Benfica edge past Mourinho’s Fenerbahce to complete 36-team Champions League lineup

Benfica's Kerem Akturkoglu celebrates scoring their first and eventual winning goal against Fenerbahce during the sides' UEFA Champions League playoff second leg at Estadio da Luz in Lisbon Wednesday. (Reuters)
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Updated 28 August 2025
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Benfica edge past Mourinho’s Fenerbahce to complete 36-team Champions League lineup

  • Club Brugge, Copenhagen and Qarabag of Azerbaijan also advanced to complete the 36-team lineup for the league phase, with the draw being made Thursday
  • The 71st edition of the European Cup or Champions League will include 14 different former champions with a combined 50 titles, including holders Paris Saint-Germain

MONACO: Jose Mourinho and Fenerbahce fell short of returning to the Champions League on Wednesday, losing 1-0 at Benfica in the qualifying playoffs on Wednesday.

Benfica — the first club Mourinho coached — had two goals disallowed on video review in the first half before its Turkish forward Kerem Akturkoglu scored with a rising shot in the 35th minute for the only goal over the two legs.

Club Brugge, Copenhagen and Qarabag of Azerbaijan also advanced to complete the 36-team lineup for the league phase, with the draw being made Thursday.

Mourinho is a two-time Champions League winner but has not coached in the main stage of the marquee competition for six seasons. Fenerbahce’s absence now stretches to 17 seasons.

Brugge routed Rangers 6-0 for an aggregate score of 9-1. The Belgian side already had an early lead before Rangers defender Max Aarons was sent off in the eighth minute.

Qarabag are back in the Champions League eight years after their debut campaign, winning 5-4 on aggregate over Ferencvaros despite a 3-2 loss in Baku on Wednesday.

Copenhagen won 2-0 at home to Basel to advance 3-1 on aggregate.

The draw ceremony starts 6 p.m. local time (1600 GMT) Thursday at a beachside concert hall and conference venue in Monaco.

Who are in the Champions League draw?

A record six teams from England are in the competition this year. More than half — 19 in total — are from the four highest-ranked countries: England, Italy, Spain and Germany.

Newcomers in the main phase are Bodo/Glimt of Norway, Kairat Almaty of Kazakhstan, Pafos of Cyprus and Union Saint-Gilloise of Belgium.

The Champions League will go further north than ever before, with Bodo located inside the Arctic Circle, and further east, to Almaty, near Kazakhstan’s border with China. Pafos, the Russian-owned champion of Cyprus, was created just 11 years ago in a merger of two clubs.

Athletic Bilbao head the teams returning after a long absence. The emblematic team from Spain’s Basque region last played in the 2014-15 group stage.

Olympiakos missed four editions and Villarreal return after losing in the semifinals to Liverpool in 2022.

There is no team from Ukraine for the first time in 20 years. In that period, Shakhtar Donetsk featured 17 times and Dynamo Kyiv 10. Russian teams are banned from all European competitions for the fourth straight season since the full military invasion of Ukraine.

Former winners

The 71st edition of the European Cup or Champions League will include 14 different former champions with a combined 50 titles, including holders Paris Saint-Germain.

Now that five-time winning coach Carlo Ancelotti left Real Madrid to coach Brazil, Pep Guardiola is the leading coach in this edition. Guardiola has won three Champions League titles, with Barcelona in 2009 and 2011 and his current team Manchester City in 2023.

The other previous title-winning coaches are Luis Enrique, with Barcelona in 2015 and PSG last season, and Barcelona’s Hansi Flick, who won with Bayern Munich in 2020.

Schedule and format

This is the second season of the league phase format with 36 teams playing eight different opponents and ranked in a single-standings table.

The weighted schedule gives each team two opponents drawn from each of the four seeding pots Thursday in Monaco. Teams are seeded based on their ranking over five seasons of results in UEFA competitions.

Games start on Sept. 16 and the final matchday is Jan. 28. Bodo/Glimt should play one home game in January on its heated artificial turf in the Norwegian offseason.

