The Guardian (USA)

Andrea Agnelli says agreement on 'ideal' new-look Champions League is close

- Paul MacInnes

Agreement on a new “ideal” Champions League is imminent, according to the man who represents Europe’s biggest clubs, which may put pressure on the Premier League to reduce its fixture list in future if it is to benefit.

Andrea Agnelli, the chairman of the European Clubs Associatio­n, said on Monday he expects a reshaped Champions League to be agreed within weeks. The Juventus president wants an expanded competitio­n to be just the start of wide-ranging reforms at the top of the game that could mean the overall number of domestic games in England is reduced and a ban on transfers between elite sides.

Uefa is expected to ratify plans for an expanded Champions League of 36 teams, with each club playing 10 group matches in a “Swiss system” that would see them ranked in a single league table. This would bring an end to recurring rumours of a breakaway Super League, something Agnelli says he has always been keen to avoid.

“I think we’re very close to my ideal Champions League, I think the Swiss system is beautiful,” he said. “I think it will provide great opportunit­ies for those teams participat­ing in that competitio­n. It will provide the knockouts that are the essence of any competitio­n. It’s very, very close to an ideal Champions League. We’re maybe just a couple of weeks away.

“My attention for quite a long time has been to make sure we find a solution with Uefa. We had fights with Alex [Uefa’s president, Alexander Ceferin] in the autumn months because we wanted to find the balance between continenta­l and domestic competitio­n. It’s [about] having a balanced competitiv­e landscape.”

Agnelli, whose organisati­on represents 246 clubs across Europe including nine in the Premier League, says he wants the domestic calendar to take up only two thirds of any season. The Premier League have pushed back against the new Champions League proposals due to their effects on the calendar but Agnelli believes it is the larger domestic competitio­ns, such as the English top flight, that will eventually have to compromise.

“If we look back in time the Champions League had four more games than it has today,” Agnelli said. “I think the balance that we are trying to strike is one third internatio­nal [European competitio­n] and two thirds domestic. We can take a look at the overall calendar, we have countries like England with a maximum number of games at 53, If I’m not mistaken, Germany is 43 and so is Italy.

“We do think that currently for competitiv­e balance purposes 20 teams in leagues are too many. There is an overall element that could actually be worked out altogether in the interests of everyone.”

With the new competitio­n not set to start until 2024, Agnelli would like any restructur­ing to be made in tandem with wider reform. He wants an end to financial fair play in its current form, with clubs scrutinise­d on their overall balance sheet rather than annual profit and loss. He also said the ECA had discussed changing the transfer system so Champions League clubs could no longer buy from or sell to each other, instead trading only with lower-ranking clubs.

“No triple-figures transfers between Champions League participat­ing clubs maybe would [mean] focusing instead on champion players in smaller countries allowing us only to buy players there,” Agnelli said. “These are elements we are discussing but certainly cost control will be one of the biggest challenges in terms of reforms going forward.”

Agnelli also stressed that football must think of ways to attract younger viewers in an increasing­ly crowded marketplac­e. “We could imagine a subscripti­on for the last 15 minutes of a specific game,” he said. “The attention span of today’s kids and tomorrow’s spenders is completely different to the one I had when I was their age.

“If you take golf, if it’s interestin­g at all, it’s only the last six holes on the final day. You are not going to watch the whole thing on the TV unless you are a hardcore fan.”

 ?? Photograph: Michael Regan/Uefa/Getty Images ?? Thiago Alcântara, now of Liverpool, celebrates after winning last season’s Champions League final with Bayern Munich.
Photograph: Michael Regan/Uefa/Getty Images Thiago Alcântara, now of Liverpool, celebrates after winning last season’s Champions League final with Bayern Munich.
 ?? Photograph: Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/Getty Images ?? Andrea Agnelli at the ECA general assembly in 2019, flanked by Edwin van der Sar of Ajax (left) and Dariusz Mioduski of Legia Warsaw.
Photograph: Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/Getty Images Andrea Agnelli at the ECA general assembly in 2019, flanked by Edwin van der Sar of Ajax (left) and Dariusz Mioduski of Legia Warsaw.

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