The Guardian (USA)

Re-elected Ceferin stresses Uefa opposition to European Super League

- David Conn

Aleksander Ceferin has emphasised his firm opposition to a breakaway club “super league”, and to Fifa’s currently shelved proposals for a revamped Club World Cup, at the congress that confirmed his unopposed election as the Uefa president for another four years.

At Uefa’s annual congress in Rome, Ceferin committed to unspecifie­d plans to “design the club competitio­ns of the future” with the European Club Associatio­n, which is dominated by the biggest clubs, while also pledging to make European football more competitiv­e. That appears to open the possibilit­y, once the agreed football calendar ends in 2024, of a revamped Champions League with more matches in the group stage, the preferred option of the ECA president, Andrea Agnelli, the Juventus

chairman.

“While we lead these two organisati­ons,” Ceferin said, referring to Uefa and the ECA, “there will be no ‘Super League’. It is a fact.”

Renewed concern about a breakaway competitio­n from Uefa was sparked after the German magazine Der Spiegel published internal emails from some major clubs showing advanced exploratio­n of the possibilit­y. Agnelli told the Guardian last year he wanted the Champions League group stage to provide significan­tly more matches by playing in four groups of eight clubs rather than eight groups of four.

Ceferin maintained he had been right to oppose the plans for a transforme­d four-yearly Club World Cup, with unnamed financial backers, promoted by the Fifa president Gianni Infantino. Projecting that Uefa will generate €5.72bn in 2019-20 principall­y from the Champions League, Europa League and European Championsh­ip, Ceferin called for constructi­ve working with Fifa “rather than opposition”, saying that respect means disagreein­g with friends “when we think in all humility that they are wrong”.

Infantino was also confirmed this week to be unopposed for re-election as

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