National Post

Global soccer league on tap?

Even smaller countries could have shot at win

- Rob Harris in London

Disappoint­ed the World Cup comes around only every four years?

Find t he early games tedious?

Just want to see the elite teams contesting a final competitio­n?

Once fans get their heads around a complex format, the proposed Global Nations League could be just the event to revive internatio­nal soccer.

Out go most irrelevant friendlies. In come more meaningful fixtures with silverware at stake. Even s maller countries get a chance to pick up a trophy.

Be clear: The World Cup is going nowhere, especially as FIFA expands its showpiece from 32 to 48 teams from 2026. But if the Global Nations League is to see the light of day, one big fixture will first have to be won between two heavyweigh­ts of the game: FIFA and UEFA.

Muscling i n on s haping the global g a me, UEFA has conceived a new competitio­n that features finals every two years in odd numbered years. So for European teams, when there isn’t a World Cup or European Championsh­ip, there could be a trip to the Global Nations League finals in June.

But while UEFA is calling it the Global Nations League, the structure of the competitio­n is far more complicate­d — a potential barrier to attracting fans and commercial backers. In the final stage, there is not even one league but seven, each featuring eight teams. And it isn’t even a league, but effectivel­y mini- World Cups that start in the quarter- finals.

A host nation would be required for each of the seven finals tournament­s.

The top tier would feature the cream of soccer, each playing seven matches, and should prove more alluring t o broadcaste­rs than friendlies. What demand, though, would there be to televise games from division seven including far less appealing teams?

It will be left to each of the six confederat­ions to decide how teams will qualify for the mini-World Cups and that is where the configurat­ion scrambles the brain even more. Europe plans to adapt the convoluted Nations League that is already due to debut in 2018 to occupy many exi sting gaps set aside f or friendlies.

The disputes will inevitably come over the compositio­n of each of the final seven leagues. UEFA envisages division one featuring three of its own, the two winners of the South African qualifying groups plus the top team from North America, Africa, and Asia. Oceania, whose highestran­ked member i s New Zealand, doesn’t even make the cut until GNL4.

The underlying message from UEFA leaders as they briefed global soccer officials in recent weeks is that the workload on players will not significan­tly increase as the GNL does not significan­tly add to the burden on national teams. That could win over the powerful European Club Associatio­n.

The little- regarded eightnatio­n Confederat­ions Cup, used as a preparatio­n event a year before the World Cup, is already set for the scrap heap. That frees up a space in the internatio­nal calendar in June, 2021, one FIFA already has its own plans to fill.

FIFA will not want to risk the World Cup being devalued by introducin­g a new competitio­n for internatio­nal teams. What FIFA seems to want is a bigger slice of the club game dominated by UEFA, especially as the privately run Internatio­nal Champions Trophy contested by leading European clubs in pre- season across the globe gains traction.

The annual Club World Cup organized by FIFA is unloved and largely ignored every December beyond the participan­ts (the six confed- eration club champions and the host nation’s league winner).

FIFA believes a more desirable product can be grown if the tournament is quadrupled to 24 teams and played every four years but opposition is gathering. European officials are complainin­g about players being overworked at the end of a gruelling season. It’s a different problem for teams from the Americas. The proposed 18- day Club World Cup in June would take them away from their domestic competitio­ns for several weeks and lead to a fixture backlog to catch up on.

The Global Nations League is far less disruptive. Finalists would play only one additional game in the existing June window reserved for two internatio­nal fixtures.

Will June, 2021, see a refreshed club competitio­n or new internatio­nal series?

FIFA president Gianni Infantino seems to be pitched directly against his former paymasters in Europe over who determines the future of soccer.

The internatio­nal game between existing major tournament­s needs rejuvenati­ng. The Global Nations League seems the best solution on the table.

 ?? IVAN SEKRETAREV / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Germany’s Julian Draxler at the end of the Confederat­ions Cup final against Chile this year. The Global Nations League may revive internatio­nal soccer.
IVAN SEKRETAREV / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Germany’s Julian Draxler at the end of the Confederat­ions Cup final against Chile this year. The Global Nations League may revive internatio­nal soccer.

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