2019–20 in Belgian football explained
The following article is a summary of the 2019–20 football season in Belgium, which was the 117th season of competitive football in the country and ran from July 2019 until August 2020.
National teams
Belgium national football team
See main article: article and Belgium national football team.
After starting with four wins out of four during the previous season, Belgium continued its stroll through UEFA Euro 2020 qualifying Group I, also winning all remaining six matches and thereby qualifying for UEFA Euro 2020 with a perfect record. The tournament itself was however postponed to 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe.[1] and both the preparation matches against Portugal and Switzerland in March which were to be held in Qatar as well as two other matches in June against opponents which were still to be announced, were cancelled.
See main article: article and UEFA Euro 2020 qualifying Group I.
Belgium was to play Denmark, Finland and Russia in Group B in June 2020, however all matches were postponed to 2021.[1]
Friendlies
Four friendlies were to be played in preparation for the UEFA Euro 2020 tournament, the first two would have been played in March in Qatar against Portugal and Switzerland, while the two others were scheduled for June, with the opponents still unknown. Eventually, all matches were cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe.
Belgium women's national football team
See main article: article and Belgium women's national football team.
Qualification for the UEFA Women's Euro 2021 started perfect for the Belgians with four straight wins, with also Switzerland holding the maximum after four games. A few weeks before the crucial match between the joint-leaders, all remaining matches were postponed to the following season, due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe. The UEFA Women's Euro 2021 tournament was pushed back a year to become the UEFA Women's Euro 2021, to avoid coinciding with both the 2020 Summer Olympics and UEFA Euro 2020.[2] [3] [4] Meanwhile, the team did compete in the 2020 Algarve Cup, reaching 6th place out of 8 teams, while two other friendlies were cancelled.
UEFA Women's Euro 2021 qualifying
See main article: article.
Friendlies
Belgium national under-21 football team
See main article: article and Belgium national under-21 football team.
The U21 started their 2021 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualifying campaign and were scheduled to play their first five matches. However the final match against Bosnia-Herzegovina was postponed to the following season due to COVID-19.
Belgium national under-19 football team
See main article: article and Belgium national under-19 football team.
The U19 took part in the 2020 UEFA European Under-19 Championship qualifying campaign. The team easily passed the qualifying round, moving into the elite round, before the tournament was cancelled entirely and qualification was stopped.
Qualifying round
Elite Round
Friendlies
Men's football
League season
Promotion and relegation
The following teams had achieved promotion or suffered relegation going into the 2019–20 season.
League | Promoted to league | Relegated from league |
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First Division A |
|
|
First Division B |
|
|
First Division Amateur Division |
|
|
Second Division Amateur Division | -
- Namur Fosses
- Stockay-Warfusée
- Tienen
- Verlaine
- Zwevezele
|
|
Third Division Amateur Division | -
- Habay
- Jodoigne
- Kosova Schaerbeek
- Linden
- Lochristi Ninove Oostnieuwkerke
- Pont-à-Celles-Buzet
- Raeren-Eynatten
- Rochefort
- Saint-Ghislain
- Spy
- Witgoor
|
| |
Coronavirus impact & License troubles
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Belgium, all professional matches were postponed mid-March. A few weeks later the board of directors of the Belgian Pro League proposed to cancel permanently all remaining matches, take the standings as of March 12 counting as final and award the title to Club Brugge, with the proposal to be accepted at the general meeting on 15 May 2020. UEFA criticized the decision to stop the competition early, threatening to not allow any Belgian clubs to take part in the 2020–21 UEFA Champions League and 2020–21 UEFA Europa League unless they tried everything possible to complete as many matches as possible before the extended deadline of early August. In the amateur leagues, all remaining matches were canceled as well, and points of teams that had played fewer matches were scaled up before completing the final standings, while all playoff matches were canceled and only direct promotions and relegations were carried out.
Despite stopping all matches in both the 2019–20 Belgian First Division A and 2019–20 Belgian First Division B, several unresolved issues remain, which were to be solved by a group of experts to come with a proposal by mid-May:
- Which team will relegate from the Belgian First Division A? Last place Waasland-Beveren was only two points behind Oostende and thus mathematically had a chance to avoid relegation with one match to play.
- Which team will promote from the Belgian First Division B? Period champions Oud-Heverlee Leuven and Beerschot should have played a two-legged promotion playoff to determine the champion, but had only completed the first leg at the time the outbreak occurred.
- What to do with the 2020 Belgian Cup Final? Club Brugge and Antwerp were to play the final on 22 March 2020.
