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The main round of the all-new UEFA Champions League season is to get under way in September.
The draw for the bigger and changed-up tournament takes place in Monaco on Thursday, but it won’t be the same as previous years – not entirely anyway.
Here’s how the upcoming season will play out:
The updated version of the Champions League will see 36 clubs feature in the main round of the competition, an increase from 32 under the old format.
There is an extra place for the fifth-best European league according to UEFA’s ranking, which means France’s Ligue 1 now has three automatic qualifiers.
In addition, there is an extra berth for each of the two leagues with the highest coefficient ranking from last season in UEFA competition, which this year are Germany and Italy.
The remaining extra slot goes to a national champion to emerge from the qualifying rounds.
Since 2003, the Champions League featured 32 clubs split into eight groups of four, with the top two from each section advancing to the last 16.
That has now changed radically, and from this season, the 36 clubs will be pooled together in one league in a “Swiss system” more commonly associated with chess.
Earlier, participating teams played six games in the group stage, facing each opponent home and away. Now the clubs will each have eight games, one each against their eight opponents.
The 36 teams will be split into four seeded pots of nine. Every club will play two teams from each pot, one at home and one away.
No team will come up against another club from the same domestic league as them, and every club can only face a maximum of two teams from any one country.
In past years, the group stage ended in December, but the expansion of the Champions League means the two extra matchdays will be staged in January.
The number of games is increasing from 96 in the old group stage to 144 in the new league phase.
Rather than a manual draw, UEFA will now operate a hybrid draw.
Each of the 36 teams will still be manually drawn out, working down through the four seeding pots from top to bottom, but instead of drawing their opponents manually, this will now be done digitally and take little more than a second per team.
Once the team is drawn manually, the software will pick the opponents and where the teams will play – home or away.
The 36 clubs will be ranked together in the one league with the top eight all progressing to the last 16 and the format of the competition from that point on remaining the same.
However, it will be seeded, taking into account positions in the league phase.
In addition, a playoff round will be introduced with the teams finishing from ninth to 24th in the league phase going through to a two-legged knockout tie to decide the remaining spots in the last 16. These playoff ties will be seeded.
No. The bottom 12 teams in the league phase will be simply eliminated.
Each of the three UEFA men’s club competitions will now have one “exclusive week” when there will be no matches played in the other two competitions that week.
For the Champions League, the exclusive week is matchday one with games to be played on September 17, 18 and 19. The Europa League’s is also its first match round on September 25 and 26 while the Conference League’s exclusive week is its last round of league phase games on December 19.
There is more money to be distributed among the clubs involved in the league phase of the Champions League – $2.6bn this season compared with $2.2bn in 2023-24 – although the new figure will be shared among 36 clubs rather than the previous 32.