Champions League schedule, draw winners and losers: Good news for Arsenal, City, Barcelona and Real Madrid
Tricky routes for PSG and Dortmund while Antwerp get tall order

The UEFA Champions League group stage draw has been made and it has thrown up some interesting matchups despite the arguable lack of a true "group of death." Group F with Paris Saint-Germain, Borussia Dortmund, Milan and Newcastle United is probably the pick of the bunch but even then you feel that it could still have been worse for pretty much everyone involved. There is no shortage, though, of seemingly straightforward routes to the knockout phase with Arsenal, Real Madrid, Manchester City and Barcelona likely to be very happy with their draws.
We look at some of the winners and losers from Thursday's big event at Grimaldi Forum in Monaco.
Full UCL 23-24 groups
- Group A: Bayern Munich, Manchester United, Copenhagen and Galatasaray.
- Group B: Sevilla, Arsenal, PSV Eindhoven and Lens.
- Group C: Napoli, Real Madrid, SC Braga and Union Berlin.
- Group D: Benfica, Inter, Red Bull Salzburg and Real Sociedad.
- Group E: Feyenoord, Atletico Madrid, Lazio and Celtic.
- Group F: Paris Saint-Germain, Borussia Dortmund, Milan and Newcastle United.
- Group G: Manchester City, RB Leipzig, Red Star Belgrade and Young Boys.
- Group H: Barcelona, Porto, Shakhtar Donetsk and Antwerp.
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Winners: Arsenal
Mikel Arteta's men will feel satisfied with Sevilla, PSV and Lens with the UEFA Europa League champions arguably the biggest threat for top spot in Group B. The Gunners, over home and away games, really should finish in the top two here, although they should beware what tricky away days against PSV and Lens could mean. In any case, even if points are dropped, Sevilla struggled at this level last year before finding themselves more comfortable in the UEL. Arsenal are favorites to advance from this group and for good reason -- their pedigree remains stronger than the other three at this level despite a few years away.
Losers: PSG
It is difficult to convincingly argue that there is a "group of death" this season yet it is equally tough to judge Group F as "easy" for serial chokers PSG. Borussia Dortmund might not be the force they once were which can also be said of Milan but the narrative-rich clash between the Qatar-owned Parisien club and Saudi-backed Newcastle was one of the storylines we had you watching for pre-draw. Now that it has come to pass, USMNT captain Christian Pulisic will find himself up against not only Kylian Mbappe but also Sandro Tonali who left the Italian giants for Tyneside this summer. Factor in four magnificent venues each worthy of Champions League brilliance and it is actually a pretty attractive package.
Winners: Manchester City
The titleholders will be very happy with their lot given that their biggest concern so far is going up against RB Leipzig for a third consecutive edition after last year's round of 16 meeting. Pep Guardiola's men will not be losing sleep about Red Star Belgrade or Young Boys, although both could be trickier propositions away from home than at Etihad Stadium. Regardless, even if something were to go wrong in one or two games, there is still enough of a chasm in quality that City should make it through as one of the top two in the absolute worst-case scenario.
Losers: Antwerp
On the face of it, Group H with Barcelona, Porto, Shakhtar Donetsk and Antwerp does not look like the most difficult of groups -- unless you are the Belgian debutants. The Portuguese and Ukrainian giants might not be as formidable as they once were and the same could be said of Barca, perhaps, but that will be of no consolation to Mark van Bommel's Belgian champions. Third place ahead of possibly Shakhtar might be seen by some as Antwerp's best-case scenario but Porto could also be gettable if the Great Old can make away days at Bosuilstadion difficult for the trio with plenty of continental pedigree.