The easiest solution would involve having no relegation and allowing both Oud-Heverlee Leuven and Beerschot to be promoted, playing one season with 18 teams without playoffs. Meanwhile, the 2020 Belgian Super Cup (scheduled to be played towards the end of July) could be canceled, with the cup final to be played on that date instead. While many clubs seemed to support this proposal, no final consensus was reached in the months of March and April, as the general meeting was postponed several times.
To complicate matters further, on 8 April 2020, the license commission decided not to award a professional football license to no less than seven (of 24) professional clubs, nearly always for insufficient proof of financial solvency. This included three teams from the 2019–20 Belgian First Division A (Standard Liège, Excel Mouscron and Oostende) and four from the 2019–20 Belgian First Division B (Lokeren, Lommel, Roeselare and Virton). All seven clubs appealed the decision at the Belgian Court for Sports Arbitrage, but only Standard Liège, Excel Mouscron, Oostende, and Lommel were awarded a license while Lokeren went bankrupt and ceased to exist and both Roeselare and Virton were refused a license and thereby forced to relegate. As a result, there are only 21 professional teams left, meaning more than just one team will need to be promoted from the 2019–20 Belgian First Amateur Division. In that division, only had two teams received a professional football license (Deinze and RWDM47) at first instance, but eventually, the appeals of Seraing and Lierse Kempenzonen were upheld, meaning there are four eligible teams.
In the days before the decision by the general meeting, several clubs sent around their proposal with their vision on how the season should come to an end, with opinions differing hugely:
- On 10 May 2020, league leaders Club Brugge (who are against the playoff system) proposed to stop the season with the standings as final. Waasland-Beveren would be spared of relegation while both Beerschot and OH Leuven would be promoted and the 2020–21 Belgian First Division A would thus be played with 18 teams, without playoffs. In their proposal, the cup final would be played on 1 or 2 August and newly signed players would be allowed.[5]
- On 11 May 2020, Standard Liège (who would prefer keeping the playoff system) reacted by stating that there needed to be consistency in the decisions and it would be unfair to declare a champion but have no relegation. Hence they insisted Waasland-Beveren be relegated and the promotion play-off between Beerschot and OH Leuven to be played without supporters and if needed at a neutral venue to decide the promoting team. The club also hoped the Belgian Cup final could still be completed before the end of the season.[6]
- On 12 May 2020, Genk agreed to extend the league to 18 teams (as per the proposal of Club Brugge), but also proposed to create a new playoff system, in which after completion of the regular season, the top four teams playoff for the title while teams five through eight play off for the remaining European ticket. In case the coronavirus reemerges, they propose to end the season after 34 matchdays and take those standings as final. They also insist that the current league format should be reinstated as from the 2021–22 season, meaning there would be three teams relegating from the 2020–21 Belgian First Division A. Genk also stated that in case there would be no agreement to stop the current season (80% of votes needed), to declare the current season void (50% of votes needed), which would imply no champion, no relegations and promotions.[7]
- On 14 May 2020, in preparation for the general meeting of the next day, the group of experts came to a new proposal to be approved at the general meeting, which involved canceling all remaining matches, taking the standings as final with Club Brugge crowned as champions. The 2020–21 Belgian First Division A season will have shortened playoffs, but most importantly will still contain 16 teams, meaning that Waasland-Beveren would be relegated. To determine the team to be promoted, Oud-Heverlee Leuven and Beerschot need to attempt to play the return leg of the promotion playoff. If they cannot complete the match before the deadline, Westerlo would be promoted instead as the team which obtained the most points during the regular season. There will also be an attempt to complete the 2020 Belgian Cup Final before the deadline of August 3 as set by UEFA.[8]
Belgian First Division A
See main article: article and 2019–20 Belgian First Division A.
Regular season
Belgian First Division B
See main article: article and 2019–20 Belgian First Division B.
Belgian First Amateur Division
See main article: article and 2019–20 Belgian First Amateur Division.
Belgian Second Amateur Division
See main article: article and 2019–20 Belgian Second Amateur Division.
Division C
Belgian Third Amateur Division
See main article: article and 2019–20 Belgian Third Amateur Division.
Division D
Cup competitions
Transfers
See main article: article, List of Belgian football transfers summer 2019, List of Belgian football transfers winter 2019–20 and List of Belgian football transfers summer 2020.
UEFA competitions
Champions Genk qualified directly for the group stage of the Champions League, while runners-up Club Brugge started in the qualifying rounds. Cup winners KV Mechelen were banned from European football after being found guilty of match-fixing as part of the 2017–19 Belgian football fraud scandal, resulting in their place in the group stage of the Europa League being taken by Standard Liège for finishing third in the league. Finally Antwerp and Gent started in the UEFA Europa League qualifying rounds after respectively finishing fourth and fifth.
