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Official Football Club World Cup Discussion Thread

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The 2019 FIFA Club World Cup will be the 16th edition of the FIFA Club World Cup, a FIFA-organised international club football tournament between the winners of the six continental confederations, as well as the host nation's league champions.


Teams: 7
Venue(s): 3 (in 1 host city)
Dates: Wed, Dec 11, 2019 – Sun, Dec 22, 2019
Location: Qatar
City: Doha


Capture.JPG
 
Al-Sadd 1-1 Hienghene

Part-time Hienghene have held full-time Al-Sadd.

Xavi doesn't look happy on the touchline.

Extra-time and penalties to follow shortly.
 
Al-Sadd reached the second round of the Club World Cup with a 3-1 extra-time win over part-time Hienghene.

Al-Sadd, managed by former Barcelona midfielder Xavi, took a first-half lead through Algeria striker Baghdad Bounedjah.

Hienghene's Amy Roine equalised with the referee using the pitchside video assistant referee monitor to award the goal after initially giving a foul.

Extra-time goals from Abdelkarim Hassan and Pedro Miguel gave Al-Sadd victory.

The Qatar side dominated the game, having 69% possession and 37 shots, but missed a host of chances in normal time.

They will face Monterrey from Mexico in the next round on Saturday (17:30 GMT), with Premier League leaders Liverpool joining the competition at the semi-final stage on 18 December.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/50750229
 
Fifa has indicated it would be willing to make wholesale changes to its controversial plans for a 24-team Club World Cup.

The changes, including the frequency it is held, have been outlined in a tender issued to potential investors, commercial partners and media.

The annual competition, which currently features seven teams, is scheduled to be expanded from June 2021.

The expanded format was implemented despite fierce opposition from Uefa.

China is set to host the first edition of the larger tournament, with Gianni Infantino, the president of football's world governing body Fifa, describing it as "the first real and true [Club] World Cup".

It will be held in June and July, starting with a play-off between the Oceania representative and the third Asian qualifier, and includes eight clubs from Europe.

However, detail within the tender suggests the revamped event, to be held every four years, could be changed beyond recognition if Fifa receives valuable enough proposals.

In their tender, which has been seen by the BBC, Fifa say its objective is to find partners to create "the world's greatest club football experience".

In the document, Fifa states: "Should an interested party wish to do so, it may also submit a proposal for future editions of the tournament (which is currently envisaged to take place every four years) and which may include suggestions for alternative Tournament parameters, including as to frequency, format, qualification process and team participation."

The words will alarm European football's governing body Uefa, who fear the Champions League will be undermined by any significant competition to their dominant club competition, triggering a reduction in broadcasting revenue.

Potential investors have been given 11 days to come up with a proposal. The document does not say what would happen if a direct competitor to a current sponsorship partner made a better offer.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/boxing/50784271
 
Former Swansea striker Bafetimbi Gomis scored the winner as Al Hilal beat Esperance Sportive de Tunis 1-0 to reach the Fifa Club World Cup semi-finals.

Eight minutes after coming off the bench, Gomis opened the scoring with a brilliant volley.

Al Hilal's Mohamed Kanno was sent off with five minutes remaining for two bookable offences within three minutes.

Yet Tunisia's Esperance were unable to find an equaliser.

The closest Esperance came to scoring was when Al Hilal defender Yasser Al-Shahrani almost diverted into his own net.

Esperance will now contest the fifth-placed play-off on Tuesday (14:30 GMT), while Al Hilal will face Copa Libertadores winners Flamengo in the semi-final later that day (17:30 GMT).

Capture.JPG
 
Liverpool will face Monterrey in their Fifa Club World Cup semi-final after the Mexico side beat Al-Sadd 3-2.

Left-back Leonel Vangioni gave Monterrey the lead with a 35-yard rocket before Rogelio Funes Mori doubled their advantage in first-half stoppage time.

Baghdad Bounedjah pulled one back for Al-Sadd before Carlos Rodriguez restored Monterrey's two-goal lead.

Abdelkarim Hassan scored a late consolation but Monterrey hung on.

Al-Sadd will now contest the fifth-placed play-off against Esperance Sportive de Tunis on Tuesday (14:30 GMT), while Monterrey will face runaway Premier League leaders Liverpool in a semi-final on Wednesday (17:30).

Brazil's Flamengo will face Saudi Arabia's Al Hilal in the other semi-final on Tuesday (17:30).

What can Liverpool expect from Monterrey?
Monterrey qualified for the Club World Cup as they were crowned champions of the Concacaf Champions League (for sides from North America, Central America and the Caribbean) for the fourth time.

