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Teams learn fate for upcoming Champions League season under new league format | MRK News |
The 36 teams competing in the upcoming 2024/25 UEFA Champions League – the most prestigious competition in European club football – learned who they will play in the competition’s newly revised format after the draw took place in Monaco on Thursday.
Teams were assigned their eight opponents – two from each of the four pots – in the new league phase through the help of technology.
First, teams were manually picked from a bowl by former Italy goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon before five-time winner Cristiano Ronaldo pressed a button to begin the scheduling process by a computer, with the opponents appearing on screen shortly afterwards.
Reigning champion Real Madrid will face the team it beat in last year’s final, Borussia Dortmund, at home, with a trip to Liverpool among its eight fixtures.
2022/23 champion Manchester City was also handed a rematch of its victorious final against Inter Milan, as well as away trips to Paris Saint-Germain and Italian giant Juventus in its eight match-ups.
PSG looks to have one of the toughest draws of the Pot 1 teams, with games against City, Bayern Munich, Atlético Madrid and Arsenal selected for the French club.
The match dates and kick-off times will be announced on Saturday.
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Real Madrid's players celebrate winning the 2023/24 Champions League after beating Borussia Dortmund in the final at Wembley Stadium on June 1. |
So how will the Champions League work starting this 2024/25 season?
According to UEFA President Aleksander Čeferin, the new format was passed unanimously by the organization’s executive committee and will see qualification “based on sporting merit.”
From this season, UEFA hopes, fans will get to see more top-level matches earlier in the competition with higher stakes in each game.
The primary change is that 32 teams will no longer compete in eight groups of four during the group stages. Instead, the opening round will be an expanded 36-team stage in which the teams participate in a single league.
Each team will play eight matches against eight different clubs, four at home and four away. The teams each club plays will be selected from four seeded pots (based on ranking) with two opponents being drawn from each – with one home game and one away game per pot.
This is a departure from the former group-stage format, in which teams played against the three other teams in their group twice (one home and one away game per opponent).