How English clubs got smart to dominate this season’s Champions League

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It has been quite the season in the Champions League for Premier League clubs.

All six teams are still in business in European football’s elite club competition.

Arsenal, Liverpool, Tottenham, Chelsea and Manchester City are guaranteed to be in the last 16 of the Champions League.

And they could be joined by Newcastle, if they navigate a two-legged play-off against Monaco or Qarabag.

England is the only country to have every team – nine of them – through to the knockout rounds across the three European competitions.

‘An advantage even before a ball is kicked’ – Balague

Spain, which like England gained one of the two European Performance Spots for this season, has not fared well so far.

Only Barcelona are sure of the being in the last 16, with Atletico Madrid and Real Madrid in the playoff round. Athletic Club and Villarreal have been eliminated.

Whereas Spanish clubs used to dominate in Europe – Real Madrid won the competition twice in the past four seasons – this time they lost all but one of 10 meetings against Premier League teams in the group stage. La Liga clubs failed to score in seven matches and were beaten by an aggregate score of 21-5.

BBC Sport columnist Guillem Balague describes it as “a near-perfect storm” which has been driven by “collective wealth, elite decision-making off the pitch, plus a league environment that forces constant tactical evolution”.

Six Premier League sides sit inside the top 10 of the Deloitte Football Money League, while 50% of the top 30 come from the English top flight.

Balague added: “The Premier League has the biggest budgets, but also professional structures – recruitment departments, data analysis, coaching teams and sporting directors – all working at a level that allows clubs to choose better profiles of players and managers.

“There is an advantage even before a ball is kicked.”

Balague believes only Paris St-Germain and Bayern Munich can match English clubs in all the four areas of “organised attack, structured defence, attacking transition and defensive transition”.

English clubs are now fully attuned to the European style, Balague says.

“Rather than imposing something radically different, they are adapting to what Europe now requires,” he said.

“Defensive composure, winning the duels, squeezing space and time, control of transitions and clarity in decisive moments have become more important than dominating by possession. All prepared in training by top managers and coaches.”

Balague pointed out that success in the league phase does not mean anything. The competition only really begins in the knockout rounds “where English domination has been far less pronounced”.

‘The days of stupid English money are gone’ – Honigstein

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Of the seven meetings between German and English clubs in the league phase the Bundesliga clubs only picked up two victories.

But Bayern Munich, Bayer Leverkusen and Borussia Dortmund are all through to the knockout stages, although only Bayern go straight into the last 16.

German football expert Raphael Honigstein says few people are placing too much focus on the English success so far.

“The Premier League’s dominance is just denoted as a matter of fact,” Honigstein said.

“Kicker today wrote that the top eight reflect the hegemony [dominance] of the Premier League, or reinforces it. So it’s just seen as a given.”

In the past week both Dortmund and Eintracht Frankfurt lost to Spurs, who are languishing in 14th in the Premier League.

It is not just about the money but how it is being used too, though.

“The days of stupid English money are gone,” Honigstein added. “Suddeutsche Zeitung wrote that the Premier League had learned to actually use its riches more effectively, which explains their improved performances relative to recent years.”

Honigstein also said Bodo/Glimt and Qarabag having enjoyed success they could not have achieved in the old group-stage format.

He added: “The fact that Inter and Paris St-Germain, last year’s finalists, both didn’t qualify for the top eight suggests that there is a healthy sense of competition and a bit of randomness.

“I haven’t seen anyone make the link that the Premier League dominance somehow invalidates or diminishes the current format.

Premier League ‘increasingly resembles the Super League’

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Napoli know the dominance of the Premier League only too well after Wednesday night.

Antonio Conte’s side suffered a 3-2 home defeat by Chelsea which ended their Champions League campaign.

Atalanta, Inter Milan and Juventus are still active but failed to make the top eight.

Davide Chinellato, the UK correspondent for La Gazzetta dello Sport, says this season has only underlined opinions about the Premier League.