They've also been Mexican champions on four occasions.

They played free-flowing, attacking football and looked threatening going forward, albeit against a shaky Al-Sadd defence.

The twin-brother of ex-Everton defender Ramiro Funes Mori, Rogelio, looked a good player and took his goal well and may cause Liverpool problems.

Defensively, they were much weaker and Al-Sadd, in addition to scoring twice, cut them open and were guilty of missing some gilt-edged chances - the sort you'd expect Mohamed Salah, Saido Mane and Roberto Firmino to take.

It is a game Liverpool should and will expect to win.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/50794576
 
Liverpool centre-back Virgil van Dijk will be available for their Club World Cup semi-final against Monterrey, but midfielder Georginio Wijnaldum will miss out with a muscle injury.

Van Dijk missed training on Monday but Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp said in his pre-match press conference that the Dutchman was "fine".

Klopp added that Wijnaldum's injury is "not as serious as we thought".

Dejan Lovren, Joel Matip and Fabinho are all still missing through injury.

The game against Monterrey, which be live on BBC Two and iPlayer, will be Liverpool's second game in less than 24 hours, with a youthful team left in England for Tuesday's Carabao Cup quarter-final at Aston Villa.

Klopp said it was the "only solution" Liverpool could find and described it as a "very exciting opportunity for us".

"In the last few years we got kicked out of the cup competitions with our first team, but this year we have given the youngsters the opportunity, they showed up against Arsenal and that is what we expect," Klopp said.

"We knew first we would be invited to the Club World Cup before we knew how far we would get in the Carabao Cup.

"We do not fly 3,000 miles not to show up. Our life is certainly dealing with difficult situations. We will be prepared and we will try to win the football gam. We do not see ourselves as the favourites, we are challengers. We are here to represent Liverpool and Europe."

The German, who recently signed a new contact until 2024, said Liverpool "respect Monterrey a lot".

He added: "Monterrey are in a pretty good way at the moment. They have a way to play and they change system when they are in front. I was impressed by the things I saw and we are full of respect."

The Mexico side reached the semi-finals with a 3-2 victory over Qatar's Al-Sadd on Saturday and won the Concacaf Champions League last season to qualify for the tournament.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/50817868
 
Hamdou Elhouni scored a hat-trick as Tunisia's Esperance Sportive de Tunis finished fifth in the Club World Cup with victory against Qatar's Al Sadd.

Elhouni curled in the opener from 12 yards before Anice Badri made it 2-0.

Abdelkarim Hassan was then sent off for handball in the box and Badri sent the keeper the wrong way with the penalty.

Baghdad Bounedjah and Hassan Al Haydosv scored from the spot for Al Sadd while Elhouni's hat-trick came via a finish from a tight angle then a tap-in.

Right-back Sameh Derbali slashed home to complete the scoring after his run in behind beat the offside trap.

Elhouni is the fourth player to score a Club World Cup hat-trick, after Luis Suarez in 2015, Cristiano Ronaldo 12 months later and Gareth Bale last year.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/50827682
 
Brazil's Flamengo came from behind to beat Saudi Arabia's Al Hilal 3-1 and reach the Club World Cup final.

Salem Al Dawsari gave underdogs Al Hilal the lead in the 18th minute before Uruguay's Giorgian de Arrascaeta equalised just after the break.

Bruno Henrique headed the Copa Libertadores winners ahead and then turned provider as Ali Albulayhi inadvertently turned into his own net.

They will face Liverpool or Monterrey in the final on Saturday (17:30 GMT).

Former Watford loanee Andre Carrillo saw red in the 83rd minute for a wild swipe but at that point the game was beyond Al Hilal.

Flamengo were well below par in the first half, leaving manager Jorge Jesus exasperated on the touchline, but were much improved after the break.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/50827689
 
Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp is keen to maintain the club's winning momentum when they take on Mexican champions Monterrey in the semi-finals of the Club World Cup on Wednesday.

Klopp says his decision to field a youth team in the Carabao Cup quarter-final at Aston Villa on Tuesday night - a match his reserves lost 5-0 - is justified, having brought all his senior players to Doha.

“We had to make a decision. We knew first we would be invited to the Club World Cup before we knew how far we’d go in the Carabao Cup,” he said.

“We are here. We don’t fly 3,000 miles, we don’t fly the distance not to show up.

“Our life is constantly dealing with difficult situations and finding solutions. Whatever it is, we don’t care. We will be prepared and try to win football games.”

