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The draw for FIFA’s revamped Club World Cup is coming up

The draw for FIFA’s revamped Club World Cup is coming up
Soccer’s biggest ever global club tournament is coming to the United States next year and the 32-team group stage will be drawn Thursday. (Reuters/File)
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Updated 05 December 2024

The draw for FIFA’s revamped Club World Cup is coming up

The draw for FIFA’s revamped Club World Cup is coming up
  • The tournament will take place in 11 US cities from June 15 to July 13 in an expanded format with 32 teams instead of the previous seven
  • Europe got 12 places, South America six, while Africa, Asia and North America got four each

GENEVA: Soccer’s biggest ever global club tournament is coming to the United States next year and the 32-team group stage will be drawn Thursday.
European powers Real Madrid and Manchester City, Lionel Messi’s Inter Miami, recently crowned South American champion Botafogo and top clubs from Asia, Africa and Oceania are among the teams who are in the draw for FIFA’s revamped Club World Cup.
The tournament, which used to be played annually in December, will take place in 11 US cities from June 15 to July 13 in an expanded format with 32 teams instead of the previous seven. Going forward the Club World Cup will be played every four years – just like the World Cup for national teams, which will be co-hosted by the US, Mexico and Canada in 2026.
Here’s what to know about the Club World Cup draw, which is made in Miami at 1 p.m. (1800 GMT) on Thursday.
What is the Club World Cup?
FIFA and its presidents have long coveted a prime piece of club soccer content.
The 2025 Club World Cup is FIFA’s most ambitious project, creating a month-long tournament in a mid-June to mid-July slot historically used by the men’s World Cup, which draws the biggest audiences in global sports.
The new club competition uses the traditional 32-team format used by the World Cup from 1998 to 2022. Eight round-robin groups of four teams each, and the top two advance to a knockout bracket of 16.
In allocating 32 entries, FIFA tried to balance getting the best and most watchable teams with giving all the world a chance to compete and develop.
Europe got 12 places, South America six, while Africa, Asia and North America got four each. One place went to Oceania and one to the host nation that should change for each edition.
Teams qualified by winning their continental championship from 2021 through 2024, or ranking highly with consistent results across those four seasons. Countries are capped at two entries unless more won titles. Brazil will send four different Copa Libertadores winners and Mexico three champions of the CONCACAF region. The other North American champion was Seattle Sounders.
Who will play?
Storied and wealthy European names are in: Real Madrid, Manchester City, Bayern Munich, Inter Milan and Paris Saint-Germain. The current leaders of most of Europe’s strongest leagues miss out: Liverpool, Barcelona, Napoli and Sporting Lisbon.
Salzburg earned the last European entry last season based on FIFA’s ranking system though it can hardly be considered among Europe’s top clubs: it’s currently 32nd in the new 36-team Champions League standings.
Argentina’s big two clubs, River Plate and Boca Juniors, are in. The Brazilian and Mexican entries include, respectively, Fluminense and Pachuca, both currently 16th in their national league standings.
Africa’s entries include Al Ahly of Egypt — three times champion of Africa in the last four years — and Mamelodi Sundowns of South Africa, which is owned by FIFA vice president Patrice Motsepe.
ֱ sends Al-Hilal, the 2021 champion of Asia, which won the domestic league last season despite losing Neymar to a long-term injury.
If they stay fit, the tournament will feature a new generation of stars such as Real Madrid’s Kylian Mbappé, Vinícius Júnior and Jude Bellingham, Manchester City’s Erling Haaland and Bayern Munich’s Jamal Musiala.
Lionel Messi’s Inter Miami will be there, with a FIFA thumb on the scales in October to give the team the host nation’s entry. Two other stars from Messi’s generation will miss out: Cristiano Ronaldo’s ֱn club Al Nassr and Barcelona with Robert Lewandowski failed to qualify through their continental Champions League competitions.
Why is Inter Miami playing?
The previous version of the Club World Cup kept an entry for the host nation’s champion. But this time FIFA did not wait for the MLS Cup title game on Saturday, when LA Galaxy hosts New York Red Bulls. Neither will be in the draw Thursday.
Instead, Inter Miami, with the star power of Lionel Messi on the field and co-owner David Beckham, was given the Club World Cup place in October based on regular-season standings. It will play three group-stage games in Florida, including opening the tournament at the Hard Rock Stadium.
What are they playing for?
Money and a trophy. Which is more prized by club owners is a debate to be had.
FIFA president Gianni Infantino has promised hundreds of millions of dollars in prize money, with reported guarantees of $50 million to top European teams, though it is currently unclear where from.
FIFA signed a global broadcasting deal Wednesday with streaming service DAZN to make all 63 games available for free. The value of the deal was not disclosed, and allows the streaming service to sell on rights to public broadcasters.
DAZN has close ties with ֱ, which promotes and stages top-level boxing title fights.
The new gold trophy has been fashioned by Tiffany and has Infantino’s name engraved on it twice. Plus his signature.
What is the tournament’s history?
Traditionally, the champions of Europe and South America played for the Intercontinental Cup. From 1980 to 2004 the game was played in Japan and usually in December.
FIFA launched a Club World Championship in 2000, played in January by eight teams in Brazil. It was not held again for nearly six years.
From 2005 through last year, the annual FIFA Club World Cup was played each December, settling on a seven-team knockout format: the six reigning continental champions and the host nation’s domestic champion. Hosts rotated between Japan, Abu Dhabi, Morocco, Qatar and, for its final edition last December, ֱ.
This annual event was unloved in Europe. The UEFA Champions League winner typically arrived for two games in four days and took home the trophy. Chelsea in 2012 was the only European team to lose in the past 17 years.
When first elected in 2016, Infantino spoke of FIFA’s need for a bigger, more attractive and lucrative club event.
In his previous job as UEFA general secretary, he helped organize the Champions League, in peak years of Messi winning the title at Barcelona and Ronaldo with Manchester United and then Real Madrid.
First, Infantino had a secretive $25 billion deal for new tournaments including a 24-team Club World Cup worth $3 billion every four years from 2021. That was blocked by European soccer officials.
Agreement was reached to play an inaugural 24-team tournament in June 2021 in China. Europe was to send just six teams.
No broadcast or sponsor deals had been announced by early 2020 when the tournament was scrapped because of the COVID-19 pandemic. The June 2021 slot was needed for the postponed Euro 2020 and Copa America.
After the failed Super League project in April 2021 rocked European soccer, FIFA found agreement for a 32-team Club World Cup.


