UEFA are close to finalising plans for a tournament revamp to launch post 2024

UEFA has rejected fears it will schedule Champions League fixtures at weekends as "complete nonsense".

UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin has insisted he will not seek to stage European club football during weekends, pledging to protect the game at all levels.

La Liga president Javier Tebas recently claimed UEFA wants to shift Champions League matches from midweek to weekends and introduce promotion and relegation in the top-tier European competition.

Ceferin revealed Europe's governing body is close to finalising plans for a tournament revamp to launch post 2024, but insisted UEFA will resist changes that could usher in a continental super league.

"We haven't discussed weekends, just to clear that up once and for all," Ceferin told Press Association Sport.

"To be honest, we are the governing body, we have to take care of everything.

"Some leagues don't understand it, they care about themselves only.

"Then the chairman of the Spanish league comes out and speaks complete nonsense that we will play on weekends, launch a super league and that we will do this and do that.

"We are talking about the future of football.

"I cannot go into much detail now, but there's an idea of having more stability while at the same time more inclusion. The idea is that more clubs would play from Europe."

Former lawyer Ceferin insisted UEFA only wants to fine-tune the Champions League, and accepted that games scheduled on the weekends would be damaging to domestic leagues across the continent, despite the fact that would provide a financial incentive for the governing body.

Aleksander Ceferin has spoken out about plans for the Champions League

"We haven't discussed weekends, do we need that? We have a fantastic environment," said Ceferin.

"I know many clubs want it. Many clubs want it to happen.

"But here we will all have to step back a bit and see what is in the common interest in developing football.

"If we played Champions League play-offs during the weekend we could get much more revenue, but at the same time that does damage elsewhere.

"Our role as a governing body is to develop football and also to protect it.

"I cannot say the Premier League, for example, is not my problem.

"The Spanish league boss says UEFA is our competitor. When you say that, you have a problem.

"This is football, we are the governing body of European football, and we have to care about the Premier League, the Slovenian league, the Bulgarian league, the Italian league.

"The ideas are not finalised yet, because we need further discussion with stakeholders. We have an idea but we are seeking feedback.

"There's room for improvement if we will be clever, all of us."