“Italian teams can win individual games [Atalanta beat Chelsea 2-1] but over the course of a season everyone knows Premier League sides are simply stronger,” he said.

“They have more money, better players and more stars.

“When a fringe Premier League player like Scott McTominay can move to Serie A and dominate, or when Serie A clubs consistently target players on the margins in England, the gap becomes clear.”

Chinellato added that the view in Italy is that the Premier League “increasingly resembles the Super League it claimed to oppose”.

He said: “It risks starting to look like unfair competition – even if that dominance has not yet fully translated into Champions League titles.

“My sense is that it will only become a real problem once Premier League teams begin winning consistently.”

Domestic financial crisis the focus in France

France may have the holders of the competition, Paris St-Germain, but its sides have not had a great season.

Nice failed to make the league phase, and Marseille are out now too. Monaco and PSG only made the knockout play-offs.

Matt Spiro, a France-based writer and host of ‘The French Football Show’ on YouTube, says there has been “little discussion” of the Premier League’s performance.

PSG’s failure to make the top eight is seen as a “clear setback” for the country’s “only realistic title contender”. They did manage to win the competition via the play-offs last season, however.

“French clubs are preoccupied with the domestic financial crisis,” Spiro said. “Many even rely on Premier League spending to balance their books, counting on big transfer fees for Ligue 1 talent.

“In today’s L’Equipe, there is one reference to English dominance, but that carries little sense of alarm.”

The theme again was the new format “has created more opportunities”.

Sprio added: “Last season, with Brest, Lille and Monaco all impressing in the league phase and PSG going on to win the tournament, the revamped competition appeared to generate renewed interest in France.

“For now, there is no real trepidation about English performances.

    • 19 hours ago
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The BBC World Service’s Sport Today show debated the topic on Thursday.

Filippo Ricci, the La Liga correspondent for Gazzetta dello Sport, said the best young stars now all go to England.

Ricci told the story of Carlos Vicente, who was considered to be Alaves’ best player. Such is the financial strength of English football that on Wednesday he joined Championship club Birmingham.

French football expert Julien Laurens believes the English dominance paints a picture of a low-quality season in which “every league is suffering because of the calendar and the fixtures”.

Constantin Eckner, a German football expert, backs the assertion that the competition is only just getting going.

“We don’t know how Tottenham or maybe Liverpool will do in the knockout stage,” Eckner said. “There’s still time and maybe the English dominance won’t be that overbearing.”

    • 16 August 2025

Watch highlights of every Champions League game from 22:00 on Wednesday on BBC iPlayer and the BBC Sport website and app.

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Archer named in England side for first T20

Fast bowler Jofra Archer has been named in England’s team to face Sri Lanka in the first T20 match after recovering from injury.

The 30-year-old missed the final two Tests of England’s 4-1 Ashes defeat with a side strain and was not initially named in the squad for the three-match T20 series.

He was expected to make his return at the T20 World Cup next month but is in the XI for Friday’s match in Kandy.

Opener Ben Duckett misses out with a bruised finger so Jos Buttler will open the batting on his record-equalling 401st appearance in an England shirt.

England beat Sri Lanka by 53 runs to clinch a one-day international series win on Tuesday.

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What awaits interim boss Lindsay in Northern Ireland women’s job?

It was announced on Wednesday that Kris Lindsay had been appointed as Tanya Oxtoby’s successor as Northern Ireland boss on an interim basis.

Lindsay, who was previously a first-team coach when Gail Redmond was interim NI manager in 2023, will take charge for the World Cup 2027 qualifiers in March away to Switzerland and at home to Turkey.

The former Dungannon Swifts manager certainly has a lot to sort out between now and their first qualifier on Tuesday, 3 March, which is in only 34 days’ time.

    • 1 day ago

Appoint a captain

Simone MagillGetty Images

Lindsay has an early big decision to make in naming an interim captain in the absence of regular skipper Simone Magill.