As European champions, Liverpool are favourites for the tournament in Qatar.

“We don’t see ourselves as favourites, we see ourselves as challengers as it will be the first time to win it,” the German added.

“Is it the biggest cup competition in the world? I don’t know.

“If you had asked me beforehand if I think there should be a Club World Cup in the middle of our season I would say no, but we are here and so it is the most important competition in the world.

“It is not important that, and I’m not sure about this, we are the best football team in the world.

“No one cares about what happened in the summer, three months ago, it only matters what happens tomorrow night.

“We need to show we are ready. We don’t listen to public opinions, we try to be as serious as possible in these situations.

“We tend to be more concerned before games than optimistic I would say.”

Midfielder Georginio Wijnaldum, who travelled despite sustaining a hamstring injury against Watford, is out of the game, at the Khalifa International Stadium, but Virgil van Dijk, who did a personalised training session on Monday, is fit.

Meanwhile, backup defenders Ki-Jana Hoever and Sepp van den Berg and goalkeeper Caoimhin Kelleher - who featured at Villa Park on Tuesday - all flew out to join Liverpool's senior squad in Qatar on Wednesday.

However, Harvey Elliott, who impressed in the 5-0 League Cup defeat at Aston Villa as part of the youngest team in the club's history on Tuesday, will not be making the trip.

After 20 senior players flew out on Sunday only three places were left available, one of which had to be a goalkeeper as Liverpool are obligated to name three in their Club World Cup squad.

With only two fit first-team centre-backs in Van Dijk and Joe Gomez, Hoever, who came off with cramp against Villa but has been passed fit, and Van den Berg will provide some cover for Klopp if necessary.

Liverpool midfielder James Milner insists the players are driven by the desire to be serial trophy winners and to not be remembered solely for their Champions League triumph.

June's victory over Tottenham in Madrid was only the club's second piece of silverware in 13 years, but the Reds' vice-captain said that should be the starting point.

Liverpool, 10 points clear at the top of the Premier League as they seek to end their 30-year wait for a domestic title, are bidding this week to win the one trophy which has so far eluded them - the Club World Cup.

Milner, who signed a new contract to 2022 last week to underline his long-term ambitions, believes a winning habit is pushing the squad forward.

"Since I have been at the club it was important for the club to get that first trophy on the board," said the midfielder, who also lifted the European Super Cup with the club at the start of the season.

"We had been unfortunate in a few finals, but the team has moved on and we have heard many people talk about it.

"We don't want to be remembered as the team who won one major trophy. We want people to remember us as a group and forget which year we won each trophy.

"It will be difficult, but you want to get that winning habit and win trophies together as a group and to keep adding them.

"This is the trophy the club have not won, so it would be nice to have that. Hopefully we can add that."

Monterrey coach Antonio Mohamed insists his side have not come just to participate in the Club World Cup and nothing is impossible against red-hot favourites Liverpool.

The CONCACAF Champions League winners are making their fourth appearance in this tournament and, although Klopp's side have a vastly better squad on paper, Mohamed said they would ensure it was not easy for the European champions in their semi-final on Wednesday.

"We have a big ambition to play against Liverpool and we came to compete strongly at this mega-tournament," he said.

"We have made a huge effort to reach this stage and have come to compete irrespective of which team or manager we are facing.

"We came here to play and win the match with our weapons.

"We didn't come to participate in this tournament and let Liverpool win against us. Nothing is impossible in football."
https://www.skysports.com/football/monterrey-vs-liverpool/preview/420736
 
FULL-TIME
Monterrey 1-2 Liverpool

Liverpool are into the Club World Cup final against Flamengo.
 
Decent game, Monterrey played really well but didn't have the quality in the final 3rd.

We will be better on Saturday and im sure will take the trophy back to Anfield.
 
Fifa Club World Cup final - Liverpool v Flamengo

Liverpool 0-0 Flamengo
 
FULL-TIME
Liverpool 0-0 Flamengo

Extra time!
 
FULL-TIME
Liverpool 1-0 Flamengo

LIVERPOOL ARE THE WORLD CLUB CHAMPIONS!!!
 
Roberto Firmino struck in extra time to hand Liverpool a first Fifa Club World Cup triumph as Jurgen Klopp's side eventually ended the resistance of Brazilian champions Flamengo in Qatar.

Firmino, who scored a dramatic injury-time winner against Monterrey to send Liverpool into the final, produced a composed finish in the 99th minute as the Reds became the second English side to win the tournament, after Manchester United in 2008.

