Aleksander Ceferin was re-elected unopposed for a third term of four years as president of UEFA at a meeting of European football’s governing body in Lisbon on Wednesday, reports AFP. The 55-year-old Slovenian lawyer, first elected in 2016
following the downfall of Frenchman Michel Platini, will now remain in the role until 2027. “I would like to thank you from the bottom of my heart for your unanimous support. It really means a lot to me,” Ceferin told delegates at the UEFA Congress in the Portuguese capital. The UEFA Congress came just a few weeks after Gianni Infantino was re-elected as president of the sport’s world governing body FIFA, also unopposed. Ceferin recently successfully opposed proposals by Infantino to hold the World Cup every two years, and his re-election by acclamation comes after he also fought off the breakaway European Super League project during his second term. He will now oversee the introduction of a new format for the Champions League starting next year. However, the Super League is not dead yet, with Real Madrid, Barcelona and Juventus