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CLUB WORLD CUP

Flamengo won’t take Ighalo’ Al Hilal lightly in Club World Cup semis

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Club World Cup – Flamengo Press Conference – Ibn Batouta Stadium, Tangier, Morocco – February 6, 2023 Flamengo coach Vitor Pereira during press conference REUTERS/Susana Vera

Flamengo will not make the mistake of looking past Saudi Arabia’s Al Hilal in their Club World Cup semi-final on Tuesday and will give the challenge the attention it deserves, manager Vitor Pereira said on Monday.

Since FIFA changed the Intercontinental Cup, a competition played by the winners of the European Cup and Copa Libertadores, to a new format including clubs from other continents, the South American sides have lost five times in the semis.

“We will not fall into the trap of thinking it will be an easy match against Al Hilal,” Pereira told a news conference.

“They are a good team that have already a tradition to make it tough for opponents in the Club World Cup so we will not take them lightly.

“We are motivated because we can bring great joy to our fans. We represent millions of supporters, and we also represent an entire continent.”

Pereira acknowledged the pressure not to disappoint the Brazilians, who see the Club World Cup as the most important title a South American club can win, but said that works as an incentive rather than an extra challenge.

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“Having the pressure to win a title is great. Bad pressure is when you are fighting against relegation,” Pereira said.

“The pressure that we are feeling today is a pressure that sparks you from inside, that excites, because it’s a unique opportunity.

“We are two games away from the most incredible moment of our career.”

Defender David Luiz, who lost a Club World Cup final with Chelsea in 2012, agreed with his coach and insisted the players were not even thinking about a possible clash against Real Madrid in Saturday’s showpiece.

Real face Egypt’s Al Ahly in the second semi-final on Wednesday.

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“Our final is against Al Hilal on Tuesday,” David Luiz told a news conference.

“The dream of winning the Club World Cup started in our first Copa Libertadores game last year. That’s why we should think exclusively about the semi-final.

“This is our final at the moment, it’s going to be very difficult. We know we are going to face a qualified opponent.”

Al-Hilal coach Ramon Diaz said he understood that Flamengo were the favourites to win but that his side will try to shock the South American giants.

“We have to be ready and focused the entire match so we don’t waste an opportunity when it comes,” Diaz told a news conference.

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“Our team are coming from winning two Asian Champions League (titles) in three years. We have 12 players from the Saudi Arabia team, so we will compete.”

Kunle Solaja is the author of landmark books on sports and journalism as well as being a multiple award-winning journalist and editor of long standing. He is easily Nigeria’s foremost soccer diarist and Africa's most capped FIFA World Cup journalist, having attended all FIFA World Cup finals from Italia ’90 to Qatar 2022. He was honoured at the Qatar 2022 World Cup by FIFA and AIPS.

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New Jersey awarded 2025 Club World Cup final

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Sep 8, 2024; East Rutherford, New Jersey, USA; Fans display an American flag on the field before the game between the New York Giants and the Minnesota Vikings at MetLife Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images/File Photo

The 2025 FIFA Club World Cup final will be held at the New Jersey home of the NFL’s New York Giants and New York Jets, world soccer’s governing body announced on Saturday along with the venue lineup for the revamped tournament.

The expanded 32-team tournament, which will feature leading clubs from around the world, will be held in 12 stadiums around the United States next year from June 15-July 13.

The open-air stadium for the final, which opened in 2010 and has a capacity of 82,500, held the Copa America Centenario final in 2016 when Chile denied Lionel Messi’s Argentina for a second time in a penalty shootout.

The venue was also announced earlier this year as the site of the 2026 World Cup final.

The other venues, mostly a mix of NFL and Major League Soccer stadiums, are in Atlanta, Charlotte, Cincinnati, Los Angeles, Miami, Nashville, Philadelphia, Seattle, Washington and two in Orlando.

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The Club World Cup will have eight groups of four with the top two teams from each group advancing to the single-match knockout stage from the round of 16 to the final.

FIFPRO’s European member unions have started legal action against FIFA over the Club World Cup due to concerns over the impact of a crammed calendar on players’ health and performance.

