European Super League 2022-23
UPDATED June 12: Final Standings.
In previous years, some of the the richest clubs of European football announced (and then stepped back) a closed European Super League. They have previously made noise about permanent spots in the UEFA Champions League, as well. If there were a Super League, I would prefer it to be open, with promotion and relegation with the domestic leagues.
Since there are too many "big" clubs for one twenty-team league, I created a twenty-team Super League and a second division with forty teams, split into East and West Leagues. To pick which teams are placed in which leagues, I used the UEFA Club Coefficients from the end of the 2014-15 season. Since then, each season, teams were relegated from the Super League to Division 2, replaced by the East and West champions. Beginning with the 2021-22 season, the two second-place teams of Division 2 will also be promoted to the Super League. Four teams from each Division 2 league will be relegated, replaced by the eight teams that progress the furthest in the Champions League and Europa League. (Ideally, this would just be the final Champions League teams, with the relegated teams automatically qualified for the next season's Champions League so they have the potential for promotion as soon as possible.)
After the previous season, Valencia and Celtic were relegated from the Super League to Division 2 West. Slavia Praha and Olympiacos were relegated from the Super League to Division 2 East. Brugge, Ajax, Zenit and AC Milan were promoted from Division 2 to the Super League. Molde, Granada, Borussia Mönchengladbach, Genk, Spartak Moskva, Dynamo Kyiv, Berner Young Boys and Beşiktaş were relegated to their respective domestic leagues. Sporting Portugal, Real Betis, Real Sociadad, West Ham United, Feyenoord, Leicester City and PSV Eindhoven were promoted to Division 2 West. Sheriff Tiraspol were promoted to Division 2 East. Bayer 04 Leverkusen, Borussia Dortmund and Monaco were moved from West to East.
Here is a map of the sixty teams in the international leagues. Click the rectangle tab thing in the upper left to get to the list where you can deselect the separate divisions.
The standings include only games against teams in a team's division (Super League or Division 2). The first tiebreaker is the number of games played. The second tiebreaker is the UEFA club coefficient rankings.
The teams that will be promoted from the domestic leagues for the 2023-24 season are the eight teams (that aren't in these international leagues) who progress the furthest in the Champions League, Europa League and Europa Conference League. These are Fenerbahçe, Ferencváros, Freiburg, Midtjylland, Nantes, Royale Union Saint-Gilloise, Union Berlin, and Basel.