“When it comes to Xabi Alonso’s Real Madrid, nothing seems to be a coincidence, and that applies to the emergence of Arda Guler. Madrid’s new coach has been taking care of every detail since he took over in May, with the 20-year-old Turkey playmaker one of the main beneficiaries of his arrival. After their win against Borussia Dortmund in the Club World Cup quarter-finals, the coach and the player were seen heading to the team bus together as they left the MetLife Stadium. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
USMNT’s Gold Cup final defeat to Mexico a microcosm of its summer

“The lessons of this summer were fully on display in the U.S. men’s national team’s 2-1 loss to Mexico on Sunday night in the Concacaf Gold Cup final. The U.S. gutted its way to the tournament’s championship game, slaloming through a path of opponents it was supposed to beat. Mexico was a real test. … The U.S. fought the best it could. It even took an early lead. But it was clear that the quality of Mexico would prevail — and it did. Mexico dominated long stretches of Sunday’s final. It created dangerous opportunities and forced the U.S. into uncomfortable moments. It held 60 percent possession, won the expected goals battle and dominated in shots (16-6) and shots on target (8-3). Mexico was the better side. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
YouTube: United States vs. Mexico Concacaf Gold Cup Highlights

What can the Club World Cup tell us about the strength of leagues around the world?
“For those unaware, FIFA has established its own Technical Study Group (TSG) to analyse the Club World Cup this summer. Led by their chief of global football development, Arsene Wenger, the panel contains former players and coaches — with Esteban Cambiasso, Aliou Cisse, Tobin Heath, Jurgen Klinsmann, Roberto Martinez, Gilberto Silva and Pascal Zuberbuhler unpicking the key insights from each game. A recent media release from the TSG saw the panel offer their views on the tournament at the midway stage, and the conclusions were rather… jarring in places. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Kylian Mbappe, Thibaut Courtois and the anatomy of a wonder goal and save
“Ignore all the fluff that occurs in the middle of the pitch for a moment. Real Madrid’s winning reputation is built on their clinical efficiency in both boxes. Never was that more true than against Borussia Dortmund on Saturday afternoon, with Kylian Mbappe and Thibaut Courtois showing how fiercely skilled they are in such crucial moments. There was a glimmer of hope for a Dortmund comeback after substitute Maximilian Beier’s goal made it 2-1 in the 92nd minute, but Mbappe’s expert finish restored Madrid’s two-goal lead barely 90 seconds later. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
How PSG and Bayern’s positive tactics resulted in the best game of the Club World Cup
“If the starting line-ups contain names such as Michael Olise, Jamal Musiala and Kingsley Coman on one side, with Bradley Barcola, Desire Doue and Khvicha Kvaratskhelia on the other, there is a high probability of entertainment. Yet how both teams approach the game factors in whether we see the individual flair or not. Paris Saint-Germain and Bayern Munich didn’t disappoint the audience on Saturday, with their proactive and positive approaches resulting in a thrilling match where Luis Enrique’s side came out victorious. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
NY Times/The Athletic – PSG lean on new-found championship mentality as they target Club World Cup triumph
PSG v Bayern chaos dissected: Jamal Musiala’s horror injury, two red cards and two fine goals
“It was billed as the game of the Club World Cup and it did not disappoint. Paris Saint-Germain and Bayern Munich produced a breathless game that had just about everything in Atlanta, and not all of it good. There was a serious injury to Bayern’s Jamal Musiala, two second-half red cards for PSG’s Willian Pacho and Lucas Hernandez and late drama with an overturned penalty decision in the French club’s favour. Musiala’s injury was the most serious incident, the German international badly damaging his left ankle in a collision with PSG goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma. It left both sets of players shocked and cast a cloud over this occasion. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
Football Architects: Rebuilding Ajax’s famous academy in Johan Cruyff’s image

