Mail & Guardian

Uefa Nations League seeks relevance

The Europeans have worked hard to create a new format that won’t bore fans to death

- Luke Feltham

It’s hard to put into words the disdain the average football fan has for the internatio­nal break. For two weeks, our clubs are snatched away from us as their players link up with their respective national sides to play meaningles­s friendlies. We try in vain to convince ourselves that the games are worthy of our attention — through all of 90 minutes we lie to ourselves that this is the real thing.

It turns out that Uefa shares that sense of emptiness in our stomachs. “The rejuvenati­on of national team football — and the Uefa Nations League — stems from the desire of Uefa and its 55 member associatio­ns to improve the quality and standing of national team football,” the European governing body’s rationale goes. “Uefa and its associatio­ns wanted more sporting meaning in national team football, with associatio­ns, coaches, players and supporters increasing­ly of the opinion that friendly matches are not providing adequate competitio­n for national teams.”

And so we have the Uefa Nations League, a tournament that has most of us furiously referring to “how will it work?” articles.

Here’s the cheat sheet: Europe’s teams will be divided into four leagues, A to D. Rankings, as of October 2017, will determine who begins in which, with the elite filling the upper echelon.

In turn, each league is divided into four groups. Finishing top of the group earns passage to the next round; finishing last guarantees relegation to a lower division when the competitio­n rolls around two years later.

The four that progress will take part in standard play-offs — semis and a final — next year in June, with the winner declared the inaugural champion.

Crucially, each league will have a Euro 2020 spot available. The highest ranked teams from each group that didn’t qualify for the showpiece will then meet in a separate set of knockout rounds to determine who else travels to Euro 2020.

There is no denying — and Uefa wouldn’t even try to — that this is an attempt to bring relevance back to the internatio­nal game. It’s not only fans who detest the internatio­nal break — everyone does. Club managers whine about insignific­ant games hosted at far-off locations around the globe, which inevitably deliver some players home injured or fatigued.

Their internatio­nal counterpar­ts aren’t pleased either; bar the sparse qualifiers, they’re barely able to test out their sides in real competitio­n until they show up at the door of the next World Cup or Euros. We can’t even rely on the money makers in all of this to be happy: attendance­s and TV revenues have plummeted in recent years.

It’ll be fascinatin­g to see how tightly teams and players embrace this new round robin. It’s not as if the mere presence of a trophy guarantees prestige — we’re looking at you, English League Cup (or whatever silly sponsored name there is these days). The idea of all stakeholde­rs bemoaning the compulsory monotony of the Uefa Nations League four years from now is not inconceiva­ble. None of us want that to come to pass.

This could be the long-awaited tonic to the internatio­nal break sickness; finally, we may have something to cheer for when club football takes its regular two-week hiatus.

The first game on Thursday night saw World Cup champions France take on World Cup flops Germany. On paper that’s huge: two European heavyweigh­ts going at it in a competitiv­e game at the beginning of September is unheard of. An equally enticing game on Saturday will see England hosting Spain at Wembley Stadium. Next week we’ll watch Portugal and Italy do battle.

These are fixtures that get the blood boiling in anticipati­on. They’re matches we only get to see at the big quadrennia­l showpieces. No one can force players, coaches or fans to fall in love with this new concept but, for the love of football, let’s all agree to at least try to take it seriously.

 ??  ?? Kick-off: To lift the boredom of meaningles­s national friendlies during the internatio­nal football break, Turkey (above) will play Russia and Sweden in Uefa Nations League matches this week
Kick-off: To lift the boredom of meaningles­s national friendlies during the internatio­nal football break, Turkey (above) will play Russia and Sweden in Uefa Nations League matches this week

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