Next Story
Newszop

Chelsea Champions League ban truth confirmed after UEFA talks as Enzo Maresca task obvious

Send Push

Chelsea will not face a ban next season should they finish in the top five.

Thanks to the ’s improved UEFA coefficient this year, the team finishing fifth will also qualify for Europe’s premier competition, rather than just the traditional top four.

Enzo Maresca’s side remain in contention to do so, although both Nottingham Forest and have a game in hand.

READ MORE:

READ MORE:

final fixture of the 2024/25 Premier League campaign will be against top-five rivals Forest next weekend. Should they get the job done, the London club will return to the Champions League for the first time since the 2022/23 season.

However, the ownership situation at Stamford Bridge had posed a potential obstacle.

Under English manager Liam Rosenior, the French club had been enjoying a strong run of form and were in contention for Champions League qualification right up until the final day of the Ligue 1 season, which took place on Saturday.

UEFA has long maintained a firm stance against multi-club ownership models in which two clubs controlled by the same entity compete in the same competition.

According to a earlier this month, to ensure a compliant structure was in place in the event their sister club also qualified.

The two main options to meet UEFA's requirements are either reducing the ownership stake in one of the clubs, or placing one of them into a blind trust to ensure the owner cannot exert influence over both.

This is the approach taken by Evangelos Marinakis, who reduced his control over one of his clubs as a precaution in case both Forest and Olympiakos qualified for the Champions League.

Fortunately for Chelsea, this will no longer be an issue next season, regardless of which European competition they qualify for. Strasbourg suffered a dramatic 3-2 defeat to Le Havre on Saturday evening, conceding a 99th-minute penalty.

The result leaves them seventh in the Ligue 1 table, missing out on European qualification by three points and the Champions League by four.

While it’s a bitter blow for Chelsea’s sister club and their shared ownership, it means the Blues can secure Champions League football next weekend without the need for BlueCO to change their Strasbourg ownership structure to satisfy UEFA’s multi-club rules.

Loving Newspoint? Download the app now