Date | Team | Competition | Round | Leg | Opponent | Location | Score | Belgian Team Goalscorers |
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25 July 2019 | Gent | Europa League | Qual. Round 2 | Leg 1, Home | Viitorul Constanța | Ghelamco Arena, Ghent | | Asare, Dejaegere, Kubo (2), Yaremchuk (2) |
1 August 2019 | Gent | Europa League | Qual. Round 2 | Leg 2, Away | Viitorul Constanța | Stadionul Viitorul, Ovidiu | | Yaremchuk |
6 August 2019 | Club Brugge | Champions League | Qual. Round 3 | Leg 1, Home | Dynamo Kyiv | Jan Breydel Stadium, Bruges | | Vanaken |
8 August 2019 | Antwerp | Europa League | Qual. Round 3 | Leg 1, Home | Viktoria Plzeň | King Baudouin Stadium, Brussels | | Rodrigues |
8 August 2019 | Gent | Europa League | Qual. Round 3 | Leg 1, Away | AEK Larnaca | AEK Arena – Georgios Karapatakis, Larnaca | 1–1 | Yaremchuk |
13 August 2019 | Club Brugge | Champions League | Qual. Round 3 | Leg 2, Away | Dynamo Kyiv | Jan Breydel Stadium, Bruges | 3–3 | Deli, Vormer, Openda |
15 August 2019 | Antwerp | Europa League | Qual. Round 3 | Leg 2, Away | Viktoria Plzeň | Doosan Arena, Plzeň | | Mbokani |
15 August 2019 | Gent | Europa League | Qual. Round 3 | Leg 2, Home | AEK Larnaca | Ghelamco Arena, Ghent | | Depoitre, Jonathan David (2) |
20 August 2019 | Club Brugge | Champions League | Play-off round | Leg 1, Away | LASK | Linzer Stadion, Linz | | Vanaken |
22 August 2019 | Antwerp | Europa League | Play-off round | Leg 1, Away | AZ | De Grolsch Veste, Enschede | 1–1 | Batubinsika |
22 August 2019 | Gent | Europa League | Play-off round | Leg 1, Home | Rijeka | Ghelamco Arena, Ghent | | Depoitre (2) |
28 August 2019 | Club Brugge | Champions League | Play-off round | Leg 2, Home | LASK | Jan Breydel Stadium, Bruges | | Vanaken, Dennis |
29 August 2019 | Antwerp | Europa League | Play-off round | Leg 2, Home | AZ | King Baudouin Stadium, Brussels | | Lamkel Zé |
29 August 2019 | Gent | Europa League | Play-off round | Leg 2, Away | Rijeka | Stadion Rujevica, Rijeka | 1–1 | Plastun |
17 September 2019 | Genk | Champions League | Group Stage | Matchday 1, Away | Red Bull Salzburg | Stadion Wals-Siezenheim, Wals-Siezenheim | | Lucumí, Samatta |
18 September 2019 | Club Brugge | Champions League | Group Stage | Matchday 1, Home | Galatasaray | Jan Breydel Stadium, Bruges | 0–0 | |
19 September 2019 | Gent | Europa League | Group Stage | Matchday 1, Home | Saint-Étienne | Ghelamco Arena, Ghent | | |
19 September 2019 | Standard Liège | Europa League | Group Stage | Matchday 1, Home | Vitória de Guimarães | Stade Maurice Dufrasne, Liège | | Hanin, M'Poku |
1 October 2019 | Club Brugge | Champions League | Group Stage | Matchday 2, Away | Real Madrid | Santiago Bernabéu Stadium, Madrid | 2–2 | Dennis (2) |
2 October 2019 | Genk | Champions League | Group Stage | Matchday 2, Home | Napoli | Luminus Arena, Genk | 0–0 | |
3 October 2019 | Gent | Europa League | Group Stage | Matchday 2, Away | Oleksandriya | Arena Lviv, Lviv | 1–1 | Depoitre |
3 October 2019 | Standard Liège | Europa League | Group Stage | Matchday 2, Away | Arsenal | Emirates Stadium, London | | |
22 October 2019 | Club Brugge | Champions League | Group Stage | Matchday 3, Home | Paris Saint-Germain | Jan Breydel Stadium, Bruges | | |
23 October 2019 | Genk | Champions League | Group Stage | Matchday 3, Home | Liverpool | Luminus Arena, Genk | | Odey |
24 October 2019 | Gent | Europa League | Group Stage | Matchday 3, Home | Wolfsburg | Ghelamco Arena, Ghent | 2–2 | Yaremchuk (2) |