In a dramatic conclusion to normal time, Liverpool had seen an injury-time penalty decision overturned after Sadio Mane went down under a challenge from Rafinha, with referee Abdulrahman Al Jassim reversing his initial verdict after checking the pitchside monitor following a consultation with the video assistant referee.

Brazil forward Firmino squandered the opportunity to put Liverpool ahead inside the opening minute at Khalifa International Stadium, blazing over the bar before Naby Keita and Trent Alexander-Arnold also spurned early chances as the Premier League leaders made a blistering start.

Firmino agonisingly hit the post and Mohamed Salah shot narrowly wide shortly after half-time, but Flamengo responded well to early pressure in both halves and posed Liverpool problems - striker Gabriel Barbosa's attempted bicycle-kick typifying the Brazilian side's steadily growing confidence.

Liverpool suffered an injury blow as Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain appeared to fall awkwardly on his ankle, and with the prospect of extra time approaching Jordan Henderson's powerful, curled strike from the edge of the box was superbly tipped over by Flamengo goalkeeper Diego Alves.

Firmino's breakthrough in the first half of extra time delivered huge relief for Klopp's side, and while Salah was denied by Alves soon after, the Premier League side were able to see out the second period unharmed.

Mexican side Monterrey earlier defeated Saudi Arabia's Al Hilal 4-3 on penalties after a 2-2 draw to claim third place.

Manager Klopp said he wanted to change perceptions of the Club World Cup in Europe as his Liverpool side prepared to face a Flamengo squad who had been given "a clear order to win it and come back home as heroes".

Having elected to focus on the Club World Cup, Liverpool fielded their youngest ever side as they exited the Carabao Cup on Tuesday in a 5-0 defeat by Aston Villa. Just 24 hours later, the Reds were busy securing their first appearance in a Club World Cup final since losing to Brazilian side Sao Paulo in 2005, eventually overcoming Monterrey 2-1 courtesy of Firmino's dramatic injury-time winner on Wednesday.

Despite taking his senior players, Klopp was forced to name a makeshift side against Monterrey due to injuries and illness, but he welcomed back defensive rock Virgil van Dijk, along with Alexander-Arnold, Firmino and Mane against Flamengo.

And how he needed his strongest side to navigate this difficult contest, in which it increasingly appeared it may not turn out to be Liverpool's day. After failing to capitalise on an excellent start, Liverpool came under pressure as tricky winger Bruno Henrique threatened down the right and Barbosa troubled the defence.

But Klopp's side dug deep, despite the frustration of Henderson's dismissed penalty appeal and Mane's overturned spot-kick at the death, and earned their reward as Firmino once again had the crucial say.

That 99th-minute winner vindicated Klopp's decision to pursue a first Club World Cup triumph over progress in the Carabao Cup, while delivering an entertaining final sure to have grabbed attention at home.

Man of the match - Roberto Firmino (Liverpool)
Roberto Firmino
Leading Liverpool from the front, Roberto Firmino struck the winning goal in his side's two Fifa Club World Cup matches to score in back-to-back appearances for the first time since January
European sides dominating - the stats
This was only the fourth Fifa Club World Cup final to go to extra time, after 2000, 2009 and 2016.
European sides have won 12 of the last 13 Club World Cup tournaments, including the last seven.
This was only the second time an English side has beaten Brazilian opposition in a competitive fixture, after Manchester United's 1-0 win over Palmeiras in the 1999 Inter-Continental Cup final.
Only two of the last 10 Club World Cup finals have seen both teams score, with the winning finalist keeping a clean sheet on eight occasions in the past 10 years.
Flamengo are the fourth Brazilian club to finish as Club World Cup runners-up. No other nation has had more second-place finishes.
Sadio Mane has been directly involved in more goals in all competitions in 2019 than any other Liverpool player, scoring 30 goals and making eight assists. Only Raheem Sterling (44) and Sergio Aguero (39) boast a better record among Premier League players this calendar year.

What's next?
Liverpool return to Premier League action against second-placed Leicester City on Thursday (20:00 GMT).

Leicester lost 3-1 to reigning champions Manchester City on Saturday, to leave Liverpool 10 points clear with a game in hand on their closest challengers as they chase a first league title in 30 years.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/50869633
 
I am happy and all for the celebration, as long as we are winning 1-0 on Boxing day at Leicester.
 
Really tough game, Flamengo is such a good team but our fitness at the end showed along with our class.

Champions League, Supercup and World cup cup.

Great 2019 for LFC but wont matter if 2020 is not our league winning moment, bigger than all of those 3 trophies.
 
