Champions League revamp ‘already a success,’ says PSG’s Al-Khelaifi

PSG manager Luis Campos (L) and President Nasser Al-Khelaifi during a training session on the eve of football match between PSG and Juventus Turin outside Paris on Sept. 5, 2022. (AFP)
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Updated 06 September 2022
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Champions League revamp ‘already a success,’ says PSG’s Al-Khelaifi

  • The expansion of UEFA’s flagship competition has coincided with TV rights for European club competitions jumping more than 40 percent from 2024

OEIRAS, Portugal: Paris Saint-Germain president Nasser Al-Khelaifi said Monday the sharp rise in Champions League TV rights shows the overhaul of the competition’s format from 2024 is a “success already.”

“The sales for the new format in the US have increased without even Spanish language 150 percent, and the UK and France increased a lot also,” said Al-Khelaifi, a main opponent of the aborted Super League project.

“I think it shows this new format is already a success even before it has started,” he told a video conference organized near Lisbon by the Portuguese FA.

From 2024 the group stage will be expanded to feature 36 clubs, up from 32, with all teams together in one pool and playing eight matches, instead of eight groups of four teams.

It is the first significant change to the competition in two decades and will shake up a first phase that has become too predictable.

“Football needs to be developed in a way that it respects small, medium and big clubs,” said Al-Khelaifi, who is also chairman of the European Club Association, which has nearly 250 members from across the continent.

The expansion of UEFA’s flagship competition has coincided with TV rights for European club competitions jumping more than 40 percent from 2024.

Global deals have been agreed worth €15 billion for the three seasons to 2027, or €5 billion annually.

Asked about the financial model of clubs like PSG or Manchester City, backed by mega-rich Gulf owners, Al-Khelaifi said “football needs investment to grow” and called out the “disastrous debt” of some clubs.

He criticized clubs which are supposed to belong to the fans but whose supporters “control nothing,” allowing those in power to pass on huge debts to their successors once they have served their terms.

“This is what we should worry about because that’s a big danger,” he added, in a thinly-veiled dig at Barcelona, who remain committed to launching a Super League and have debts in excess of a billion euros.


Salah sets up goal on return to Liverpool action

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Salah sets up goal on return to Liverpool action

  • Salah came off the substitutes’ bench to huge cheers in the 26th minute
  • Liverpool doubled their lead in the 60th minute when Ekitike scored his second, nodding home Salah’s corner

LIVERPOOL: Mohamed Salah set up a goal in Liverpool’s 2-0 win against Brighton on Saturday as he returned to action after an explosive outburst cast doubt over his future at the Premier League champions.
The Egypt forward, the subject of intense scrutiny in the build-up to the game at Anfield, came off the substitutes’ bench to huge cheers in the 26th minute, replacing injured defender Joe Gomez.
The home team, whose title defense has collapsed after a shocking run of results, were leading 1-0 at the time, with France forward Hugo Ekitike on the scoresheet after just 46 seconds.
Brighton squandered a number of opportunities to level and Ekitike scored again with half an hour to go to give Liverpool breathing space.
Salah accused Liverpool of throwing him “under the bus” after he was left on the bench for last week’s 3-3 draw at Leeds — the third match in a row that he had been named among the replacements.
He also said that he had no relationship with manager Arne Slot.
Salah was omitted from the midweek Champions League trip to Inter Milan, which Liverpool won 1-0, posting a picture on social media of himself alone in the gym.
Slot said at Friday’s pre-match press conference that he would speak to the forward later in the day, adding: “I have no reasons (in) not wanting him to stay.”
There was feverish speculation in the build-up to Saturday’s match about what role Salah would play, with the winger named on the bench.
Liverpool, who had won just two of 10 Premier League matches before the Brighton game, made a lightning start, taking the lead in the first minute when Joe Gomez set up Ekitike, who thumped the ball past Bart Verbruggen.
Salah entered the fray about 20 minutes before half-time when Gomez was withdrawn.
Brighton’s Diego Gomez squandered a good chance to level early in the second half, striking the ball against the outside of a post, and Brajan Gruda also went close as the home crowd chanted Salah’s name.
Liverpool doubled their lead in the 60th minute when Ekitike scored his second, nodding home Salah’s corner.
Salah himself went close in stoppage time after he was set up by Federico Chiesa but he blazed over.
The win lifts Slot’s men to sixth in the table ahead of the later kick-offs on Saturday, easing the pressure on the beleaguered manager.

- Salah departure -

Salah, who signed a new two-year contract at Liverpool in April, is about to depart for the Africa Cup of Nations.
The length of his absence depends on how far Egypt go in the competition in Morocco, with the final taking place on January 18.
The forward, who has been linked with a move to the lucrative Saudi Pro League, had invited his family to the Brighton game as speculation swirled over his future.
“I will be in Anfield to say goodbye to the fans and go to the Africa Cup,” he told reporters last week. “I don’t know what is going to happen when I am there.”
Salah, third in Liverpool’s all-time scoring charts with 250 goals, has won two Premier League titles and one Champions League crown during his spell on Merseyside.
He scored 29 Premier League goals last season as Liverpool romped to a 20th English league title, but has managed just four league goals this season.