
Former Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson, UEFA's coaching ambassador, said he did not like to see players walking around the pitch exhausted and that extra-time rarely succeeded in producing a winner. Ferguson said it was important to consider the protection of the game.
He said “I don't think we like to see players exhausted in extra-time and when the whistle goes at the end of 90 minutes, I've always the feeling it's going to go to penalty kicks. You saw in the last Champions League final, players walking about... it's inevitable that it goes to penalty kicks so the question is how we can improve it?”
UEFA's chief technical officer Ioan Lupescu said “Some coaches said it could be direct to penalties, others thought that could be an advantage for the smaller teams who could defend more. One thing that is very clear is that these days the players play so many matches and we raised the question whether from their point of view it is still worthwhile having extra-time.”
UEFA could have scrapped extra-time without the approval of the game's lawmakers, the Independent Football Association Board. IFAB's Law 10, which determines the outcome of a match, states a winning team can be determined by away goals, extra time or penalty kicks.
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