The UEFA Women's Champions League (UWCL) made the first- and second-round qualifying draws for the competition's 2025/26 season on Tuesday, with clubs across Europe battling for the nine remaining tickets into the continental tournament's new 18-team league phase.

Along with 2024/25 UWCL champions Arsenal, eight other clubs earned automatic byes through to the league phase, including France's OL Lyonnes, WSL winners Chelsea FC, and last season's Champions League runners-up Barcelona.

Four more teams will join the nine automatic qualifiers via the 2025/26 competition's Champions Path, with the final five clubs coming from the League Path. 

Under the tournament's new format, 46 winning teams from non-automatically qualified leagues will battle through the Champions Path, with an additional 22 non-league champions hoping to advance via the League Path.

Notable clubs like England's Manchester United, Sweden's Hammarby, and Italy's Roma will enter through the League Path, setting up tense battles as both parity and rising interest spreads through European women's leagues.

Regardless of Path, all first and second qualifying rounds will function as mini-tournaments with single-leg semifinals, a final, and a third-place match, all hosted by one of the participating clubs.

The winners will then advance to a third-and-final qualifying round, with the eventual nine victors guaranteed a spot in the UWCL League Phase while the runners-up head to the brand-new incoming UEFA Europa Cup competition.

The road to the 2025/26 Champions League trophy officially kicks off with first-round qualifying play on July 30th, with the competition's second round mini-tournaments set to begin on August 27th.

The first-ever World Sevens Football (W7F) tournament kicked off in Portugal on Wednesday, as eight European powerhouses compete for the 7v7 soccer venture's inaugural trophy — and a share of its $5 million prize pool.

After winning their first matches on Wednesday, French side Paris Saint-Germain, reigning Bundesliga champion Bayern Munich, and WSL clubs Manchester City and Manchester United all tacked on second group-stage wins early Thursday.

Those two-match leads guarantee each club a spot in Friday's knockout rounds — and a shot at the $2.5 million grand prize — regardless of the outcome of their third and final group play games on Thursday.

Notably, Ajax midfielder Lily Yohannes and Man United keeper Phallon Tullis-Joyce both feature in this week's tournament, adding extra time with their club teams before they report to USWNT camp next week.

For Yohannes's Netherlands team, the W7F road will end in group play, with fellow two-loss clubs AS Roma (Italy), FC Rosengård (Sweden), and Benfica (Portugal) facing the same fate.

With another competition in the works for North America this fall, this week’s tournament is setting the bar for what players, teams, and fans can expect from W7F moving forward.

How to watch the inaugural W7F tournament

After the group stage wraps on Thursday, the first-ever W7F semifinal slate will begin at 10 AM ET on Friday, followed by the championship match at 3 PM ET.

All W7F matches will stream live on DAZN.