The three rebel European outfits that never withdrew from the European Super League are expected to try and launch the plan for a second time later this week.
It could prove to be yet another attack on the current stronghold UEFA have over European football and a bid to form a breakaway from UEFA-organised competitions.
Juventus president Andrea Agnelli is lined up to speak at a business summit where he is likely to explain the new details surrounding a new and improved Super League proposal along with input from La Liga giants Barcelona and Real Madrid.
The most notable change from the original structure that was launched last year is the concept of members that cannot be relegated will now be scrapped in favour of a more traditional qualification process.
HAVE YOUR SAY! Will the European Super League eventually come to fruition? Comment below
UEFA are thought to have drawn a line under the controversial plans that were first made public in April of 2021 while the six Premier League teams have since apologised and accepted fines as punishment.
One document rumoured to have been drawn up in September reveals that those at the top of the Super League are keen on creating clubs in major European cities that currently do not have one competing on the highest stage.
Both Luxembourg and Dublin were cited as examples of locations where a top-tier club could be formed and then integrated into the Super League.
UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin has labelled the three clubs still involved as “charlatans”.
The Super League still exists as a corporate entity and now goes under the guise of A22, who have instructed a legal counsel and a Brussels lobby group.
Both A22 and Agnelli have confirmed the idea of teams being unable to get relegated has been axed "to maximise the game’s impact on social well-being for constituents in Europe."
The trio are set to take aim at the quality of UEFA-regulated competitions, including the Champions League and the failings of the Financial Fair Play system.
Paris Saint-Germain chairman Nasser Al-Khelaifi is also in the firing line given he is the chairman of the European Club Association while also owning UEFA broadcast rights in the Middle East.
A document from the rebel trio reads: “UEFA has close ties to certain club owners from non-member states who are commercial sponsors of certain competitions and clubs, are the main buyers of media rights for competitions operated by UEFA and who sit on UEFA's executive committee, while chairing the ECA without any transparent election process.
"Since within the EU a club cannot benefit from state aids [sic] from its own member state … why should it be allowed that the football market be disrupted, to the exclusive benefit of a few state-owned clubs, because of state aids coming from non-member states?"