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Original publish date: January 23, 2017

CONCACAF restructures Champions League with focus on knock-outs

If you’re CONCACAF, you can never have too much change. Here’s the latest big one.

Matt Montgomery

Did you like the latest iteration of the CONCACAF Champions League? You know the one — it has a group stage with three-team groups.

Yeah, it’s gone, and there’s a new structure in its place.

There’s no group stage now, but there’s a qualifying tournament that will add a single member to the final 16-stage CONCACAF Champions League. Four teams from the United States will make it to the final stage, as will four from Mexico. A host of others make it, too — see below.

But now, rather than playing several times in the group stage, you’re basically thrust into what CONCACAF is calling a “direct-elimination format” — so, a single-elimination tournament, albeit one where each leg is contested home and away. (Did you know that ‘direct elimination’ is most often used to describe fencing tournament brackets?✨)

31 teams, one winner

Qualifying tournament: 16 teams

  • Qualifying tournament for teams from Central America and the Caribbean, with the champion progresses to CONCACAF Champions League

CONCACAF Champions League: 16 teams

  • Four U.S. teams — MLS Cup, Supporters Shield, opposing conference winner, U.S. Open Cup winner
  • Four Mexican teams — Champion and runners-up in Apertura, Clausura
  • Five champions of Central American leagues — Costa Rica, Panama, Honduras, Guatemala, El Salvador
  • Caribbean Club Championship winner
  • Canadian Cup winner
  • Qualifying tournament winner

How are teams seeded?

Places in the two phases will be based on the performances of member associations’ clubs over the nine-year history of the current CONCACAF Champions League.  The ranking results will be revealed in the coming weeks.

I want to know more

Trust me, so do we. Not that it matters right now. Sigh. Here are a couple reads from CONCACAF itself. You know, the horse’s mouth.