Christies Child wrote:http://www.accringtonweb.com/forum/f93/efl-trophy-68319-3.html#post1171903
Had to take from the Accy site as I don't think that an explanation of the format has been explained on here.
Personally I think it's a load of bollocks although I know that at least one Director is quite excited about the new format.
An assessment of its impact on League 1 and 2 teams will be made at the end of the season...but no doubt powerful lobbying by the Premier clubs will have more power than the humble likes of League 1 and 2 clubs.
If we draw say Man Utd away would the game be played at Old Trafford or at Carrington or even transfered to The Globe.
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The EFL has confirmed the format of the EFL Trophy 2016/17 which, for the first time, will include 16 invited teams from clubs with Category One Academies.
A total of 64 clubs will compete in the competition beginning with 16 groups of four teams, each of which will include at least one club from each of Leagues One and Two, along with one invited team. The top two sides in each group will then go into a knockout stage that will culminate in a showpiece final at Wembley Stadium on April 2.
The new look competition will also have an enhanced prize fund with an expected £1.95m being up for grabs, including £10,000 per win and £5,000 per draw during the Group Stage and £100,000 for the eventual winner.
The first 16 clubs with Category One Academies that have been invited to take part in the EFL Trophy 2016/17 are Arsenal, Chelsea, Everton, Leicester City, Liverpool, Manchester City, Manchester United, Middlesbrough, Newcastle United, Southampton, Stoke City, Sunderland, Swansea City, Tottenham Hotspur, West Bromwich Albion and West Ham United.
EFL Chief Executive, Shaun Harvey said: "The new format is intended to rejuvenate this competition and also assist the development of the very best young players in English football. This will help us deliver more and better home grown players which will deliver benefits to the national team and domestic league football at all levels.
"I believe this is the right time to pilot these changes to the EFL Trophy, which we will review at the end of the 2016/17 season following discussions with our clubs and having consulted with the other football bodies and supporter organisations."
A Premier League spokesman said: "The overriding aim of the Elite Player Performance Plan across the Premier League and English Football League is to produce more and better home grown players capable of performing at first team and international levels.
"Participation for a selection of Premier League clubs' teams to take part in the EFL Trophy is an important part of a range developments that both we and the EFL believe will help young, talented players progress physically and mentally on top of the technical aspect of their game developed in the Academy system.
"It is a progressive move by both leagues; one that we welcome."
Competition format
Clubs:
- 48 clubs from League One & Two.
- 16 invited Category One Academy teams.
Eligibility Criteria:
- EFL Clubs – a minimum of 5 ‘First Team’ players in the starting 11 as defined under the competition’s existing rules.
- Invited Clubs – 6 of the starting 11 to be U21 (as at June 30).
Group Stage:
- 16 groups of 4 teams organised on a regionalised basis.
- Groups to include one invited club and at least one club from each of Leagues One & Two.
- Clubs to play each other once, either home or away. Invited clubs will play one home game at the club’s first team stadium.
- Clubs will be awarded 3 points for a win and 1 point for a draw. In the event of a drawn game (after 90 minutes), a penalty shootout will be held with the winning team earning an additional point.
- The top two teams will progress to the Knockout Stage.
Knockout Stage:
- Round 2 (32 teams) will remain regionalised with each group winner being drawn at home to a second placed team from a different qualifying group.
- Round 3 (16 teams) and Round 4 (8 teams) will be ‘free’ draws.
- Semi-finals (4 teams) will be a 'free’ draw and will consist of single ties played at the stadium of the club drawn first in each tie.
- If scores are level after 90 minutes in Rounds 2, 3 and 4, the game will be determined by the taking of penalties. The EFL will confirm arrangements for the Semi-Finals and Final in due course following further consultation.
Dates:
- Group Stage
- w/c 29th August 2016
- w/c 3rd October 2016
- w/c 7th November 2016
- Round 2 - w/c 5th December 2016
- Round 3 - w/c 9th January 2017
- Round 4 - w/c 23rd January 2017
- Semi- Final - w/c 20th February 2017
- Final - 2nd April 2017 (Wembley Stadium)
The date of the draw for the group stage will be announced in due course.
Match Proceeds:
After deduction of match expenses, all proceeds will be split:
- 45% Home Club
- 45% Away Club
- 10% to the pool account
Invited clubs will donate all or some of their share of gate receipts to a fund that will be shared equally by League One and Two clubs.
Group Stage - Invited Clubs will donate their 45% share to the fund.
Knockout Stage - Invited Clubs will retain 25% of their share and donate 20% to the fund.
Semi-finals & Final - Invited Clubs will retain 30% of their share and donate 15% to the fund.
Read more at EFL Trophy: Format confirmed for 2016/17
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Christies Child wrote:If we draw say Man Utd away would the game be played at Old Trafford or at Carrington or even transfered to The Globe.
Invited clubs will play one home game at the club’s first team stadium.
marky No.1 wrote:Only one top team in each League so don't think you can get that Bill. The academy team can only play once at home
Christies Child wrote:Not sure how much truth there is in this report but it appears that Man Utd have declined an invitation to partake......probably because they don't want to get their possible future stars knees dirty playing on the likes of the Crown Ground at Accrington.....
SupermarketShrimp wrote:These kids will be worth millions and I wouldn't be risking that for one league 2 carthorse with a chip on his shoulder about being released giving one of them a reducer.
RedRedWine wrote:They should scrap the proposed new format and revert to the one of the previous few seasons. I've actually enjoyed the much derided competition, not just because we've done well in it but because it throws up a lot of local games which are more interesting IMO. I'm also all for league three if it means a regionalised step as the bottom tier, so long as the new teams come from the conference and are not reserve/B teams.
I gather very few clubs voted against the proposed chances to the competitions format and one of them was Accrington. It would be interesting to know how our club voted and their reasons for doing so in any case..... But I think we can all guess how and why we voted.... Liverpool FC (cough XI) springs to mind.
Wild Bill wrote:marky No.1 wrote:Only one top team in each League so don't think you can get that Bill. The academy team can only play once at home
Yup but one of them would be nice. Still think you'd get a half decent crowd at Anfield or Old Trafford if they priced it right and we would still take a good few too just to say we'd watched Morecambe play there.
Gone_Shrimping wrote:
I thought I had seen somewhere that Morecambe also voted against it but not seen any official statement about our stance on the new format.
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