Showing posts with label Club World Cup. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Club World Cup. Show all posts

Thursday, 12 June 2025

Trent Alexander-Arnold shows off fluent Spanish at Real Madrid unveiling after learning for ‘a few months’



Trent Alexander-Arnold surprisingly gave his welcome speech entirely in Spanish as Real Madrid unveiled their new signing at the Estadio Bernabeu.

Alexander-Arnold, 26, arrives after 20 years at boyhood club Liverpooljoining for a fee of £10m to ensure his participation at the Club World Cup.

However, Alexander-Arnold’s first words as a Real Madrid player indicate his decision to leave was far from a last-minute one as he showed off his impressive Spanish at the welcome ceremony.

“This doesn’t happen every day,” Alexander-Arnold said in the language of his new employers. “It’s a dream come true, I’m very happy and proud to be here.

“I want to show Real Madrid fans how I play. I do realise I’m signing for Real Madrid and that the demands are high, but I’m going to give my all for the team. I want to win many titles and play alongside the best players.”

In his press conference, he confirmed he had been learning for a “few months”.

The ceremony kicked off with a montage of his greatest moments for Liverpool, among which included his famous performance against El Clasico rivals Barcelona in the Champions League in 2019, where he caught the Blaugrana defence napping from a corner to set up the Reds’ crucial fourth goal on the night.

Alexander-Arnold was instrumental in Liverpool winning Europe’s most prestigious trophy that year, and later added two Premier League titles, two Carabao Cups, an FA Cup and a Club World Cup to his accolade collection across 354 appearances.

The Liverpudlian left his home side on imperfect terms, with his first appearance after announcing his departure seeing him booed by the Anfield faithful. However, as he collected his Premier League winners medal on the final day of the season, a teary-eyed Alexander-Arnold was met with cheers in what was heart-warming send-off.

Alexander-Arnold will wear the number 12 shirt - forced to ditch his famed 66 due to LaLiga rules - but has also changed the name that will appear on his back, opting for ‘Trent’ over his surname.

Real Madrid president Florentino Perez was sure to hail Alexander-Arnold’s arrival at the ceremony, who joins in time for the start of the Club World Cup next week.

Trent Alexander-Arnold lifted the Premier League title on his Liverpool send-off (PA Wire)

“This is a very special day for Real Madrid fans worldwide,” Perez said. “One of the best right-backs in world football who played for one of the best clubs in the world. A legend in the game at 26 years old, today we welcome him to our family, a player who wants to don the famous Real Madrid jersey.

“We’d like to thank you for joining our club we know it means a lot, you could have signed for any club worldwide but you wanted to commit your future to Real Madrid. Our fans will never forget that gesture.”

when they take on Saudi side Al-Hilal on Wednesday 18 June at Miami’s Hard Rock Stadium.


Source: https://onefootball.com/en/news/trent-alexander-arnold-shows-off-fluent-spanish-at-real-madrid-unveiling-after-learning-for-a-few-months-41236671

Wednesday, 11 June 2025

Where the Club World Cup will be won and lost – and why it matters more than you think


 

It was on a call with Fifa and Club World Cup rivals that Manchester City’s Ferran Soriano was willing to reveal some of the team’s inner workings.

As long ago as August, City’s chief executive revealed how Pep Guardiola’s staff had been working on their physical programme to ensure the squad would be ready for the tournament in the United States. Such changes might have been a factor in City’s underwhelming season, but the Club World Cup might change perceptions. An entire year may have been building to this.

For Florentino Perez, it’s a lifetime’s work. The Real Madrid president never got his Super League, but this is viewed as something similar, at least in terms of legacy and maybe an elegant historical echo.

Under his predecessor, Santiago Bernabeu, Madrid were the drivers of the European Cup back in 1955 - to the point that they claim to have created it and were the first club to win it. Now though, Perez wants to do the same thing with the Club World Cup.

He has developed a political alliance with Gianni Infantino’s Fifa and Madrid have backed the competition. So, the key message for Xabi Alonso’s team as they depart for the USA has been that it would fit with Madrid’s great history to be the first to win this. It would ensure they have been the first true European champions and the first true world champions.

A club like Madrid having such aspirations is almost all the endorsement that Infantino needs. Because, right now, it’s hardly an exaggeration to say this new Club World Cup has caused huge debate.

The more relevant point is that controversy subsides and prestige grows as games are played. Even the European Cup met with resistance in its first season, as Chelsea know too well. They were supposed to be England’s representatives in 1955, only for the Football League to object. Now, Chelsea’s ownership is all in on the Club World Cup, to the point they care little for the Premier League’s reservations.

The Club World Cup trophy is displayed prior to the Play-In match between LAFC and Club America (Getty)

It’s like that with all of the owners. They can see the worth, especially since the eventual winners could receive around £80m in prize money. On the other side, clubs and federations from the Americas, Asia and Africa see the opportunities from big games against the hugely popular European clubs.