Magill, who succeeded Marissa Callaghan as her country’s captain in October 2024, will miss the entirety of this World Cup qualification campaign as she is expecting her first child.

There are a number of players who have worn the armband in recent years when Magill has been absent through injury.

The experienced Nadene Caldwell was captain in the two-legged Nations League play-off defeat by Iceland in October.

Laura Rafferty and Sarah McFadden, when they have been fit and included in the squad, were also named skipper on a few occasions under Oxtoby.

Jackie Burns and Rebecca McKenna, who are two of the first names on the team sheet alongside Lauren Wade, have all also captained the side on special occasions such as celebrating their respective 50th caps.

Although it is a young squad, there are evidently a number of experienced and consistent performers who could lead the team out against Switzerland.

Find a consistent striker

Kascie Weir celebrates scoringInpho

Northern Ireland not only lose Magill’s leadership abilities for this campaign, but also her knack for being in the right place at the right time to score goals.

The 31-year-old has won 95 caps and has scored 25 goals, putting her second in the NI women’s goalscoring charts behind Rachel Furness.

A direct replacement will be hard to come by but there are some young options for Lindsay to choose from.

For the home leg of the Nations League play-off against Iceland, Oxtoby went for Glentoran duo Kascie Weir and Emily Wilson up front.

Weir at 19 is an exciting prospect who netted the winner against Romania, while Wilson can also operate out wide but has been a constant goal threat for the Glens in recent seasons when playing through the middle.

Kerry Beattie, who has found form at Aberdeen, was on the bench for both legs in October and is playing regularly in Scotland.

Choose backroom staff

Gail RedmondInpho

He may only be in charge for two games but Lindsay will want to have the right staff around him to ensure his side can hit the ground running.

Oxtoby had a sizeable backroom staff and a number of assistant coaches during her tenure.

The first was Stuart McLaren, who left his role in April 2025 with former Wales international Loren Dykes then being involved in a number of camps alongside her role as first-team coach at Bristol City.

Oxtoby added Laura Heffernan, manager of DLR Waves in the League of Ireland Women’s Premier Division, to her backroom team for the play-off against Iceland and it will be interesting to see if her and Dykes’ services are retained by Lindsay.

For Lindsay’s brief spell as Dungannon Swifts boss, he had Chris Wright as his assistant but he is currently working as head of NIFL phase at Portadown.

Get domestic-based players up to speed

Nadene CaldwellGetty Images

A challenge that all Northern Ireland women’s managers face at this time of year is getting domestic-based players, who are presently only undertaking pre-season, ready for international games.

While those that play in England and Scotland are in the thick of their seasons and playing regularly, those that ply their trade in the Women’s Premiership have been without competitive action since October.

There were nine domestic-based players in the last squad who will have had to be doing their own training on top of pre-season with their clubs to be considered fit and sharp enough for for selection.

Shore up the defence

Laura RaffertyGetty Images

Lindsay faces a baptism of fire with a first game away to the group’s top seeds Switzerland and then a home game against in-form Turkey four days later.

Against the Swiss, who featured in last summer’s Euros, in particular, NI will want to try and stay in the game as long as possible.

Starting to keep clean sheets again will be a key aim in these two games and the campaign as a whole.

NI only managed one clean sheet in their eight fixtures in 2025, in a 1-0 win over Romania at Windsor Park in April.

They conceded 15 goals across those games, including two or more in five fixtures.

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  • Northern Ireland Sport
  • Northern Ireland Women’s Football Team
  • Football
  • Women’s Football
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What awaits interim boss Lindsay in Northern Ireland women’s job?

It was announced on Wednesday that Kris Lindsay had been appointed as Tanya Oxtoby’s successor as Northern Ireland boss on an interim basis.

Lindsay, who was previously a first-team coach when Gail Redmond was interim NI manager in 2023, will take charge for the World Cup 2027 qualifiers in March away to Switzerland and at home to Turkey.