24 October 2019 | Standard Liège | Europa League | Group Stage | Matchday 3, Away | Eintracht Frankfurt | Waldstadion, Frankfurt | | Amallah |
5 November 2019 | Genk | Champions League | Group Stage | Matchday 4, Away | Liverpool | Anfield, Liverpool | | Samatta |
6 November 2019 | Club Brugge | Champions League | Group Stage | Matchday 4, Away | Paris Saint-Germain | Parc des Princes, Paris | | |
7 November 2019 | Gent | Europa League | Group Stage | Matchday 4, Away | Wolfsburg | Volkswagen Arena, Wolfsburg | | Yaremchuk, Depoitre, Ngadeu-Ngadjui |
7 November 2019 | Standard Liège | Europa League | Group Stage | Matchday 4, Home | Eintracht Frankfurt | Stade Maurice Dufrasne, Liège | | Vanheusden, Lestienne |
26 November 2019 | Club Brugge | Champions League | Group Stage | Matchday 5, Away | Galatasaray | Türk Telekom Stadium, Istanbul | 1–1 | Diatta |
27 November 2019 | Genk | Champions League | Group Stage | Matchday 5, Home | Red Bull Salzburg | Luminus Arena, Genk | | Samatta |
28 November 2019 | Gent | Europa League | Group Stage | Matchday 5, Away | Saint-Étienne | Stade Geoffroy-Guichard, Saint-Étienne | 0–0 | |
28 November 2019 | Standard Liège | Europa League | Group Stage | Matchday 5, Away | Vitória de Guimarães | Estádio D. Afonso Henriques, Guimarães | 1–1 | Lestienne |
10 December 2019 | Genk | Champions League | Group Stage | Matchday 6, Away | Napoli | Stadio San Paolo, Naples | | |
11 December 2019 | Club Brugge | Champions League | Group Stage | Matchday 6, Home | Real Madrid | Jan Breydel Stadium, Bruges | | Vanaken |
12 December 2019 | Gent | Europa League | Group Stage | Matchday 6, Home | Oleksandriya | Ghelamco Arena, Ghent | | Depoitre (2) |
12 December 2019 | Standard Liège | Europa League | Group Stage | Matchday 6, Home | Arsenal | Stade Maurice Dufrasne, Liège | 2–2 | Bastien, Amallah |
20 February 2020 | Club Brugge | Europa League | Round of 32 | Leg 1, Home | Manchester United | Jan Breydel Stadium, Bruges | 1–1 | Dennis |
20 February 2020 | Gent | Europa League | Round of 32 | Leg 1, Away | Roma | Stadio Olimpico, Rome | | |
27 February 2020 | Club Brugge | Europa League | Round of 32 | Leg 2, Away | Manchester United | Old Trafford, Manchester | | |
27 February 2020 | Gent | Europa League | Round of 32 | Leg 2, Home | Roma | Ghelamco Arena, Ghent | 1–1 | Jonathan David | |
European qualification for 2020–21 summary
Managerial changes
This is a list of changes of managers within Belgian professional league football:
First Division B
See also
Notes and References
- News: 17 March 2020 . UEFA postpones EURO 2020 by 12 months . UEFA.com . Union of European Football Associations . 17 March 2020.
- News: Resolution of the European football family on a coordinated response to the impact of the COVID-19 on competitions . UEFA.com . Union of European Football Associations . 17 March 2020 . 17 March 2020.
- News: Women's European Championship: Tournament to be moved back a year . bbc.co.uk . BBC . 1 April 2020 . 2 April 2020.
- News: UEFA Women's EURO moved to July 2022 . UEFA.com . Union of European Football Associations . 23 April 2020 . 23 April 2020.
- Web site: Club Brugge stuurt voorstel rond: 1A met 18 clubs zonder play-offs. sporza . 10 May 2020 . 12 May 2020.
- Web site: Standard: "Geen degradant? Dan ook geen kampioen dit seizoen". sporza . 11 May 2020 . 12 May 2020.
- Web site: KRC Genk legt de nietigverklaring van de competitie op tafel. sporza . 12 May 2020 . 12 May 2020.
- Web site: Peter Vandenbempt: "16 clubs met kortere play-offs en Westerlo naar 1A? Dat ligt nu op tafel". sporza . 14 May 2020 . 15 May 2020.