Image used for representation purposes only. (Photo | Facebook)
Football

Asian Champions League to expand from 24 to 32 teams

The move will take effect from next season once it is signed off by the Asian Football Confederation's executive committee, the AFC said, hailing it as a "landmark expansion".

AFP

KUALA LUMPUR: The Asian Champions League is set to expand from 24 to 32 teams, the region's governing body for football said Tuesday, adding it will "promote inclusivity and excellence".

The move will take effect from next season once it is signed off by the Asian Football Confederation's executive committee, the AFC said, hailing it as a "landmark expansion".

The group phase of the continent's top club competition is split into two sections, East and West, before going into the knockout rounds.

The structure will remain broadly the same but the two groups will from 2026-27 increase from 12 to 16 teams each.

The top six in each group will automatically progress to the last 16 while clubs in seventh to 10th will go through to a newly established knockout stage playoff.

The tournament has been branded the AFC Champions League Elite since 2024/25.

The last 16 and quarter-final matches in the 2025/26 campaign take place this week in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.

'TN’s final warning': Stalin threatens Centre with anti-delimitation agitation if southern states are harmed

West Asia conflict could push 25 lakh Indians into poverty: UNDP report

Mamata claims 'logical discrepancy' not recognised term under ECI, alleges it was used in Bengal to benefit BJP

'Will cooperate with new govt in Bihar', Nitish assures colleagues at his last cabinet meeting

Noida unrest continues despite wage hike; police deployed, stone-pelting reported

SCROLL FOR NEXT