Zimbabwe fire coach after poor World Cup qualifying campaign

Updated 7 sec ago

Zimbabwe fire coach after poor World Cup qualifying campaign

Zimbabwe fire coach after poor World Cup qualifying campaign
Nees had been in the job for 14 months
Zimbabwe must now find a new coach in time for the Cup of Nations

HARARE: Zimbabwe have fired their German coach Michael Nees after a disappointing World Cup qualifying campaign and only two months before they play at the Africa Cup of Nations finals, the Zimbabwe Football Association said.
Nees had been in the job for 14 months, ensuring Zimbabwe’s qualification for the Cup of Nations finals in Morocco.
He then oversaw the last six matches of the 2026 World Cup qualifying campaign, in which they ended last in their group, having drawn three and lost three.
Overall, he won two of 14 games he was in charge of since being appointed in August last year.
Zimbabwe must now find a new coach in time for the Cup of Nations, where they face Egypt in their opening Group B game in Agadir on December 22.
The 58-year-old Nees had previous national team jobs in Africa with Seychelles and Rwanda and was technical director in Israel and Kosovo.

PIF’s SURJ Sports Investment partners with ATP in first ever expansion of the Masters 1000 category in ATP Tour’s 35-year history 

PIF’s SURJ Sports Investment partners with ATP in first ever expansion of the Masters 1000 category in ATP Tour’s 35-year history 
Updated 21 min 44 sec ago

PIF’s SURJ Sports Investment partners with ATP in first ever expansion of the Masters 1000 category in ATP Tour’s 35-year history 

PIF’s SURJ Sports Investment partners with ATP in first ever expansion of the Masters 1000 category in ATP Tour’s 35-year history 
  • Landmark deal sees SURJ bring newly created ATP Masters 1000 tournament to ֱ, cementing the country’s position as a premier global sports destination 
  • Announcement marks the first addition to the ATP Tour’s top-tier of events since its inception in 1990 
  • Backed by PIF, a strategic partner of both men’s and women’s tennis, SURJ’s investment reflects ֱ’s ambition to help shape the future of the global game 

PARIS/RIYADH: SURJ Sports Investments, a PIF company, and ATP have announced the launch of an all-new ATP Masters 1000 tournament, to be hosted in ֱ.  

