Gulf Today

CL draw comes with UEFA hoping virus doesn’t ruin plans for finale

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PARIS: Four months on from the last match in this season’s Champions League, the draw for the final eight will be held on Friday amid ongoing uncertaint­y about how safe it will be to play out the competitio­n in Lisbon as planned, and with four last-16 ties still to be completed.

It was on March 11 that Paris Saint-germain beat Borussia Dortmund 2-0 behind closed doors to qualify for the quarter-finals for the first time in four years and their players celebrated wildly with jubilant supporters who had gathered outside the Parc des Princes.

The same night, holders Liverpool were knocked out by Atletico Madrid in front of 52,000 fans at Anfield, a mass gathering which British scientists later said had aided the accelerati­on of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Within days football across Europe was suspended and it was only in mid-june that UEFA was able to unveil a way of finishing its flagship tournament, the main economic driver for European football’s governing body -- before the pandemic, it estimated gross commercial revenue from its competitio­ns this season would be 3.25 billion euros ($3.69bn).

And so the plan is to go to the Portuguese capital for a unique “final eight” straight knockout tournament from the quarter-finals onwards, starting on Aug. 12 and finishing with the final at Benfica’s Estadio da Luz on Aug. 23.

It will share the quarter-final and semi-final matches with the Estadio Jose Alvalade, Sporting’s home just along Lisbon’s Segunda Circular ring road.

Benfica’s home staged the Champions League final in 2014 when Real Madrid beat Atletico. Then it was filled to its 65,000 capacity, but this time it is expected all matches will be played behind closed doors due to fears an influx of supporters from around Europe could spark a new wave of COVID-19.

Indeed, the biggest concern right now is Lisbon itself.

Last week lockdown restrictio­ns were reimposed on 19 neighbourh­oods across the northern periphery of Lisbon, worryingly close to both venues. The restrictio­ns concern some 700,000 people and will remain in place for at least a fortnight.

Portugal, a country of 10 million, is currently registerin­g over 300 cases of coronaviru­s a day. Three-quarters of the 443 new cases registered on Wednesday came in the Lisbon area.

NO PLAN B: That raises questions about whether the final eight will happen as planned, although UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin has remained outwardly bullish.

“I am confident that with the continued and constant collaborat­ion between all stakeholde­rs, we will conclude the season in a positive way in Lisbon. There is no need for a Plan B,” Ceferin said last week.

UEFA plans to complete the Europa League with an identical format, a final eight in Germany, with the final due to go ahead in Cologne on Aug. 21.

The draws for the quarter-finals and semi-finals of both competitio­ns will be held on Friday, from 1000 GMT. However, before geting that far in either competitio­n, there are a host of last-16 ties to be completed.

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