It's official that Liverpool are the best club side in the world. Winning the League now will be the perfect icing on the cake. We deserved to win it on the day.
 
Arsene Wenger says Fifa's expanded Club World Cup can make football "really global" and should not just be looked at from a European perspective.

However, Wenger, Fifa's chief of global football development, says it is "a chance for other clubs to progress".

Having championed the idea of a biennial World Cup, only for it to be dropped amid fierce opposition, the Frenchman wants to find ways of making all the confederations as strong as Europe's Uefa.

"The positive impact this will have on clubs is going to be huge, because it will increase resources for clubs all over the world to develop and to compete," said the former Arsenal manager.

"In Europe we are lucky, but it's important that we make football really global and this creates a chance for other clubs to progress. It will give more opportunities to more players all over the world to compete at the highest level.

"I accept that the football calendar is a busy one, but this is a competition that is going to take place every four years and of course the rest period during the competition and afterwards has to be respected."

The final of the event in the United States in 2025 will take place on 13 July. Under normal circumstances that would be four weeks before the start of the 2025-26 Premier League season.

At the height of the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020, European club competitions were completed after the end of all domestic football, with the quarter-finals onwards staged in this August period.

As a result, the Premier League gave Manchester City and Manchester United the opening week of the 2020-21 season off to allow their players extra rest time.

Source : BBC
 
A jump from 7 to 32-Teams for a Club World Cup feels too big for me. I reckon it should be a 16-team Club World Cup every two years, so 2023, 2025, 2027, 2029.

1 Host Team of Host Nation
Europe - 4 Teams
- 4 Finalists of the two preceding Champions League Finals
South America - 4 Teams - 4 Finalists of the two precceding Champions League Finals
North America - 2 Teams - 2 Winners of preceeding Champions League seasons
Asia - 2 Teams - 2 Winners of preceeding Champions League seasons
Africa - 2 Teams - 2 Winners of preceeding Champions League seasons
Oceania - 1 Team - Ranking System
 
So if I were to make a 16-team Club World Cup for 2023 hosted in Saudi Arabia, then here would be the teams


Host Team
Al-Ittihad (Saudi Arabia)
------------
Europe
Manchester City (England)
Real Madrid (Spain)
Liverpool (England)
Inter Milan (Italy)
------------
South America
Fluminense (Brazil)
Flamengo (Brazil)
Boca Juniors (Argentina)
Athletico Paranaense (Brazil)
------------
North America
León (Mexico)
Seattle Sounders FC (United States)
------------
Asia
Urawa Red Diamonds (Japan)
Al-Hilal (Saudi Arabia)
------------
Africa
Al-Ahly (Egypt)
Wydad Casablanca (Morocco)
------------
Oceania
Auckland City (New Zealand)

And if I were to do a random group draw, it would look like this:

Group A
Al-Ittihad
Inter Milan
Flamengo
Al-Ahly

Group B
Urawa Red Diamonds
Liverpool
Fluminense
Léon

Group C
Auckland City
Manchester City
Athletico Paranaense
Seattle Sounders

Group D
Al-Hilal
Real Madrid
Boca Juniors
Wydad Casablanca


Now that looks good, it looks a lot more clean compared to a 32-team Club World Cup
 
Match Report Manchester City vs Fluminese

Citizens add world title to their list of honours


Manchester City were just too good and a bit lucky for overmatched Fluminense in the Club World Cup final by winning 4-0 and taking a fifth title in 2023 on Friday.

City led after just 40 seconds to make it a match mostly free of tension. Julian Alvarez followed up fastest to meet a rebound off a post from Nathan Ake's shot.

An own goal in the 27th by Fluminense captain Nino decided the game long before Phil Foden's goal in the 72nd, guiding an Alvarez pass into an open net. Alvarez struck again in the 88th.

It gave City a first Club World Cup title and Europe a 16th in 17 editions of FIFA's competition for continental champions.

City cruised to a second easy win in four balmy days in Saudi Arabia even without injured superstars Erling Haaland and Kevin De Bruyne. They also missed City's semifinals win over Urawa Red Diamonds on Tuesday.

Their expected absences could help explain the empty seats among a crowd of 52,601 at King Abdullah Sports City, the Jeddah stadium which is planned to be used at the 2034 World Cup.

Victory made Pep Guardiola the first coach to win the Club World Cup with three different teams. He led Barcelona to titles in 2009 and 2011, then Bayern Munich in 2013 with a team that won the Champions League under outgoing coach Jupp Heynckes.

