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Uefa delegates threaten Fifa walkout 

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Uefa president Aleksander Ceferin, together with colleagues, will stage a walk out at the Fifa Council meeting in Kigali on Friday if the world governing body pushes for a vote on a new Club World Cup and Nations League,National Daily gathered.

Uefa delegates are said to be angry and frustrated over what they perceive as “emotional blackmail” by Fifa president Gianni Infantino to agree to the proposals.
Complaints centre on lack of detail on football’s calendar, the implications and an overall lack of consultation.

A new and expanded Club World Cup – held every year featuring some of the Premier League and Europe’s top clubs – has been proposed by Fifa.

National Daily learnt from BBC, there are two options for an annual tournament, alongside the original plan for a competition every four years.

Fifa’s ruling council is to decide whether and how to proceed at its meeting in Rwanda on Friday.

The Club World Cup is currently held every December and features seven teams from six confederations.

Earlier this year, Infantino proposed expanding it to 24 teams, including 12 from Europe, with the competition to be staged every four years.

Opposition to the plans from Fifa Council members – including Ceferin – resulted in talks being suspended shortly before the start of the World Cup in June.

Both options being put forward would see the current Club World Cup and Confederations Cup abolished, with a new and expanded Club World Cup set up:
Proposal 1: Stage it in place of the Confederations Cup, an eight-nation tournament held in June the year before each World Cup.

Proposal 2: Same plan – but also including options for a yearly competition held either as a pre-season tournament in July to August or in another time slot.

In each case, the competition format, number of teams and division of places between each confederation are yet to be determined, but it will last a maximum of 18 days.

Fifa also wants to introduce a new global Nations League based on the format of Uefa’s Nations League, which started in September.

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The new Club World Cup and global Nations League would be projected to generate $25bn (£17.9bn) in revenue, with the investment coming from a consortium led by Japan’s SoftBank.

But with Fifa facing scrutiny over potential financial links with Saudi Arabia, the documents outline how the organisation “would not enter into a joint venture for this purpose, whether directly or indirectly, with sovereign wealth funds of individual states”.

The Fifa Council will vote on whether to introduce a Nations League including countries from across the world from 2022.

However, it will also decide whether organising and commercialising that competition is Fifa’s responsibility.

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