13:20 GMT, Friday, 9 May 2008 14:20 UK
England lands extra Uefa Cup slot
England will have an additional club in next season's Uefa Cup after topping Europe's fair play rankings.
The place will be awarded to the best-behaved Premier League team that does not automatically qualify for European competition next term.
Manchester City are the side who would qualify in the current Premier League fair play standings.
The entire Premiership season counts towards the standings so the qualifier will be decided after Sunday's games.
City, whose final game is at Middlesbrough on Sunday, qualified for the Uefa Cup on the same basis in 2003.
Sven-Goran Eriksson's side currently stand fifth in the fair play table, behind Tottenham, Arsenal, Manchester United and Liverpool - who are all already guaranteed a place in continental competition.
Everton and Fulham are the other teams in contention to qualify, although David Moyes' side will enter the Uefa Cup automatically if they get a point against Newcastle at Goodison Park on Sunday.
E-mail this to a friend
Related to this story:
Ups and downs
(09 May 08 |
Football
)
Who can still qualify for Europe?
(04 May 08 |
Football
)
RELATED INTERNET LINKS:
Fifa
Football on the BBC
Your say - 606
Uefa website
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites
Sport Homepage
|
Football
|
Cricket
|
Rugby Union
|
Rugby League
|
Tennis
|
Golf
|
Motorsport
|
Boxing
|
Athletics
|
Snooker
|
Horse Racing
|
Cycling
|
Disability sport
|
Olympics
|
Sport Relief
|
Other sport...
|
606
|
Sport Academy
|
Health & Fitness
|
Fun and Games
|
Inside Sport
|
Northern Ireland
|
Scotland
|
Wales
Football Contents:
Schedule and statistics
|
My Club
|
Gossip
|
Premier League
|
Championship
|
League One
|
League Two
|
Non League
|
FA Cup
|
League Cup
|
Scottish Premier
|
Scottish League
|
Scottish Cups
|
Welsh
|
Irish
|
Internationals
|
Europe
|
African
|
Women
|
Football Focus
|
Match of the Day
|
Score on BBCi
|
World Football
|
Skills
|
Laws & Equipment
|
Get Involved
|
Your Game
^ Back to top | BBC News Home | BBC Homepage | Feedback | Help | ©