In what is the first ever expansion of the tournament category, ֱ will become the tenth ATP Masters 1000 host, joining the existing nine tournaments in Indian Wells, Miami, Monte-Carlo, Madrid, Rome, Toronto/Montreal, Cincinnati, Shanghai and Paris. The Saudi tournament will begin as early as 2028.

The agreement marks a new era for global tennis and a major sports transformation in ֱ, bringing the most celebrated names in the sport to the country and delivering an unforgettable experience for fans.  

The hosting of the tenth ATP Masters 1000 event underscores PIF’s long-term commitment to shaping the future of international tennis and global sport, and elevating ֱ’s position as a premier global sports and entertainment hub. The deal builds on the existing strategic partnership between PIF and ATP, which includes PIF as the official naming partner of the PIF ATP Rankings (as well as the WTA rankings), partnering on several key ATP Tour events and the recent launch of a next-generation technology platform, ATP Tennis IQ Powered by PIF. As part of the agreement, the new event will join ATP and the existing Masters 1000 tournaments as a shareholder in ATP Media, the Tour’s global broadcast and media arm. 

The tournament will also focus on accelerating the growth of the game at all levels. A nationwide grassroots program, developed in partnership with the Saudi Tennis Federation, will promote inclusivity, accessibility, and talent development, inspiring the next generation of Saudi athletes and champions and creating robust pathways for participation. This supports part of PIF’s broader ambition to grow sport at all levels, and to help drive the development of tennis across both the men’s and women’s game. 

Bander Bin Mogren, Chairman of SURJ Sports Investment, said: “Bringing an ATP Masters 1000 event to ֱ is a major step forward for tennis in the region and a reflection of our shared commitment with ATP to the growth of the game around the world. This announcement underscores ֱ’s emergence as a major destination for world-class sport and strengthens our ambition to support athletes, fans, and the wider tennis community for years to come. We are proud to be leading this effort with our partners, and we are committed to delivering a tournament that leaves a lasting legacy for the sport.” 

Andrea Gaudenzi, ATP Chairman, commented: "This is a proud moment for us and the result of a journey that’s been years in the making. ֱ has shown a genuine commitment to tennis – not just at the professional level, but also in growing the game more broadly at all levels. PIF’s ambition for the sport is clear, and we believe fans and players alike will be amazed by what’s coming. Strengthening our premium events is driving record growth and transformation across the Tour, and we’re grateful to our partners at PIF and SURJ for helping deliver that growth and sharing in this vision.”  

Danny Townsend, CEO of SURJ Sports Investment, added: "The launch of an ATP Masters 1000 in ֱ is a defining moment in our journey to enhance the sports landscape. This tournament is more than an event; it is a statement of ambition, showcasing ֱ’s role as a global sports hub. In partnership with ATP, we are committed to creating an extraordinary experience for players and fans, while advancing our mission to develop sport at every level.” 

Sports is a key strategic sector for PIF, unlocking opportunities and enriching lives while establishing ֱ as a global destination for sports and a driver of long-term economic growth. PIF supports a wide range of sports globally and domestically, including football/soccer, tennis, golf, electric motorsports, combat sports and esports both to drive sports’ global growth and encourage participation domestically.  

With Riyadh having hosted the WTA Finals since 2024 and Jeddah as the home of the Next Gen ATP Finals since 2023, this latest announcement is set to strengthen the country’s connection with tennis and inspire an emerging fanbase with yet another glimpse of the world’s best players. 

More details on the tournament venue and dates will be announced in due course. 


Test Twenty highlights ever-evolving business of spotting cricketing talent

Test Twenty highlights ever-evolving business of spotting cricketing talent
Updated 43 min 55 sec ago

Test Twenty highlights ever-evolving business of spotting cricketing talent

Test Twenty highlights ever-evolving business of spotting cricketing talent
  • Game’s ‘fourth format’ will use AI to help discover, nurture young players

As a boy, I dreamed of playing cricket for my county and my country. Obviously, I was not the only one. Very few made it to the top. The financial rewards at the time were slim but the status counted for something. The pathways to the top were random.

A scout would come to matches to watch players. Over time, he formed a view and reported to the county coaches. An invitation to a trial might be issued, a single chance to impress. Failure was unlikely to gain a second chance. Even success did not guarantee a second invitation. 

