Vienna:A scaled-back first phase to the expanded Champions League in 2024 was approved by UEFA on Tuesday to quell a backlash around Europe. The reformatted group stage has been reduced from 10 rounds to eight, and backup places for teams based on historical performance have been removed.
The stage will still grow from 32 to 36 teams based around a single standings rather than eight groups. Weeks of talks involving domestic leagues and clubs produced the revised format that will see two additional places in the expanded format awarded to the two countries with the highest UEFA ranking based on their teams' results in European competitions the previous season.
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If the system was already in place, it would mean the fifth-place team in England would qualify for the Champions League along with a second automatic place for the Netherlands. The team finishing third in the Dutch league would get a chance to enter the qualifying rounds.
The original plan that sparked criticism, particularly among middle-class clubs and fans, would have awarded the two places to teams with the strongest five-season record in Europe who failed to qualify through their domestic leagues. The distribution of the other two expansion places will see an additional team qualify from the fifth-ranked country in Europe regularly France and a fifth slot for domestic champions who don't qualify automatically.
UEFA President Aleksander Ceferin said the revisions agreed to at an executive committee meeting in Vienna ensure qualification is based on sporting performance. An initial radical plan presented by UEFA in 2019 featured 24 of the 32 slots in the Champions League locked in without the need to qualify annually a largely closed competition that Super League rebel clubs tried to then introduce with a failed breakaway last year.