.

The Germany defender was incensed when teammate Kylian Mbappé was pulled back for a foul instead of threatening for a goal at the end of extra time in the 3-2 defeat that finished in the early hours on Sunday, and he had to be restrained by teammates and coaching staff after apparently throwing a small bag of ice onto the field and shouting at the referee, The AP news reported.

“There’s definitely no excuse for my behavior last night,” Rüdiger wrote Sunday in an Instagram story. “I’m very sorry for that. We played a very good game from the 2nd half on.”

Rüdiger had gone off midway through the second period of extra time after earlier having had his legs bandaged.

“After 111 minutes I was not able to help my team anymore and before the final whistle I did a mistake,” Rüdiger said. “Sorry again to the referee and to everyone I have disappointed last night.”

Referee Ricardo de Burgos Bengoechea also handed out red cards to Jude Bellingham and Lucas Vázquez for protesting.

De Burgos wrote in his match report that Rüdiger “threw an object from the coaching area that didn’t reach me,” and that the Germany defender had displayed “an aggressive attitude.”

Rüdiger faces a possible multi-game suspension, while Bellingham and Vázquez likely face lesser sanctions.

The day before the final De Burgos denounced a campaign to discredit him by Real Madrid’s official club television station.