The reality is football did need something like that.

It also points to something that may decide this entire Club World Cup. It was also reflected in Soriano’s comments.

Man City enter the tournament as one of the favourites (AP)

European club owners might be all in on this competition, but that doesn’t mean their players can be, even if they want to. Many are exhausted. The Champions League’s expansion meant the 2024-25 season was the most congested for elite clubs in modern history, all that off the back of Euro 2024. Inter have been affected the most, with 10 more games than the 2023/24 campaign. They already looked like they could do with a break in the Champions League final.

And yet this may all make the first expanded Club World Cup even more unpredictable. That is primarily because the South American clubs are primed, and see this as an opportunity of their own. While the European clubs are at the end of long campaigns, their South American counterparts are mid-season, meaning they’re at peak condition. It could be like the 2022 World Cup for them. Although most of their best players go to Champions League clubs, they believe their desire can more than compensate.

There won’t just be a physical freshness, either. There’s a psychological freshness. The old Club World Cup was always bigger in South America. That was partly because of its own mythology. Pele’s Santos embarrassed Eusebio’s Benfica in 1963, the Brazilian legend even nutmegging his burgeoning Portuguese challenger. Flamengo humiliated Liverpool in 1981, with the great Zico starring.

Florentino Perez sees the Club World Cup as pivotal to the allure of Real Madrid (Getty Images)

The South American clubs are now determined to evoke that spirit, and their fans will travel in hundreds of thousands. From that, the eye will naturally be drawn to fixtures like Boca Juniors against Bayern Munich. Thomas Muller even told that such a fixture would be “a highlight”.

The main focus should perhaps be on Brazilian clubs, though. The country’s domestic competition is going through a resurgence, as plans evolve for its own version of the Premier League. In the meantime, a growing financial power has meant Brazilian clubs have won the last six Copa Libertadores. Palmeiras and Flamengo, who have just signed Jorginho after his Arsenal exit, look the most dangerous.

Some are even motivated by the words of Uefa president Aleksander Ceferin, who predicted the competition will lack interest because “the Europeans will win everything”. This is a chance for pride and glory.

Xabi Alonso faces a quick start to life as Real Madrid boss (Getty Images)

Brazilian dominance of the Libertadores has already superseded the era of Marcelo Gallardo, who coached River Plate to two victories. He is back at the club, and made a late pitch to bring in Cristiano Ronaldo for this summer.

The Portuguese declined, meaning Lionel Messi still heads an array of stars, from Mbappe, Jude Bellingham and Erling Haaland through to Jamal Musiala, PSG’s electrifying Desire Doue and Chelsea’s Cole Palmer. In a manner that might fit with the classic World Cup, too, this tournament could also offer exciting first glimpses of brilliant new talent.

There is considerable buzz about Flamengo’s Uruguayan playmaker Giorgian de Arrascaeta, who has never played for a club outside of South America, while River Plate midfielder Franco Mastantuono is a revelation. Typically, the 17-year-old is set to join Real Madrid.

Desire Doue and PSG have the firepower to claim Club World Cup glory this summer (PA Wire)

That doesn’t mean the trophy is also bound for the Bernabeu. One of the many storylines will be how Xabi Alonso adapts as their new manager, having agreed to take the job just days before the tournament after Carlo Ancelotti’s departure to lead Brazil ahead of next summer’s World Cup. With Inter, there’s the question of how they recover from Champions League final humiliation. City will meanwhile be seeking to make a season right, and Chelsea will feel they can restore their own prestige after becoming the first club to win every major European trophy following the Conference League final win over Real Betis.

On the other side of the world, can Messi be as impactful for Inter Miami? Could any of South Africa’s Mamelodi Sundowns, Korea’s Ulsan HD or New Zealand’s Auckland spring a surprise? The Saudi Pro League’s Al-Hilal, meanwhile, get their grand stage, just as Saudi football is about to escalate activity after being confirmed as 2034 World Cup hosts.

In general, though, this is a new tournament, so there’s also a sense of new territory. It has the dimensions of a classic World Cup - taking place every four years - but on top of a club game that runs constantly. Will it serve as a barometer for the game in the same way? Will it point to something new in terms of how it might be played? Palmeiras’ Abel Ferreira is one coach who has already attracted attention.

Franco Mastantuono is poised for a big future away from River Plate with a move to Real Madrid in the works (AP)

Muller added that he is thrilled by “different cultures and different clubs coming together”. That is needed in the club game, which is so dominated by Europe. It also affords the tournament a more distinctive sense of glory.

And yet, after all that, it’s still hard to look past Europe’s champions. PSG have had 58 games, but many of those have been while cantering to the French title. If the Champions League final is anything to go by, they may have too much firepower for the competition. Luis Enrique sounded more enthusiastic than anyone when asked about the Club World Cup after winning the Champions League. He found the idea of crowning a true club world champion for the first time, and potentially being the first, “invigorating”.