In today’s game there are much more structured pathways in place to identify talent capable of progressing to professional level. Generally, these are in age groups, starting with under-10s. In England and Wales, the pathways are organized by the county cricket boards. Naturally, the boards hope that their investment in these players will result in them displaying loyalty. The advent of franchise cricket has begun to disrupt this balance. It may be about to receive a new shock.

Last week, a new global initiative was launched, titled Test Twenty. Its focus is on 13- to 19-year-old males, with a female equivalent mooted for the second season. Test Twenty’s format concept comprises 80 overs, divided into two innings of 20 overs per side, with scores carrying forward as in Test cricket. Matches can end in a win, draw, tie or loss. There will be some tinkering with playing conditions but, crucially, players will wear white kit and a red ball will be used. The concept is billed as cricket’s fourth format, after Test, 50 overs (one day) and T20. This takes no account of either The Hundred, which is played only in England and Wales and is regarded as subset of T20, or T10 cricket, presumably for the same reason. 

The architect of Test Twenty is sports entrepreneur Gaurav Bahirvani, executive chair of the One One Six Network, whom I was fortunate to speak with on a Zoom call this week. His advisory board includes four of cricket’s luminary figures — AB de Villiers, Sir Clive Lloyd, Matthew Hayden and Harbhajan Singh. Their public statements reflect a belief that cricket must evolve while remaining true to its spirit, something that may be easier said than done. They regard the concept as visionary and evolutionary, a blend of tradition, innovation, excitement and opportunity. The opportunities are for youth. Test Twenty is designed to discover and nurture emerging talent from around the world.

Its first edition is scheduled for January in India. Player registration opened on Oct. 16, with invitations to complete the official form on the Test Twenty website. There is also a direct entry route for applicants who receive a formal recommendation from a registered cricket academy coach, a recognized cricket administrator (former or current), or a “notable” Indian cricketer, past or present. Test Twenty’s selection committee will make the final decision.

Applicants following the standard entry route will be subject to an initial evaluation conducted via the AI Discovery Engine and reviewed by the core selection committee. Short-listed players will advance to city trials at authorized Test Twenty centers across India and around the world. Ultimately this will lead to the selection of 1,000 players for the national — presumably India — and world pools.

Short-listed players from these pools will undergo an evaluation phase which will test on-field skills, mental acuity, cricket intelligence and temperament. The assessment will be based on the Test Twenty Intelligence Index, which combines AI-driven scenario testing, match simulations and expert psychological assessment.

Gaurav Bahirvani told me that TTII was proprietary, a pioneering system which had been made possible by recent advances in technology. These include stickers on the backs of bats and chips in cricket balls that transmit data to facilitate a 360-degree evaluation of performance. The owners aim to share the technology with counties, state associations and national boards through tech-transfer partnerships. In this way, coaches, academies and cricketing bodies will have access to performance data, trend analysis and developmental metrics at all levels of cricket.

After the selection of the initial pool of 1,000 Test Twenty players at stage one, the TTII will identify 300 players who will advance to a global auction pool. Six franchises will select talent for the inaugural season at auction. Each franchise is required to assemble a 16-player squad, comprising eight Indian and eight international players. Hence 96 players will be chosen at auction, with the unselected players forming a wildcard pool, or reserve group eligible for mid-season selection opportunities.

The competition is termed a Junior Test Twenty Championship, rather than a league. It will be played in one venue in India, on a round robin basis, followed by semifinals and a final.

Three city-based teams — Dubai, London and one in the US — are planned, along with three in India. Their identities have yet to be revealed but Bahirvani said that negotiations were at an advanced stage, with plans to close deals by the end of November.

Similarly, negotiations are progressing with potential broadcasters and sponsors, some of which have not previously invested in cricket. The amount of funding available to franchises has been set — this will cover the auction and player performance remuneration.

At this stage, there is no evidence of any national boards sanctioning or endorsing Test Twenty. It is not clear how experienced coaches will react to TTII. It is certainly not clear how national, regional and county boards will react to the prospect of promising young players on their books registering independently with Test Twenty. Even more unknown is how they will react should a player be selected.

Bahirvani is unfazed by these concerns. He is quite clear that Test Twenty does not seek to compete with existing cricket boards, authorities or coaches. In fact, quite the opposite. He believes that Test Twenty can co-exist with other formats and add to the talent pool of young players and provide benefits to coaches.