Guardiola celebrated calmly by walking across to console Fluminense coach Fernando Diniz with a handshake and arm on his shoulder.

At the same time, a melee broke out between players in the Fluminense half of the field.

Fluminense started with six players born in the 1980s, and bristled with perceived disrespect when told on Thursday of British media drawing attention to the age of its veteran team. City's oldest player in the starting lineup, 33-year-old captain Kyle Walker, was born in May 1990.

Source : The Standard
 
Liverpool supporters have been left fuming by a rule change that has favoured Man City after their Club World Cup triumph.

Pep Guardiola's side will wear the golden winners’ badge on their shirts for the rest of the season - which the Reds were prevented from doing four years ago.

Man City became world champions on Friday night as they swept away Brazilian side Fluminense with a 4-0 victory to win the FIFA-run competition.

Julian Alvarez was the star man with two goals in a game which descended into chaos after the final whistle as players clashed, with Guardiola later saying his side had ‘completed the chapter’ by making history with five major trophies won in the calendar year.

It means City’s sky blue shirt will get a golden addition, with the Club World Cup winners allowed to sport a commemorative patch to display their achievement until next year’s competition when a new champion is crowned.

It has been confirmed City will wear the Club World Cup patch with immediate effect, which has upset fans of Liverpool who weren’t allowed to.

Jurgen Klopp’s side were crowned Club World Cup champions in 2019 with a win over Brazilian club Flamengo in the final, following their Champions League triumph the previous season.

But they only wore the golden patch on their shirts on a few occasions due to a rule on kits in England.

At the time, the Premier League stated that kit changes - including new badges being added to existing shirts - could not be made during the campaign.

That differed from the rules elsewhere in Europe, with Real Madrid, Barcelona and Bayern Munich remembered for displaying it proudly on their kits.

TalkSPORT
 

Fifa faces legal threat over congested calendar​


World governing body Fifa is facing the threat of legal action from world players’ union Fifpro and the World Leagues Association – which includes the Premier League – if it continues with plans to host a 32-team Club World Cup at the end of next season.

They say the global football calendar is “now beyond saturation, to the point that national leagues are unable to properly organise their competitions" while "players are being pushed beyond their limits, with significant injury risks and impacts on their welfare".

BBC Sport reported in December that the PFA was taking legal advice over the lack of consultation over an increasingly congested calendar and the impact that was likely to have on its members.

PFA chief executive Maheta Molango has been part of a series of high-level discussions over the intervening period, including the European Leagues general assembly last month, when Premier League chief executive Richard Masters said the calendar was ‘at tipping point’.

Next season, all three European club competitions will be expanded to 36 teams. The Champions League and Europa League will have eight first phase games compared to the current six. It is possible a club would have to play 17 matches to win either competition.

Manchester City and Chelsea are among the 12 European representatives at the expanded Club World Cup, to be held in the United States in June and July next year.

Source: BBC
 

Fifa names 12 US stadiums for 2025 Club World Cup​

Fifa has named the 12 stadiums set to host the new-look Club World Cup in the United States next year.

The tournament, which will run from 15 June to 13 July 2025, is the first staging of an expanded 32-team competition.

Matches will be played across the US, with the final to take place at the MetLife Stadium in New Jersey, five miles from New York City.

The other venues are:

  • Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Atlanta
  • TQL Stadium, Cincinnati
  • Hard Rock Stadium, Miami
  • Geodis Park, Nashville
  • Bank of America Stadium, Charlotte
  • Camping World Stadium, Orlando
  • Inter&Co Stadium, Orlando
  • Rose Bowl Stadium, Los Angeles
  • Lincoln Financial Field, Philadelphia
  • Lumen Field, Seattle
  • Audi Field, Washington DC
Chelsea, Manchester City and Real Madrid have all automatically qualified from Europe as the most recent winners of the Champions League in the last four-year cycle.

Bayern Munich, Paris St-Germain, Inter Milan, Porto and Benfica will also feature, thanks to their co-efficient rankings.

Six South American clubs and 12 teams from Asia, Africa and North America will make up the rest of the tournament, while a spot is given to one club from Oceania and another for the US as the host nation.

The Club World Cup had previously been an annual mid-season tournament which included six teams from seven worldwide confederations.

"In 2025 a new era for club football will kick off when Fifa stages the greatest, most inclusive and merit-based global club competition right here in the United States," said Fifa president Gianni Infantino.

Fifa's decision to expand the competition has drawn criticism from clubs and players, particularly after Uefa expanded the Champions League and Europa League group stages to include two further matches.