-Reuters

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FIFA names 12 stadiums set to stage historic FIFA Club World Cup 2025

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NEW YORK, NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 28: Gianni Infantino and Hugh Jackman speak onstage during the Global Citizen Festival 2024 in Central Park on September 28, 2024 in New York City. (Photo by Theo Wargo/Getty Images for Global Citizen) Copyright 2024 Getty Images

Twelve stadiums have been announced as venues for the expanded Club World Cup holding in the United States next year. There will be 32 clubs in attendance – a far departure from the regular  eight.

The tournament kicks off on Sunday, 15 June 2025, with all roads leading to the MetLife Stadium in New York.

The final match will be in New Jersey on Sunday, 13 July 2025, just over a year before the venue stages the FIFA World Cup 26 final.

This venue is joined by 11 more – Mercedes-Benz Stadium (Atlanta), Bank of America Stadium (Charlotte), TQL Stadium (Cincinnati), Rose Bowl Stadium (Los Angeles), Hard Rock Stadium (Miami), GEODIS Park (Nashville), Camping World Stadium (Orlando), Inter&Co Stadium (Orlando), Lincoln Financial Field (Philadelphia), Lumen Field (Seattle), and Audi Field (Washington, D.C.).

“The FIFA Club World Cup 2025 will feature 12 fantastic stadiums where a new chapter in football’s global history will be written by great players from the 32 best clubs in the world,”  Infantino, the FIFA president stated.

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 “This new FIFA competition is the only true example in worldwide club football of real solidarity and inclusivity, allowing the best clubs from Africa, Asia, Central and North America and Oceania to play the powerhouses of Europe and South America in an incredible new World Cup which will impact enormously the growth of club football and talent globally.

“This is about opportunity and hope for those who need it most, and also about prestige and true football for those who make our sport shine.” 

With the draw set for December, just two of the 32 teams are yet to be confirmed: one from South America, the other representing the host country.

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SHOCKER! Real Madrid pull out of Club World Cup

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Champions League - Final - Borussia Dortmund v Real Madrid - Wembley Stadium, London, Britain - June 1, 2024 Real Madrid coach Carlo Ancelotti celebrates with the trophy after winning the Champions League REUTERS/Hannah Mckay

The expanded FIFA Club World Cup which has put the organisation of the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations in disarray, is beginning to crumble.

Cup holders, Real Madrid, have indicated their intention not to participate.

Earlier on, the umbrella body of professional footballers has also frowned at the fixtures congestion which the novel competition appears to have caused.

According to Reuters’ report, Real Madrid will decline FIFA’s invitation to participate in the Club World Cup as the governing body have undervalued the compensation the 15-times Champions League winners should receive, manager Carlo Ancelotti said.

FIFA’s revamped international tournament, with 32 teams, is set to take place in the United States at the end of next season, with Europe’s best-ranked 12 clubs among those invited.

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Ancelotti, one of the most successful football managers in Europe, has won the Club World Cup three times and the Champions League five times.

“FIFA can forget it, footballers and clubs will not participate in that tournament,” Ancelotti told Italian daily Il Giornale in an interview published on Monday to coincide with his 65th birthday.

“A single Real Madrid match is worth 20 million and FIFA wants to give us that amount for the whole cup. Negative. Like us, other clubs will refuse the invitation.”

Ancelotti, who led Real to a Champions League and LaLiga double last season, said there had been a lot of pressure on managers lately but he had managed to stay passionate about his job.

“I see nothing particularly new, this has always been our job but the case of (former Liverpool manager Juergen) Klopp is significant. The pressure continues, the burden of responsibility becomes too heavy, obsession takes over,” he said.

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“I keep my passion, that’s how I live the match, the game, my job; I’ve always carried this balance with me. I’ve overcome moments that weren’t always positive; after my experience with Everton I was off the radar, they thought I was finished, I was old.”

With all three European club competitions expanded to 36 teams from next season, the Club World Cup has come under scrutiny for saturating the football calendar.

In May, FIFA said they would not consider rescheduling their 32-team Club World Cup after global players’ union FIFPRO and the World Leagues Association (WLA) threatened legal action if they did not review their plans.

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