Title-holders Mamelodi
Sundowns of South Africa are among eight winners of the CAF Champions League
who will compete in the premier African club competition next season.
AFP
report continues:
The
draws for the 2017 preliminary and first rounds are scheduled to be made in
Cairo Wednesday, officials from several national football associations told
AFP.
Only
Al Ahly of Egypt, TP Mazembe from the Democratic Republic of Congo and Enyimba
of Nigeria have staged successful defences since the 1964 launch of the
Champions League.
Ahly
(2005-2006 and 2012-2013) and Mazembe (1967-1968 and 2009-2010) twice won
back-to-back titles.
Enyimba,
the only Nigerian outfit to conquer the continent in the premier club
competition, triumphed in 2003 and 2004.
A
further eight defending champions reached successive finals, but had to settle
for runners-up prizes.
Record
eight-time title-holders Ahly, fellow Egyptian side Zamalek and Esperance and
Etoile du Sahel of Tunisia are among the teams who will challenge Sundowns, the
second African champions from South Africa after Orlando Pirates.
Mazembe
and V Club of DR Congo and Wydad Casablanca of Morocco complete the list of
former winners who have confirmed their participation.
Five-time
champions Zamalek were losing finalists this year, going down 3-1 on aggregate
to Sundowns, and Wydad reached the semi-finals.
The
other losing 2016 semi-finalists, ZESCO United of Zambia, failed to qualify and
compete in the second-tier CAF Confederation Cup instead.
Other
confirmed entrants include three former Confederation Cup title-holders -- AC
Leopards of Congo Brazzaville, FUS Rabat of Morocco and Stade Malien of Mali.
Three
winners of the now defunct African Cup Winners Cup, Al Merrikh of Sudan, Enugu
Rangers of Nigeria and Horoya of Guinea, are also in the line-up.
Sundowns
flopped at the FIFA Club World Cup this month, finishing sixth of seven clubs
afer losses to Kashima Antlers of Japan and Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors of South
Korea.
But
the Pretoria outfit scored financially, pocketing US$1 million after two
matches in Japan. They played 14 matches to conquer Africa and collect US$1.5
million.
A
huge incentive for Sundowns and the rest of the 2017 field is increased
financial rewards in a new format with first prize increasing by 66.6 percent
to US$2.5 million.
The
runners-up will receive US$1.25 million, semi-finalists US$875,000,
quarter-finalists US$650,000 and the eight group qualifiers who fail to make
the knockout stage US$550,000 each.
CAF
have cut the two-leg qualifying phase from three rounds to two and doubled the
number of qualifiers for the mini-leagues from eight to 16.
Clubs
eliminated at the last-32 stage of qualifying get a second shot at African
glory by dropping to the Confederation Cup, which star-studded Mazembe won this
season.
The
precise number of 2017 entrants is unknown with CAF giving no pre-draw information,
not even confirming the date for a secretive event held behind closed doors.
After
some previous qualifying rounds draws, there has been an unexplained delay of
several days before they are released.
While
the 54 member states and associates Reunion and Zanzibar are eligible to enter
one or two clubs, depending on previous results, financial constraints prevent
some doing so.
Officials
from Libyan outfit Al Ahly Tripoli say they will be in the draw, despite the
likelihood of being unable to host Champions League matches for a second
successive season.
While
football is being staged in the North African state, CAF consider post Moamer
Kadhafi era conflict in the country too dangerous to host international
fixtures.
Among the footballers most looking forward to the draw will be those from Ferroviario Beira of Mozambique, a club formed 92 years ago and set to make their Champions League debut.
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