A competition format used in chess known as the "Swiss model" will be introduced for this season's Uefa Champions League football tournament.
The new-look draw, to be held in Monaco this evening, has already kicked off furious debate: some say the "high-stakes experiment" offers "more excitement", said Nick Ames in The Guardian, but others "feel it serves the interests of Super League rebels".
Brave new world From its launch as the European Cup in 1955 until 1991, the tournament had a simple knockout format. A group phase was then introduced, and the competition was rebranded as the Champions League in 1992.
From this season, the format is switching to the "Swiss model", which has been used in chess, croquet, bridge and Scrabble. The group stage is being replaced by a league structure and the number of participating clubs has been increased from 32 to 36.
Every club will play a minimum of eight league stage games against eight different opponents (four home games, four away). To determine the eight opponents, the teams will initially be ranked in four seeding pots for this evening's draw.
Clubs that finish the league phase in first to eighth places will automatically go on to the 16-club knockout phase, and the clubs that finish in ninth to 24th places will enter a two-legged play-off, with the winners proceeding to the 16-club knockout.
More big games, less jeopardy Uefa president Aleksander Ceferin said the new format would mean "greater fairness, excitement, intensity, emotion and uncertainty". But not everyone is convinced. Football's "greatest virtue is its simplicity", said Miguel Delaney in The Independent, but that "certainly isn't how you'd describe this new Champions League", which is "in essence, almost a full European season now running alongside the domestic season".
"Boredom" is guaranteed, said Thom Gibbs in The Telegraph, as "qualifiers are settled long before the eighth round of fixtures". And "all for what?" – a "witless expansion which looks alarmingly like the Super League entering via the backdoor, surrounded by bouncers". |