UEFA


The Union of European Football Associations is one of six continental bodies of governance in association football. It governs football, futsal and beach football in Europe and the transcontinental countries of Russia, Turkey, Azerbaijan, Georgia and Kazakhstan, as well as the West Asian countries of Cyprus, Armenia and Israel. UEFA consists of 55 national association members. After the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, FIFA and UEFA suspended all Russian national teams and clubs from any FIFA and UEFA competitions.
UEFA consists of the national football associations of Europe, and runs national and club competitions including the European Championship, Nations League, Champions League, Europa League, Conference League, and Super Cup, and also controls the prize money, regulations, as well as media rights to those competitions.
Henri Delaunay acted as the first general secretary and Ebbe Schwartz as the first president. The current president is Aleksander Čeferin, a former Football Association of Slovenia president, who was elected as UEFA's seventh president at the 12th Extraordinary UEFA Congress in Athens in September 2016, and automatically became a vice-president of the world body FIFA.

History and membership

UEFA was officially inaugurated on 15 June 1954 in Basel, Switzerland, after consultation between the Italian, French, and Belgian associations. At the founding meeting, 25 members were present. However, six other associations which were not present were still recognised as founding members, bringing the total of founding associations to 31. UEFA grew to more than 50 members by the mid-1990s, as new associations were born out of the fragmentation of the Soviet Union, Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia into their constituent states. UEFA's main headquarters after its foundation were located in Paris, but moved to Bern in 1960. Finally, they moved to Nyon, Switzerland, in 1995, opening the organisation's current headquarters in 1999.

Current members

UEFA membership coincides for the most part with recognition as a sovereign country in Europe, although there are some exceptions. One UN member state and one UN General Assembly non-member observer state are not members. Some UEFA members are not sovereign states, but form part of a larger recognised sovereign state in the context of international law. These include England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales, Gibraltar, Faroe Islands, and Kosovo, however, in the context of these countries, government functions concerning sport tend to be carried at the territorial level coterminous with the UEFA member entity. UEFA have previously declined membership to those deemed as non-sovereign countries like Jersey.
Some UEFA members are transcontinental states and others are considered part of Europe both culturally and politically. Countries which had been members of the Asian Football Confederation were also admitted to the European football association, such as Israel and Kazakhstan. Involving clubs, some UEFA member associations allow teams from outside their association's main territory to take part in their "domestic" competition, for example, AS Monaco in the French League, various Welsh clubs in the English leagues, English-based The New Saints in the Welsh League, or Derry City, situated in Northern Ireland, plays in the Republic of Ireland-based League of Ireland.
On 28 February 2022, due to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine and in accordance with a recommendation by the International Olympic Committee, the UEFA suspended the participation of Russia. The Russian Football Union unsuccessfully appealed the UEFA ban to the Court of Arbitration for Sport, which upheld the ban. On 26 September 2023 the ban was lifted for the Russia U-17 team enabling them to complete in the 2024 Euro U-17 with UEFA saying "by banning children from our competitions, we not only fail to recognise and uphold a fundamental right for their holistic development but we directly discriminate against them". The lifting of the ban also applied to all teams, men and women, of underage players. This was rejected by the FA of Ukraine, England, and Sweden, with all three threatening to boycott matches against Russia.

Europe's Big Five

Five of the UEFA national teams, Germany, Italy, France, England and Spain, have won 12 out of 22 FIFA World Cups for Europe. These five nations also make up the so-called "Europe's Big Five", consisting of Spain's La Liga, England's Premier League, Germany's Bundesliga, Italy's Serie A and France's Ligue 1.

Executive committee

UEFA executive committee is composed of;
President
  • Aleksander Čeferin
Vice-presidents
Members
General secretary
Deputy general secretary
Associate deputy general secretary
  • Michael Heselschwerdt
Treasurer
Associate treasurer
  • Friedrich Stickler
Head of club competitions
  • Tom Barlow
Head of national competitions
  • Tobias Hedtstück

    List of UEFA office holders

;List of presidents of UEFA
PresidentNationalityTerm
Ebbe Schwartz1954–1962
Gustav Wiederkehr1962–1972
Sándor Barcs1972–1973
Artemio Franchi1973–1983
Jacques Georges1983–1990
Lennart Johansson1990–2007
Michel Platini2007–2015
Ángel María Villar2015–2016
Aleksander Čeferin2016–present

;List of secretaries general of UEFA
Secretary generalNationalityTerm
Henri Delaunay1954–1955
Pierre Delaunay1955–1960
Hans Bangerter1960–1989
Gerhard Aigner1989–1999
Gerhard Aigner1999–2003
Lars-Christer Olsson2003–2007
Gianni Infantino
2007
David Taylor2007–2009
Gianni Infantino
2009–2016
Theodore Theodoridis2016–present

Members

Aspiring future members

  • : In December 2015, an application was submitted to UEFA to allow Jersey to take part in international matches, following on from Gibraltar's admission two years earlier. In October 2016, Jersey's bid to join UEFA was rejected, but this decision was appealed to the Court of Arbitration for Sport in June 2017. In September 2017, the CAS ordered the UEFA Congress to hear Jersey's case. In February 2018 a majority of the member associations of UEFA voted against admitting Jersey as a member.

    Former members

Competitions

UEFA continental competitions

National teams:
;Men
;Women
Clubs:
;Men
  • UEFA Champions League
  • UEFA Europa League
  • UEFA Conference League
  • UEFA Super Cup
  • UEFA Youth League
  • UEFA Futsal Champions League
;Women
Amateur:
  • UEFA Regions' Cup
Defunct
National teams:
;Men
Clubs:
;Men
Amateur:
;Men
  • UEFA Amateur Cup
UEFA runs official international competitions in Europe and some countries of Northern, Southwestern and Central Asia for national teams and professional clubs, known as UEFA competitions, some of which are regarded as the world's most prestigious tournaments.
UEFA is the organiser of two of the most prestigious competitions in international football: The UEFA European Championship and the UEFA Nations League. The main competition for men's national teams is the UEFA European Championship, which started in 1958, with the first finals in 1960, and was known as the European Nations Cup until 1964. The UEFA Nations League is the second tournament of UEFA and was introduced in 2018. The tournament largely replaced the international friendly matches previously played on the FIFA International Match Calendar. It will be played every two years.
UEFA also runs national competitions at Under-21, Under-19 and Under-17 levels. For women's national teams, UEFA operates the UEFA Women's Championship for senior national sides as well as Women's Under-19 and Women's Under-17 Championships.

World, Olympic and intercontinental competitions

Intercontinental national teams:
Defunct
  • UEFA–CAF Meridian Cup
Intercontinental clubs:
Defunct
  • Intercontinental Champions' Supercup
  • Intercontinental Cup
Beside continental European competitions for national and their junior teams, the UEFA organizes various qualification male and female tournaments among European national and their junior teams for World Cups and Olympics.
UEFA also organised the UEFA–CAF Meridian Cup with CAF for youth teams in an effort to boost youth football. UEFA launched the UEFA Regions' Cup, for semi-professional teams representing their local region, in 1999. In futsal there is the UEFA Futsal Championship and UEFA Under-19 Futsal Championship. Despite the existence of UEFA's Futsal and Beach soccer committee, UEFA does not organise any beach soccer competitions. International and club beach soccer competitions for UEFA members are organised externally by Beach Soccer Worldwide.
The Italian, German, Spanish, French and Russian men's national teams are the only teams to have won the European football championship in all categories.