Group stage matchdays
Matchday 1: Sept. 19-20
- Tuesday 19 Sept. Milan vs. Newcastle and Young Boys vs. Leipzig -- 12:45 p.m. ET
- Tuesday 19 Sept. Feyenoord vs. Celtic, Lazio vs. Atletico, PSG vs. Dortmund, City vs. Red Star, Barca vs. Antwerp, Shakhtar vs. Porto -- 3 p.m. ET
- Wednesday 20 Sept. Galatasaray vs. Copenhagen and Real Madrid vs. Union Berlin -- 2:45 p.m. ET
- Wednesday 20 Sept. Bayern vs. United, Sevilla vs. Lens, Arsenal vs. PSV, Braga vs. Napoli, Benfica vs. Salzburg, Sociedad vs. Inter -- 3 p.m. ET
Matchday 2: Oct. 3-4
- Tuesday 3 Oct. Union Berlin vs. Braga and Salzburg vs. Sociedad -- 12:45 p.m. ET
- Tuesday 3 Oct. United vs. Galatasaray, Copenhagen vs. Bayern, Lens vs. Arsenal, PSV vs. Sevilla, Napoli vs. Real, Inter vs. Benfica -- 3 p.m. ET
- Wednesday 4 Oct. Atleti vs. Feyenoord and Antwerp vs. Shakhtar -- 12:45 p.m. ET
- Wednesday 4 Oct. Celtic vs. Lazio, Dortmund vs. Milan, Newcastle vs. PSG, Leipzig vs. City, Red Star vs. Young Boys, Porto vs. Barca -- 3 p.m. ET
Matchday 3: Oct. 24-25
- Tuesday 24 Oct. Galatasaray vs. Bayern and Inter vs. Salzburg -- 12:45 p.m. ET
- Tuesday 24 Oct. United vs. Copenhagen, Sevilla vs. Arsenal, Lens vs. PSV, Braga vs. Real, Union vs. Napoli, Benfica vs. Sociedad -- 3 p.m. ET
- Wednesday 25 Oct. Feyenoord vs. Lazio and Barca vs. Shakhtar -- 12:45 p.m. ET
- Wednesday 25 Oct. Celtic vs. Atleti, PSG vs. Milan, Newcastle vs. Dortmund, Leipzig vs. Red Star, Young Boys vs. City, Antwerp vs. Porto -- 3 p.m. ET
Matchday 4: Nov. 7-8
- Tuesday 7 Nov. Dortmund vs. Newcastle and Shakhtar vs. Barca -- 12:45 p.m. ET
- Tuesday 7 Nov. Atleti vs. Celtic, Lazio vs. Feyenoord, Milan vs. PSG, City vs. Young Boys, Red Star vs. Leipzig, Porto vs. Antwerp -- 3 p.m. ET
- Wednesday 8 Nov. Napoli vs. Union and Sociedad vs. Benfica -- 12:45 p.m. ET
- Wednesday 8 Nov. Bayern vs. Galatasaray, Copenhagen vs. United, Arsenal vs. Sevilla, PSV vs. Lens, Real vs. Braga, Salzburg vs. Inter -- 3 p.m. ET
Matchday 5: Nov. 28-29
- Tuesday 28 Nov. Lazio vs. Celtic and Shakhtar vs. Antwerp -- 12:45 p.m. ET
- Tuesday 28 Nov. Feyenoord vs. Atleti, PSG vs. Newcastle, Milan vs. Dortmund, City vs. Leipzig, Young Boys vs. Red Star, Barca vs. Porto -- 3 p.m. ET
- Wednesday 29 Nov. Galatasaray vs. United and Sevilla vs. PSV -- 12:45 p.m. ET
- Wednesday 29 Nov. Bayern vs. Copenhagen, Arsenal vs. Lens, Real vs. Napoli, Braga vs. Union, Benfica vs. Inter, Sociedad vs. Salzburg -- 3 p.m. ET
Matchday 6: Dec. 12-13
- Tuesday 12 Dec. Lens vs. Sevilla and PSV vs. Arsenal -- 12:45 p.m. ET
- Tuesday 12 Dec. United vs. Bayern, Copenhagen vs. Galatasaray, Napoli vs. Braga, Union vs. Real, Inter vs. Sociedad, Salzburg vs. Benfica -- 3 p.m. ET
- Wednesday 13 Dec. Leipzig vs. Young Boys and Red Star vs. City -- 12:45 p.m. ET
- Wednesday 13 Dec. Atleti vs. Lazio, Celtic vs. Feyenoord, Dortmund vs. PSG, Newcastle vs. Milan, Porto vs. Shakhtar, Antwerp vs. Barca -- 3 p.m. ET
Winners: Barcelona
From Barca's point of view, though, it is hard to feel that this will not be welcomed as something of a dream scenario with none of Porto, Shakhtar or Antwerp likely to cause the Catalan giants to lose sleep. Compared with last year when Bayern Munich and Inter came out of the hat, this feels like a walk in the park and will probably be viewed as one at Camp Nou.
Losers: Celtic
Unsure of their seeding until the final hours, the Scottish giants will probably feel like they have been handed a tall order with Feyenoord, Atletico Madrid and Lazio all very tough places to go on the road. Celtic themselves are not exactly an away day to relish in Europe, but their home form is less likely to be as strong as their Dutch, Spanish or Italian counterparts.
Winners: Real Madrid
It has probably felt as if problems are mounting for Carlo Ancelotti and the Spanish giants in recent weeks with Thibaut Courtois, Eder Militao and Vinicius Junior all lost to injury, but a fairly straightforward Champions League group should lighten that load. Group C with Napoli is not exactly easy, but Los Blancos will be delighted to have seen Braga and Union Berlin added to the group which now looks like a nailed-on top-two berth.
Losers: Borussia Dortmund
We mentioned PSG earlier and how Group F could get tricky for them, but Borussia Dortmund are equally vulnerable in what is a fairly evenly-balanced selection even if the French giants are arguably the strongest side in there. With Milan and Newcastle, though, the Germans cannot afford to slip up and their early season form in the Bundesliga is not exactly encouraging. Could this be a year where BVB slip into the Europa League or worse?
