He is also aware of the doubters. It would be unwise to write off Test Twenty. After all, those who did so with T20 and the Hundred have egg on their faces. Test Twenty’s aim is not to compete with any cricketing institution but to complement the global effort to identify talent and expand the game. Its assessment platform blends machine intelligence with expert review to minimize human bias and assess each player solely on performance and ability to cope with pressure. The aim is to identify talent in an objective, data-driven, transparent and merit-based manner. This is a far cry from the system of assessment in my youth, when human judgement and bias were the core components of selection and progression, not to mention the breaking or making of dreams.


FIFA tournament featuring Afghan women’s refugee team relocated to Morocco from UAE

FIFA tournament featuring Afghan women’s refugee team relocated to Morocco from UAE
Updated 23 October 2025

FIFA tournament featuring Afghan women’s refugee team relocated to Morocco from UAE

FIFA tournament featuring Afghan women’s refugee team relocated to Morocco from UAE
  • The “FIFA Unites: Women’s Series” tournament features the UAE, Chad, Libya and Afghanistan
  • Afghanistan women’s refugee team have chosen a new official name, “Afghan Women United“

GENEVA: A FIFA-organized tournament involving the Afghanistan women’s refugee team has been moved from the UAE to Morocco, the world soccer governing body said, with the four-team friendly competition set to begin on Sunday.
The “FIFA Unites: Women’s Series” tournament, originally scheduled to run from October 23-29 in Dubai, also features the national women’s teams of the UAE, Chad and Libya.
The Afghanistan women’s refugee team’s creation stems from the Taliban’s ban on women’s sports following their takeover of Afghanistan in 2021, prompting players to flee the country fearing persecution.
“FIFA would like to thank the Royal Moroccan Football Federation (FMRF) and looks forward to working together to host a successful tournament,” FIFA said in a statement.
The governing body also confirmed that the Afghanistan women’s refugee team have chosen a new official name, “Afghan Women United,” following consultation with FIFA.
Prior to the Taliban’s takeover, Afghanistan had 25 women players under contract, most of whom now live in Australia. Afghanistan’s men’s team continues as normal.


Racist chants on the rise at Israeli football matches

Racist chants on the rise at Israeli football matches
Updated 23 October 2025

Racist chants on the rise at Israeli football matches

Racist chants on the rise at Israeli football matches
  • Report finds 367 incidents of racism last season, up 67% from previous year
  • UK police cited prospect of ‘racist taunts’ in banning Maccabi fans from game against Aston Villa

LONDON: Racist chanting by football fans in Israel has increased significantly, according to research conducted by an anti-racism group.

Kick It Out Israel, backed by civil society group Givat Haviva — which works toward a “shared society for Jews and Arabs” — singled out fans of Maccabi Tel Aviv in particular for their behavior.

In all, 367 instances of racist chanting were identified at Israeli Premier League matches in the 2024-25 season, a 67 percent increase on the previous year.

Maccabi fans were responsible for 118 of those incidents, most notably for repeated use of the chant “Let the IDF (Israel Defense Forces) win, f— the Arabs.”

The chant caused international controversy when sung by Maccabi fans during a game marred by violence against Dutch club Ajax in 2024, which saw 60 people arrested.

Fans of Beitar Jerusalem were responsible for the second-highest number of racist chants, with 115 incidents highlighted.

The behavior of Maccabi fans during the Ajax fixture was at the heart of a recent decision to ban them from traveling to the English city of Birmingham for a Europa league match again Aston Villa later this year.

West Midlands Police cited the prospect of “racist taunts” as a potential source of trouble in explaining their decision.

In addition to racist chanting at IPL matches, Kick It Out identified 165 violent incidents last season, including objects being thrown and pitch invasions.

Matan Segal, director of Kick It Out Israel, said the IPL season would “be remembered not for the football itself but for a series of troubling events that should concern every citizen in Israel,” and that there was an “absence of a serious and effective effort to combat these phenomena.”

Piara Powar, executive director of the Fare network — which focuses on monitoring racism at football matches in Europe — said the trend in Israel deviated from European leagues, where racism is on the decline. 

FairSquare, a group that pushes for the upholding of human rights in sport, wrote to UEFA — European football’s governing body — this week demanding that the Israel Football Association be suspended for breaching Article 7 of UEFA’s statutes requiring members to “implement an effective policy aimed at eradicating racism and any other forms of discrimination.”

UEFA had been expected to suspend the IFA before the announcement of a ceasefire in Gaza earlier this month, but FairSquare said Kick It Out’s report “provides clear grounds for UEFA to act and suspend the IFA.”