The top eight teams in the final standings advance to the round of 16 in March. Teams ranked ninth to 24th go to the round of two-legged knockout playoffs in February.

The final at the Puskas Arena in Budapest is on May 30. Just 12 days later the World Cup starts in Mexico City.

Prize money

UEFA has allocated €2.47 billion ($2.88 billion) in prize money from total commercial revenue of €4.4 billion ($5.1 billion) across all its European club competitions this season.

The lowest-ranked team, Kairat, are guaranteed at least €20 million ($23 million) from UEFA. High-ranked teams Real Madrid and PSG will get at least €60 million ($69 million). Teams earn more for each win and for advancing to the knockout rounds.

The title winner should receive about €150 million ($175 million) in prize money.


Sunderland earn 1-0 win over Newcastle thanks to Woltemade own goal

Updated 27 min 21 sec ago
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Sunderland earn 1-0 win over Newcastle thanks to Woltemade own goal

  • Woltemade scores own goal to give Sunderland win
  • Sunderland remain unbeaten at home this season

SUNDERLAND: Sunderland secured a 1-0 victory over Newcastle United thanks to Nick Woltemade’s unfortunate own goal on Sunday which settled the derby in dramatic fashion as the fierce North-East rivals met in the Premier League for the first time in nearly a decade.

Woltemade’s header a minute into the second half proved decisive as fans who marked their calendars after Sunderland’s promotion were treated to an entertaining game that lived up to its billing as one of English football’s fiercest clashes.

Woltemade’s mistake marked just the second Premier League own goal in the Wear-Tyne derby, extending Sunderland’s unbeaten run against their rivals to 10 Premier League games.

Sunderland remain unbeaten at home this season and the win lifted Regis Le Bris’s side to seventh on 26 points, two points off the top four. Newcastle slipped to 12th on 22.

“Derbies are here to win, it doesn’t matter how. I know how painful it was ... losing here,” Sunderland captain Granit Xhaka told Sky Sports, referring to their 3-0 defeat by Newcastle in the FA Cup third round in January 2024.

“They (the fans) motivate us, because of this, much more than before. This team deserves much more than this respect because where we are is amazing. We work very hard and deserve to be where we are.”

FRANTIC FIRST HALF

A lively but scrappy first half failed to produce shots of note, though neither team shirked from physical challenges during 45 frantic minutes.

The half was marred by an injury to Newcastle defender Dan Burn, who took a knee to the chest from Sunderland’s Nordi Mukiele while sliding in for a clearance.

The towering Englishman returned to the field after treatment but signalled to come off less than five minutes later, clearly in pain. The club later said Burn had been taken to hospital.

With barely any goalmouth action in the first half, Sunderland broke the deadlock a minute into the second when Woltemade attempted to clear a cross into the box but headed the ball into his own net as the Stadium of Light erupted.

SUNDERLAND ENERGIZED

The goal energized Sunderland and they pressed high as Newcastle were pegged back into their own box under sustained pressure, desperately making clearances to catch their breath.

Newcastle boss Eddie Howe had seen enough and made a triple substitution around the hour mark to bring on Harvey Barnes, Jacob Murphy and Joe Willock but Sunderland continued to pile on the pressure.

Sunderland’s top scorer Wilson Isidor, also introduced in the second half, gave the home side their first shot on target when he chested down a long ball and acrobatically fired an effort that was palmed away by Aaron Ramsdale.

Sunderland fans gave Woltemade a standing ovation when the Newcastle striker was substituted but soon after they had a heart-in-mouth moment when his replacement Yoane Wissa nearly got on the end of a deflected cross.

Tempers flared in added time when Sunderland keeper Robin Roefs bravely went up to catch the ball and fell heavily on his back when Willock attempted to challenge him, causing both teams to square up as the referee produced four yellow cards.

But when the final whistle blew, it was Sunderland who sealed all three points in their first Premier League meeting with Newcastle since 2016.

“I don’t think it was our finest game. I think the endeavour and the effort was there, but the quality was missing today,” Howe said.

“A game of really few chances for both teams. It was decided on a bit of a freak goal from our perspective that we didn’t defend well enough.”