The former Dungannon Swifts manager certainly has a lot to sort out between now and their first qualifier on Tuesday, 3 March, which is in only 34 days’ time.

    • 1 day ago

Appoint a captain

Simone MagillGetty Images

Lindsay has an early big decision to make in naming an interim captain in the absence of regular skipper Simone Magill.

Magill, who succeeded Marissa Callaghan as her country’s captain in October 2024, will miss the entirety of this World Cup qualification campaign as she is expecting her first child.

There are a number of players who have worn the armband in recent years when Magill has been absent through injury.

The experienced Nadene Caldwell was captain in the two-legged Nations League play-off defeat by Iceland in October.

Laura Rafferty and Sarah McFadden, when they have been fit and included in the squad, were also named skipper on a few occasions under Oxtoby.

Jackie Burns and Rebecca McKenna, who are two of the first names on the team sheet alongside Lauren Wade, have all also captained the side on special occasions such as celebrating their respective 50th caps.

Although it is a young squad, there are evidently a number of experienced and consistent performers who could lead the team out against Switzerland.

Find a consistent striker

Kascie Weir celebrates scoringInpho

Northern Ireland not only lose Magill’s leadership abilities for this campaign, but also her knack for being in the right place at the right time to score goals.

The 31-year-old has won 95 caps and has scored 25 goals, putting her second in the NI women’s goalscoring charts behind Rachel Furness.

A direct replacement will be hard to come by but there are some young options for Lindsay to choose from.

For the home leg of the Nations League play-off against Iceland, Oxtoby went for Glentoran duo Kascie Weir and Emily Wilson up front.

Weir at 19 is an exciting prospect who netted the winner against Romania, while Wilson can also operate out wide but has been a constant goal threat for the Glens in recent seasons when playing through the middle.

Kerry Beattie, who has found form at Aberdeen, was on the bench for both legs in October and is playing regularly in Scotland.

Choose backroom staff

Gail RedmondInpho

He may only be in charge for two games but Lindsay will want to have the right staff around him to ensure his side can hit the ground running.

Oxtoby had a sizeable backroom staff and a number of assistant coaches during her tenure.

The first was Stuart McLaren, who left his role in April 2025 with former Wales international Loren Dykes then being involved in a number of camps alongside her role as first-team coach at Bristol City.

Oxtoby added Laura Heffernan, manager of DLR Waves in the League of Ireland Women’s Premier Division, to her backroom team for the play-off against Iceland and it will be interesting to see if her and Dykes’ services are retained by Lindsay.

For Lindsay’s brief spell as Dungannon Swifts boss, he had Chris Wright as his assistant but he is currently working as head of NIFL phase at Portadown.

Get domestic-based players up to speed

Nadene CaldwellGetty Images

A challenge that all Northern Ireland women’s managers face at this time of year is getting domestic-based players, who are presently only undertaking pre-season, ready for international games.

While those that play in England and Scotland are in the thick of their seasons and playing regularly, those that ply their trade in the Women’s Premiership have been without competitive action since October.

There were nine domestic-based players in the last squad who will have had to be doing their own training on top of pre-season with their clubs to be considered fit and sharp enough for for selection.

Shore up the defence

Laura RaffertyGetty Images

Lindsay faces a baptism of fire with a first game away to the group’s top seeds Switzerland and then a home game against in-form Turkey four days later.

Against the Swiss, who featured in last summer’s Euros, in particular, NI will want to try and stay in the game as long as possible.

Starting to keep clean sheets again will be a key aim in these two games and the campaign as a whole.

NI only managed one clean sheet in their eight fixtures in 2025, in a 1-0 win over Romania at Windsor Park in April.

They conceded 15 goals across those games, including two or more in five fixtures.

Related topics

  • Northern Ireland Sport
  • Northern Ireland Women’s Football Team
  • Football
  • Women’s Football
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France may be ‘too tough’ for injury-hit Ireland

Five-time Six Nations winner Conor Murray admits he is “worried” about some of Ireland’s issues heading into next week’s mouthwatering tournament opener against France in Paris.

