CLUB WORLD CUP
Mbappé Set for Explosive Reunion with PSG in Club World Cup Semi-final
Kylian Mbappé is set to face his former club, Paris Saint-Germain for the first time since his controversial departure, as Real Madrid prepare for a high-stakes Club World Cup semi-final clash on July 9 in New Jersey.
The blockbuster encounter pits Mbappé against the club where he became a legend—scoring 256 goals in 308 appearances over seven seasons—before leaving on a free transfer to fulfil a childhood dream of playing for Real Madrid.
While Mbappé’s on-field legacy at PSG is undeniable, his exit in 2024 was marred by tension. PSG president Nasser Al-Khelaifi was reportedly furious that the French superstar allowed his contract to expire, denying the club a transfer fee. The fallout has since escalated into a legal dispute, with Mbappé claiming he is owed €55 million in unpaid wages and bonuses.
Only last month, the Paris prosecutor’s office confirmed an investigation into allegations of “moral harassment” after Mbappé accused PSG of ostracising him during the summer of 2023. He was excluded from the club’s pre-season tour and trained separately after refusing to sign a contract extension. However, he later dropped the complaint, according to one of his lawyers.
Despite the off-field drama, the 26-year-old France captain has thrived in his debut season at Madrid, scoring 43 goals in 56 matches across all competitions. His performances have been central to Xabi Alonso’s bright start as Real Madrid manager.
Mbappé’s Club World Cup campaign, however, got off to a slow start. A stomach bug kept him out of the group stage, during which young forward Gonzalo García stepped up impressively with four goals in five matches, including the opener in a 3-2 quarter-final win over Borussia Dortmund.
But Mbappé announced his arrival in style, coming off the bench in that match to score a stunning overhead kick that proved to be the winner in stoppage time.
“He is still not at 100 percent, but he is getting better every day,” Alonso said after the match. “Now he has three days to keep progressing before the semi-final.”
The semi-final also marks a tactical test for Alonso, who has shown flexibility by switching between back-four and three-man defence systems throughout the tournament. His next move could hinge on PSG’s strengths—particularly as the French champions arrive in top form.
PSG, under Luis Enrique, are brimming with confidence after a dominant 5-0 thrashing of Inter Milan in the UEFA Champions League final and a gritty 2-0 win over Bayern Munich in the Club World Cup quarter-finals, despite finishing that match with nine men following red cards to Willian Pacho and Lucas Hernandez.
For Enrique, the semi-final carries personal significance. The former Spanish international spent five years as a Real Madrid player in the 1990s before joining rivals Barcelona. Yet, he remained focused on the task at hand: “It doesn’t matter who we play in the semi-finals. What matters is that we’re here and determined to reach the final.”
For Mbappé, the stage is set for a dramatic showdown against his former club—his first time facing PSG since his days as a teenage sensation at AS Monaco in 2017. All eyes will be on MetLife Stadium as one of football’s biggest storylines unfolds.
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CLUB WORLD CUP
Trophygate: Chelsea gets ‘fake’ trophy as Trump Keeps Original Club World Cup trophy

Controversy has erupted following Chelsea’s dramatic victory over Paris Saint-Germain in the FIFA Club World Cup final, with reports suggesting that the trophy presented to the English club is a replica – and that the original remains in the possession of U.S. President Donald Trump.
The Blues clinched the inaugural edition of the revamped tournament at the MetLife Stadium on Sunday, July 13, with captain Reece James receiving the silverware from Trump and FIFA President Gianni Infantino.
However, social media and the international press have been ablaze with claims that the trophy lifted during the celebrations was not the authentic one.
Videos from the post-match ceremony showed Trump lingering on the podium well after the presentation, standing beside James as he hoisted the trophy. This unusual move immediately drew attention.
Now, the intrigue has deepened following Trump’s own remarks in an interview with sports broadcaster DAZN, in which he admitted that the original trophy was currently “in his office at the White House.”
According to sources, Infantino unveiled the redesigned Club World Cup trophy at the White House shortly after Trump returned to office earlier this year, following his election win over Kamala Harris.
It now appears that the original trophy never left the presidential residence, prompting FIFA to commission a replica for the ceremony in New Jersey.
Adding fuel to the fire, Trump was also seen pocketing one of the winner’s medals during the event.
Infantino had handed him a medal, presumably for inspection, but the U.S. President was later spotted slipping it inside his blazer.
This led to online jokes among fans, with some suggesting he had taken the medal intended for Chelsea winger Noni Madueke, who left the squad just before the final to complete a surprise move to Arsenal.
Madueke was reportedly seen partying with Jadon Sancho at the Wireless Festival in London while Chelsea celebrated across the Atlantic.
The incident has cast an odd shadow over what was otherwise a historic moment for Chelsea, marking their first triumph under the new Club World Cup format.
With the 2026 FIFA World Cup set to take place in the U.S., Mexico, and Canada, and the final returning to MetLife Stadium, questions may linger over the relationship between football’s global leadership and its most controversial political host.
FIFA has yet to comment officially on the trophy replica claims.
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CLUB WORLD CUP
Trump pays homage to Pele, met with boos, cheers from Club World Cup crowd