There is a place in history up for grabs here, for a competition that is going to say a lot about football’s future.


Source: https://onefootball.com/en/news/where-the-club-world-cup-will-be-won-and-lost-and-why-it-matters-more-than-you-think-41231607

Sunday, 8 June 2025

Tijjani Reijnders ‘really excited’ to link up with Man City for Club World Cup



 Tijjani Reijnders “could not wait” to undergo his medical with Manchester City and expects to be in their squad for the Club World Cup.

The 26-year-old Netherlands midfielder has agreed a five-year contract to move to City from AC Milan for 55million euros (approximately £46million) and told Italian media he had spent Sunday conducting a medical with Pep Guardiola’s side.

City will play their first match of the Club World Cup against Morocco’s Wydad AC on June 18 and the arrival of Reijnders could also impact the future of Jack Grealish at the Etihad.

Reijnders told Gazzetta: “The medical? I couldn’t wait to do it. The plan is to take part at the Club World Cup with City. I’m really excited about that.

“Doing that means I’ll get to know my new team-mates sooner.”

Reijnders was a bright spark in a disappointing season for Milan, who only finished eighth in Serie A, missing out on qualification for Europe.

Reijnders, who joined the Italian giants from AZ Alkmaar in the summer of 2023, scored 15 goals in 2024-25 and will bolster Guardiola’s midfield options following the departure of Kevin De Bruyne.

As first reported by the Daily Telegraph on Wednesday, England international Grealish looks set to miss out on City’s final 35-man squad for the Club World Cup.

The 29-year-old was not summoned from the bench in last month’s FA Cup final defeat by Crystal Palace and omitted from the squad for the last game of the season at Fulham altogether.


Source: https://onefootball.com/en/news/tijjani-reijnders-really-excited-to-link-up-with-man-city-for-club-world-cup-41221371

Wednesday, 4 June 2025

Manchester City on verge of signing Tijjani Reijnders after agreeing fee


 

Manchester City are set to make Tijjani Reijnders their first summer signing after agreeing a £46m fee with AC Milan.

The Netherlands midfielder will sign a five-year deal at the Etihad Stadium, assuming he passes a medical.

City hope the transfer will be completed in time for the 26-year-old to make his debut at the Club World Cup.

They have targeted Reijnders as they looked for a replacement for Kevin De Bruyne, after deciding not to renew the contract of the 33-year-old.

City had an interest in Florian Wirtz, but he would prefer to go to Liverpool, and Morgan Gibbs-White, who now looks more likely to stay at Nottingham Forest.

Reijnders could be one of two new signings in the summer’s first transfer window for City with Wolves left-back Rayan Ait-Nouri also wanted by Pep Guardiola.

Should both arrive, it would take their spending in 2025 past £250m after they brought in four players – Omar Marmoush, Nico Gonzalez, Abdukodir Khusanov and Vitor Reis – during the winter transfer window.

Reijnders, who helped the Netherlands reach the semi-finals of Euro 2024, scored 15 goals for AC Milan last season, even though they only finished eighth in Serie A.

Milan failed to qualify for European football, meaning they had a greater need to sell players.


Source: https://onefootball.com/en/news/manchester-city-on-verge-of-signing-tijjani-reijnders-after-agreeing-fee-41202997

Monday, 2 June 2025

Manchester City and Wolves close to Ait-Nouri agreement


 

Manchester City and Wolves expect to reach an agreement for the transfer of Rayan Ait-Nouri.

The Algerian has emerged as Manchester City’s top target to strengthen at left-back with negotiations ongoing between the Premier League sides. Ait-Nouri has just 12 months to run on his contract and Wolves will reluctantly sanction his sale this summer.

The 23-year-old has made 157 appearances for Wolves since joining the club on an initial loan deal from Angers in 2020.

Last season, he scored four goals and provided seven assists in the Premier League for Vitor Pereira’s team. No defender was directly involved in more Premier League goals. Ait-Nouri has featured predominantly at wing-back for Wolves, but has experience as a more orthodox full-back and on the left side of a back three.

Manchester City have prioritised the signing of a new left-back with Josko Gvardiol earmarked for a more central role next season. Nico O’Reilly deputised over the run-in but Guardiola has insisted the academy graduate’s long-term future is in midfield.

The Citizens hope to wrap up the transfer of Ait-Nouri before beginning their Club World Cup campaign. City start the tournament against Morocco’s Wydad AC on June 18th. The Athletic are reporting that both City and Wolves expect an agreement to be reached, following productive talks.

Ait-Nouri is set to become Wolves’ second high-profile sale of the summer. On Sunday, it was announced that Manchester United had signed Matheus Cunha from Wolves in a deal worth £62.5m, subject to visa and registration.


Source: https://onefootball.com/en/news/manchester-city-and-wolves-close-to-ait-nouri-agreement-41193852