Source: BBC
 
Club World Cup draw pairs Man City with Juventus; Chelsea face Flamengo

Defending champions Manchester City will face Juventus in the group stage of the Fifa Club World Cup next summer, while Chelsea meet Brazilian side Flamengo.

Pep Guardiola's City, who beat Brazilian side Fluminense to win the tournament for the first time in 2023, begin their title defence against Morocco's Wydad and also play Al Ain of the United Arab Emirates in Group G.

Chelsea, winners of the 2021 final, were also drawn alongside Mexico's Club Leon and Tunisian side Esperance Sportive de Tunisie in Group D.

The revamped Fifa Club World Cup, which has been expanded to 32 teams, will take place in the United States between 15 June and 13 July next year.


 
Fifa taken to court over Club World Cup rules

A Costa Rican club has taken Fifa to the Court of Arbitration for Sport over its Club World Cup rules.

Liga Deportiva Alajuelense argue football's governing body has broken its own regulations regarding multi-club ownership with the inclusion of Mexican clubs Leon and Pachuca.

Alajuelense said their case "demonstrates the existence of a joint ownership" between Leon and Pachuca and the club has requested a resolution at Cas "no later than one month before" the expanded 32-team Club World Cup begins on 15 June.

The 30-time Costa Rican champions believe they should replace one of those clubs in the tournament, which takes place in the United States, based on their continental club ranking.

In a statement to BBC Sport, Cas said an "arbitration procedure has been initiated" after a complaint from Alajuelense.

BBC Sport has contacted Fifa for comment.

Of the four places reserved for clubs from the Confederation of North, Central America and Caribbean Association Football (Concacaf), three Mexican side have qualified.

Leon and Pachuca, who are both owned by the Pachuca Group, are set to join Monterrey as three of the most recent Concacaf Champions Cup winners.

Article 10.1 of Fifa's regulations for the Club World Cup states that no club participating "may hold or deal in the securities or shares of any other club participating in the competition" or "be involved in any capacity whatsoever in the management, administration and/or sporting performance of any other club".

Alajuelense filed an initial complaint with Fifa in November to request its right to participate in the next Club World Cup.

That was met by a response from Fifa, who acknowledged receipt of the complaint but said Alajuelense would not necessarily become "a party to proceedings" should there be any, the Times reported., external

The owner of the Pachuca Group, Jesus Martinez, said in December that his intention was to put a majority share in Leon up for sale in order to comply with Fifa's rules.

Alajuelense released a further statement on 15 January, calling on Fifa to issue a decision on their case.

The 2025 Club World Cup will take place between 15 June and 13 July.

BBC
 
Man City and Chelsea could earn £97m at Club World Cup

Manchester City and Chelsea could earn up to £97m in prize money from this year's Club World Cup.

The overall prize fund, shared between all 32 teams based on different factors, will be £775m, with £407m divided between all participating clubs and £368m awarded on a performance-related basis.

Money awarded for participation is weighted by a ranking based on sporting and commercial criteria, meaning European clubs will earn more for taking part than teams from other continents.

The top-ranked European team will receive £29.6m just for participating - and they would secure the maximum prize available for winning all of their group stage games and then going on to win the tournament.

As a result, Manchester City and Chelsea, the two Premier League sides in the competition who qualified thanks to their recent Champions League wins, could earn £97m - the biggest prize money ever awarded in club football over a seven-game format.

The expanded Club World Cup will take place in the United States from 15 June to 13 July.

Previously an annual tournament contested by seven teams, it will now feature 32 clubs and take place once every four years.


 
Soccer-FIFA's inaugural Club World Cup set to kick off in the US amid challenges

FIFA's billion-dollar gamble to revolutionise club football begins a week on Sunday with plenty of cash up for grabs but questionable enthusiasm as 32 teams prepare to contest the expanded Club World Cup in 12 stadiums across the United States.

The tournament – designed as a glittering showcase ahead of the 2026 World Cup – has had to contend with the prospect of empty seats along with controversial qualification rules and player welfare concerns after an exhausting European season.

Lionel Messi's Inter Miami face Egypt's Al Ahly in the opening fixture on June 15 at Miami's Hard Rock Stadium, with tickets still widely available days before kickoff.

A glance at FIFA's website shows lots of tickets available, including for the July 13 final at New Jersey's MetLife Stadium.

Messi's presence underscores the tournament's contentious foundations.

Inter Miami gained entry by topping Major League Soccer's regular season standings, despite losing in the first round of the playoffs – a decision critics say shows FIFA's desperation to have the Argentina great at their inaugural showpiece.