U.S. President Donald Trump paid homage to soccer great Pele after being met with boos and cheers from the crowd at the Club World Cup final on Sunday at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey.
Chelsea walloped Paris St Germain 3-0 to close out the newly expanded version of the tournament, designed as a glittering curtain-raiser for the 2026 World Cup that the U.S. will co-host with Mexico and Canada.
Trump was seated next to FIFA boss Gianni Infantino in box seats at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, where fans booed him when he appeared briefly on the jumbotron during the U.S. national anthem.
He was on his feet in the same VIP suite after Chelsea completed their thrashing of Paris St Germain, pumping his fist as congratulatory music blared.
Trump was met with boos from the crowd again as he posed with the match referees on the pitch during the trophy ceremony, as organisers kept the music pumping in the stadium.
He handed Chelsea their trophy and stood in the middle of the players for their team photo and celebration.
“I knew he was going to be there but I didn’t know he was going to be on the stand when we lifted the trophy so I was a bit confused,” said Chelsea midfielder Cole Palmer, who scored two goals during the match.
Asked in a TV interview who he believed was soccer’s “GOAT,” Trump named Brazilian icon Pele, who helped spark interest in the sport in the U.S. in his brief time playing for the New York Cosmos in the fledgling North American Soccer League in 1975.
“I came to watch Pele, and he was fantastic,” Trump told broadcaster DAZN. “That’s like saying Babe Ruth, but I would say Pele was so great.”
Trump has embraced sport’s super-sized spotlight during his second term, becoming the first sitting president to attend a Super Bowl in February.
In May, he announced D.C. as the host for the 2027 NFL Draft from the Oval Office. He regularly attends UFC and has said he wants to host such fights at the White House next year.
FIFA announced last week that it had opened an office in New York’s Trump Tower ahead of the 2026 World Cup, which the U.S. will co-host with Canada and Mexico. A record 48 national teams are set to take part.
Trump’s appearance at MetLife came a day after he threatened to impose a 30% tariff on imports from Mexico and the European Union, an escalation of a trade war that has angered U.S. allies and rattled investors.
-Reuters
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CLUB WORLD CUP
Palmer double fires Chelsea past PSG to Club World Cup glory

Cole Palmer produced a scintillating first-half masterclass as Chelsea demolished Paris St Germain 3-0 to win the Club World Cup final at New Jersey’s MetLife Stadium on Sunday.
The English attacking midfielder scored twice and provided an assist for Joao Pedro in a devastating display in the revamped tournament’s decider that left the European and French champions, who finished with 10 men, shell-shocked before the break.
Chelsea struck first in the 22nd minute when PSG fullback Nuno Mendes gifted possession to Malo Gusto. While his initial effort was blocked by Mendes, Gusto collected the rebound and found Palmer unmarked in the middle and the midfielder made no mistake, slotting a tidy finish just inside the left post.
Palmer doubled the lead after the 30th-minute cooling break with a goal of sublime quality. Latching onto a precise through ball from Levi Colwill, he cut inside before faking a pass to dummy a defender and firing into the bottom-left corner.
Palmer then turned provider, running up the channel before finding Joao Pedro, who took the ball in his stride and beat the offside trap before chipping his finish beautifully over keeper Gianluigi Donnarumma.
PSG’s misery was completed when Joao Neves was sent off for pulling Marc Cucurella’s hair in the 83rd minute.
-Reuters
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