Ireland, who relinquished their title to Les Bleus in 2025, will travel to Stade de France without several key players through injury and the suspended Bundee Aki.

France, who hammered the Irish 42-27 in Dublin last year, are also without a host of established internationals, but Murray feels Fabien Galthie’s side will have the edge in the French capital next week.

“I think France will be a little bit too tough for the first game,” Murray, who won 125 Ireland caps, said on the Ireland Rugby Social podcast.

“I hate saying that because I’m recently out of the dressing room, but I do think it’ll be a little bit too far to go.

“I do, however, think they’ll put in a performance and we’ll see some sort of shape to what Ireland are trying to do and hopefully a few of the new guys come in and hold their head high after a game like that.”

Murray added: “I’m worried now with the front-row issues and the loose-head situation and the way it ties into the story of the South Africa game [in which the Irish scrum was decimated during November’s Test in Dublin].

    • 20 hours ago
    • 1 day ago

‘So many guys playing OK at best’

Mack Hansen and Hugo KeenanInpho

Ireland head coach Andy Farrell must pick from a depleted squad after a spate of injuries which has robbed him of seasoned Test players like Andrew Porter, Hugo Keenan, Mack Hansen and Robbie Henshaw.

But Farrell’s Ireland defied the odds when they secured an impressive opening win over France in Marseille in the 2024 Six Nations with a performance that emphatically eased fears of a post-World Cup hangover.

“The Farrell factor is the bit that balances it up,” said Andrew Trimble, who won 70 Ireland caps between 2005 and 2017.

“On paper, it feels like the scrum is more important than ever. [There are] one or two other injuries, a handful of lads you’d want to be in better form, and then no stability or consistency at 10.

“There’s so many guys all playing OK at best. If there were so many young lads banging on the door, then you’d go ‘OK, a spark of youth and enthusiasm to ignite this team’ but there’s only a couple of those guys.

“All of that on paper says we can’t go to Paris and be excited, but Farrell always finds a way to get something out of these guys. He’s done it less recently but he has enough credit in the bank.”

Murray, who played in the 38-17 win in Marseille two years ago, echoed Trimble’s comments and insisted Farrell will use his motivational skills to ensure Ireland improve on the standards that saw them fall to New Zealand and South Africa in November.

“Talking about the Marseille game in ’24, we were questioned about form and not clicking.

“The last game we had played was the quarter-final against New Zealand and we had the most detailed review of a game I had in my career.

“We looked at that game and Andy pointed out in black and white so many situations where we could have been better, that last 20 minutes against New Zealand when we struggled and tried to find a try.

Jack Crowley, Harry Byrne and Sam Prendergast pictured in Ireland training in PortugalInpho

For Ireland centurion Rory Best, fly-half and the back three are Farrell’s most pressing selection headaches.

Back-three players Hugo Keenan, Mack Hansen, Calvin Nash, Jimmy O’Brien, Shayne Bolton and Jordan Larmour are all missing, while Sam Prendergast, Jack Crowley and Harry Byrne are all vying for the out-half spot.

Leinster are once again most heavily represented in Farrell’s squad and Best feels finding cohesion quickly will be crucial given the differences in how the province and the national team have been playing lately.

“Leinster in the last number of years up until this year have played very similarly to how Ireland have played, hence why [former Leinster assistant] Andrew Goodman came in to be the Ireland attack coach because they were so similar,” said Best, who captained Ireland to the 2018 Grand Slam.

“You’re lifting these players from one team into the other with the same system. Leinster this season more than last are playing differently, they’re kicking the ball a lot more. Even against Ulster at the Aviva, you never would have seen Leinster get into the opposition 22 and put the ball up. Andy is definitely not going to do that.

“They will kick the ball a lot because away from home you need to. When you get in the pressure of the Stade de France, you will go into the automatic response which is what you’ve been trained every day at your club.

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