FIFA’s decision to give the host nation a spot and award it to Inter Miami underlined the opaque nature of the qualifying criteria for the tournament, which won’t feature Liverpool, Barcelona or Napoli who have all just been crowned champions of three of the most prestigious leagues in Europe.

Apart from the winners of each confederation's premier club competitions, teams qualified according to a ranking based on their performances over a four-year period.

Source: Reuters
 
Club World Cup officials get instant offside call

Club World Cup officials will use an accelerated semi-automated offside technology that will tell them to stop the game immediately if a player who is more than 10cm offside touches the ball.

It is one of the most significant initiatives being introduced for the 32-team tournament in the US and is aimed at reducing needless delays.

Assistant referees will receive the notification instantly rather than having to wait for the technology to check positions and distances - as is the case with semi-automated offside (SAO) systems used in most major leagues.

SAO was introduced into the Premier League on 12 April, before which the video assistant referee (VAR) made all offside rulings.

The introduction of the enhanced SAO comes a month after Nottingham Forest striker Taiwo Awoniyi suffered a serious abdominal injury after crashing into a post during their Premier League draw against Leicester.

He had been chasing the ball despite a clear offside that had not been given.

Among the other developments in use at the tournament, which starts on Sunday, are:

  • Referees wearing body cams that allow live pictures to be shown immediately before the game and on delay during it.
  • An eight-second countdown for goalkeepers to release the ball.
  • VAR pictures shown to fans in real time inside the ground.
Be braver with offside decisions - Collina

In the aftermath of the Awoniyi incident, team-mate Ola Aina said the injury "would never have happened" had the assistant referee raised their flag earlier.

The enhanced element of SAO will not work if a player who does not play the ball is offside, or in a crowded situation.

International referees chief Pierluigi Collina said officials therefore need to be "braver" with their offside decisions at the tournament.

"Since the very beginning we have told the assistant referee 'in case of doubt, keep the flag down'," said Collina, the Italian former World Cup final referee who is now chairman of Fifa's referees' committee.

"If you raise the flag, it kills everything, including the possibility that the VAR can help you.

"But we are aware this has led to some consequences.

"Probably the assistant referees went a bit far. What was a doubt became bigger and bigger and bigger.

"There are possible offside incidents where top assistant referees, as there are in many competitions around the world, would not have this doubt.

"Despite the introduction of this [technology], we have also reminded our assistant referees to be a bit braver and more courageous in putting the flag up when the offside is offside. Two metres offside cannot lead to a doubt."

Countdown for goalkeepers

A new plan to speed up the game will be implemented at the Club World Cup and the European Under-21 Championship, in which referees will only allow goalkeepers eight seconds to release the ball.

After three seconds, the referee will raise their hand in the air and count down from five to notify the goalkeeper he has to release. If he fails, the attacking side will be awarded a corner.

Collina said it will largely be a preventative measure and that a corner was awarded twice in 160 games when it was trialled in South America.

"The referees should be flexible," he said. "If a goalkeeper has the ball for 8.1 seconds it is not necessarily a corner.

"But we have had a lot of instances of goalkeepers keeping the ball for 25 seconds. There is nothing entertaining about that."

VAR replays to be shown in stadium

As in previous Fifa tournaments, the on-pitch referee will communicate VAR decisions and the reasons for them to supporters in the stadium.

For the first time, fans at the match will be able to see the replays the officials are being shown.

However, there will still be no broadcast of the discussions in the VAR hub.

Collina urged patience for those who cannot understand why football is not yet implementing something commonplace in rugby, cricket and all major American sports.

"I cannot tell you if something more might be added in the future," he said. "But we need to do it when we are sure this will not affect the decision-making process.

"When they are doing their job, which is very difficult, the VARs and the referees are under pressure. Knowing everyone is listening may add some pressure.

"We are a work in process. We have not to forget that, although VAR feels as though it has existed forever, the first match with it was 2016.

"We have to be patient."

Bodycam footage on delay

Fifa will show live images from referees' bodycams, which will be attached to their earpieces, before the game, in the tunnel and during the warm-up and coin toss.

However, there will be no live images shown during the game and, although goals and moments of skill will be shown with a delay, anything controversial or in bad taste, such as a player suffering a nasty injury, will not appear.

Although the images would be available to VAR, Collina cannot see how a camera next to a referee's eye would detect something the official had missed.

What it will do, Fifa believes, is show the game from a unique vantage point and "enhance the storytelling".

To that end, it is an entertainment concept.

"That is clear," said Collina.

BCC
 
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