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The UEFA Champions League is widely regarded as the most prestigious club tournament in the world, second only to the FIFA World Cup in global appeal.
For players and clubs alike, participating in the competition represents the peak of European football achievement.
However, for a select few clubs, that dream has been dashed not by on-pitch failure but by disciplinary sanctions.
Over the years, four clubs have been banned from competing in the Champions League due to various infractions. These bans not only denied them the chance to contend for European glory but also carried significant financial and reputational consequences.
Below is a list of the teams that have been barred from European football’s grandest stage:
1. Be?ikta? (Turkey) – One-Year Ban (2013)
Be?ikta?, one of Turkey’s most storied clubs, earned a place in the 2013/14 Champions League after progressing through the qualifying rounds, defeating Norway’s Tromsø. However, they were disqualified before the group stage due to involvement in a domestic match-fixing scandal.
Their appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) was dismissed, and Tromsø—whom they had previously eliminated—was reinstated in their place.
Notably, no Turkish team has ever won the Champions League, with Galatasaray’s 2000 UEFA Cup triumph remaining the country’s greatest European success.
2. Fenerbahçe (Turkey) – Two-Year Ban (2013)
Fenerbahçe, another Turkish football powerhouse, was also implicated in the same match-fixing scandal. In 2013, UEFA handed them a two-year suspension from all European competitions.
Despite lodging an appeal, the Istanbul-based club failed to overturn the decision, marking a significant blow to their international ambitions and casting a shadow over Turkish football.
3. Juventus (Italy) – One-Year Ban (2023/24 Season)
Italian giants Juventus were banned from all UEFA competitions for the 2023/24 season after breaching Financial Fair Play (FFP) rules.
The punishment, separate from the infamous 2006 Calciopoli scandal, underscored UEFA’s renewed commitment to enforcing financial regulations. Juventus, who have previously won the Champions League In 1985 and 1996, were forced to miss out on continental football altogether for a season.
4. FK Pobeda (North Macedonia) – Eight-Year Ban (2009)
FK Pobeda received UEFA’s longest-ever Champions League-related suspension in 2009 after being found guilty of match-fixing in a 2004 qualifier against FC Pyunik of Armenia.
Following an investigation that uncovered suspicious betting patterns, UEFA banned the club for eight years. Additionally, club president Aleksandar Zabrcanec and player Nikolce Zdraveski were handed lifetime bans from all football activities.
The club’s suspension was lifted in 2017, but the damage to its reputation lingered. (The Nation)