Yuma Sun

Last 8 shows why Champions League worth protecting

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LISBON – Eight European teams in one country to determine who collects the biggest prize in club football.

What should be a temporary, pandemic-enforced Champions League format adjustment provides a snapshot of so much there is to fear about the future of football from all sides.

Bringing teams together over two weeks is a first for European football, and it could feel like the harbinger to a potential Super League.

A breakaway from domestic competitio­ns has long been mooted by the continent’s elite who are keen to play each other more often rather than enduring the slog of less glamorous domestic matches in the traditiona­l league structures that feed into European qualificat­ion.

The coronaviru­s shutting down sports stalled a campaign by the wealthiest clubs to transform the Champions League into a largely closed competitio­n for them. That was on the mind of Juventus chairman Andrea Agnelli in March at the last gathering of internatio­nal football executives before Europe went into lockdown.

Agnelli openly questioned Atalanta’s right to be in the Champions League while Roma, with greater pedigree in the competitio­n, missed out on qualificat­ion because it finished too low in Serie A.

“I have high very regard of what Atalanta has done,” Agnelli told the FT Business of Football Summit in London. “But without a European history, with a great performanc­e last year, they have had direct access into internatio­nal competitio­n. Is that fair or not fair. Is that right or not right?”

Agnelli’s concern about the rise of Atalanta came to fruition.

In its first ever season in the Champions League, the Bergamo team is Italy’s sole remaining representa­tive. Cristiano Ronaldo and Juventus, meanwhile, are on their summer holidays after being knocked out in the last 16 by Lyon in the COVID-19 delayed competitio­n.

“The point is how we balance the contributi­on you bring European football,” Agnelli continued, “and the performanc­e of one year.”

It is more than one year’s performanc­e, though, now. After Serie A returned from the shutdown, Atalanta secured a second consecutiv­e third-place finish.

Paris Saint-Germain awaits Serie A’s top scoring team on Wednesday, opening a unique Champions League quarterfin­als mini-tournament that is missing the continent’s superpower­s who would expect to feature in any future Super League.

Real Madrid, the record 13-time European champion, was eliminated by Manchester City last week. Six-time winner and holder Liverpool was knocked out by Atletico. It is six years since AC Milan even qualified for the Champions League, and 13 since winning a seventh European Cup.

These are quarterfin­als without the elite – with only two former winners remaining. And the draw has pitted Bayern Munich and Barcelona – both fivetime champions – against each other in the quarterfin­als on Friday.

Just one of the remaining six teams – Atletico – has even made it to a final before, losing to Real Madrid in 2016.

This is only the second appearance in the Champions League for Leipzig, which plays Atletico on Thursday, and the first time the Red Bull-backed German side is in the knockout phase.

While the mini-tournament might be an appealing concept for the superpower clubs, it won’t be if they are not part of it.

A year on, a quarterfin­al field packed with even more fresh faces shows why the current Champions League is worth protecting. They earned their right to be in Lisbon through on-pitch performanc­es rather than historic results.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS SATURDAY, AUG. 8, FILE PHOTO, Barcelona’s Lionel Messi celebrates after scoring his side’s second goal during their Champions League round of 16, second leg soccer match against Napoli at the Camp Nou Stadium in Barcelona, Spain.
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS SATURDAY, AUG. 8, FILE PHOTO, Barcelona’s Lionel Messi celebrates after scoring his side’s second goal during their Champions League round of 16, second leg soccer match against Napoli at the Camp Nou Stadium in Barcelona, Spain.

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