“… With conversations like these, it is clear why the battle to reform Ajax’s academy was truly a battle for the soul of the Dutch giant. After the legendary Johan Cruyff and his followers regained control of the De Toekomst (The Future) in 2011, they began working with a generation of young players who are now in their prime. Arsenal’s Jurrien Timber, Liverpool’s Ryan Gravenberch, Manchester United pair Matthijs de Ligt and Noussair Mazraoui, Newcastle United’s Sven Botman, and Barcelona’s Frenkie de Jong all passed through their doors. It may have been almost a decade since Cruyff passed away from lung cancer, but his legacy is still very much alive. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Bodo/Glimt, who reached the Europa League semi-finals last season, have implemented Cruyff’s principles
Lifting Gold Cup against Mexico can give Pochettino’s USMNT the belief he craves
“As the realities faded from what this summer was supposed to be into what it was going to be, the goal of the tournament for the United States men’s national team never truly shifted. The Gold Cup was meant to be the month when Mauricio Pochettino and his staff finally got some time with the group that they would lead into next year’s home World Cup. … On Sunday night in Houston, a group of players who have used this summer to try to force their way into the World Cup picture will get that chance against rivals Mexico. After two ugly friendly losses to start the summer, the U.S. can end it with a continental title. To do so, they’ll have to beat the best team they will have seen being beaten by Turkey and Switzerland. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Club World Cup quarterfinal power rankings: Will Europe’s powers prevail?
“With apologies to the fans of the clubs that have been eliminated from the FIFA Club World Cup, it’s a relief that this tournament’s penchant for upsets and excitement hasn’t ended after the group stage. Like the stormy summer weather, this Club World Cup remains tricky to predict even with evidence informing a confident projection. Each team’s big-game personnel is coming through from end to end, sustaining a high level of play in this previously untested summer jamboree. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Club World Cup quarter-final guide: Star players, tactical battles and our predictions
“This is where the Club World Cup gets serious. Football’s new-look global competition may not have convinced every sceptic so far, but the line-up for the last eight offers an intriguing mixture of European aristocrats, Brazilian excellence and even an outsider in the Saudi Arabian side Al Hilal. Here, our writers tell you everything you need to know about the quarter-finalists, while tactical expert Mark Carey reveals where each game will be decided. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Dortmund 2 Monterrey 1 – Suspended Jobe misses Bellingham derby with Jude, fans warned over homophobic chant at Club World Cup
“A frustrated Jobe Bellingham will miss out on a first competitive meeting with brother Jude after being booked in Borussia Dortmund’s 2-1 win over Monterrey in their Club World Cup last-16 game. Earlier in the day, Jude Bellingham helped Real Madrid defeat Juventus 1-0 to set up a potential quarter-final against his brother at MetLife Stadium, New Jersey, on Saturday. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
How Sheffield Wednesday descended into chaos under Dejphon Chansiri’s ownership
“It is nine weeks since Sheffield Wednesday last played a home game but the flyposting around Hillsborough helps to illustrate a long summer of rancour. ‘Chansiri out’ is the simple, scrawled message, set against a collage of cult heroes and trophy lifts. Wednesday’s happiest recent times in the early 1990s, when they were regulars in the upper echelons of the top flight and frequent travellers to Wembley in cup competitions, seem a long time ago. It is 25 years since they were last in the Premier League and Wednesday now resemble a decaying club under the ownership of Dejphon Chansiri, a 57-year-old businessman whose family own the Thai Union Group (TUG), the world’s largest producer of canned tuna. The money has dried up and so, too, has hope. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
FIFA urged to use ‘influence’ over President Trump’s ‘abusive’ immigration policy ahead of World Cup
“FIFA president Gianni Infantino has received a letter signed by over 90 civil society groups, the majority of which are based in the United States, expressing ‘deep concern’ about immigration policies and enforcement measures in the U.S. and their potential impact on the World Cup in 2026. The letter urges FIFA to use its ‘influence’ to call on the administration of President Donald Trump to guarantee the fundamental rights of the millions of football fans who will seek to attend the World Cup next summer. The groups reference Infantino’s ‘high-profile engagements’ in the White House and his recent trip to Saudi Arabia and Qatar, when he accompanied President Trump at an investment summit as evidence of his proximity to the U.S. President. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Real Madrid 1 Juventus 0: Gonzalo keeps shining, Mbappe’s return and a fine Alexander-Arnold cross
“Gonzalo Garcia kept up his sensational Club World Cup scoring form to send Real Madrid through to the quarter-finals with a 1-0 win against Juventus. Gonzalo’s 54th-minute header was his third in four games in the United States and was enough to give Xabi Alonso’s team the edge at Miami’s Hard Rock Stadium. The striker was later replaced by Kylian Mbappe for the Frenchman’s first appearance at the tournament after suffering from viral gastroenteritis. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
How Saudi Arabia’s Al Hilal stunned Man City in Club World Cup – ex-Premier League stars, kick-off protest and cost of exit
“Al Hilal eliminated Manchester City from the Club World Cup in a landmark victory for the Saudi Arabian team, winning a remarkable last-16 game 4-3 in extra time to cap a day of upsets. The Saudi side have shopped significantly for European stars since the state’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) took control of four teams in the Saudi Pro League in 2023 as part of its global sports push. Saudi Arabia will host the World Cup in 2034 and the sports investment arm of PIF invested a reported $1billion (£750m) in DAZN, the broadcaster that bought the rights to the Club World Cup for the same amount from FIFA, which in turn has offered an overall prize pot of $1bn for this competition. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Bravo for $2 hot dogs. Boo for $19 beers. The cost of food and drink at the Club World Cup
“This summer’s FIFA Club World Cup is a valuable indicator for what we might expect at next year’s World Cup in the U.S.. For players, it is a wake-up call as to the weather conditions they might face. For FIFA, a forecast for interest, including not just attendance, but also atmosphere. For fans, it has revealed one thing that has surprised many: the price of food and drink at stadiums. To try and establish the truth among much online commentary, The Athletic felt it was our duty to ‘investigate’ the food and drink on offer at the following Club World Cup venues. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Inter 0 Fluminense 2: Cano and Hercules send second Brazilian side through to Club World Cup quarter-finals
“Fluminense are through to the Club World Cup quarter-finals after beating Inter 2-0 in Charlotte on Monday. Renato Gaucho’s side started quickly and took the lead after only three minutes via an opportunistic header from German Cano. Inter fans might have hoped that an early setback would spur their side into a concerted response but there was little evidence of that in the rest of the first half. Cristian Chivu’s team eventually managed to build some momentum in the second half but some obstinate Fluminense defending — and the woodwork — kept the Italian side at bay. And, as Inter pressed ever more desperately for an equaliser, Fluminense broke and sealed the game in injury time via a tidy finish from Hercules. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
Despite unfulfilled bombast, this Club World Cup has been saved by the soccer
“Inside the corporate monstrosity hides something that’s actually quite lovely and joyful and organic. It’s burrowed down real deep, beneath layers and layers of maximalist nonsense. But it’s in there somewhere, a good soccer tournament, cloaked by all the avarice and bombast, in spite of itself and those responsible for it. It’s true: the Club World Cup and its new summer format haven’t been all bad. The group stage, which concluded on Thursday, offered fun and competitive teams. It served up a few genuinely enthralling games, especially in the clashes between the European and South American sides. …”
Guardian
How the Club World Cup has seen a unexpected flurry of red cards
“The knockout rounds of the Club World Cup begin this weekend, starting with Palmeiras and Botafogo returning to Philadelphia’s Lincoln Financial Field just two days after 64,811 fans withstood the pouring rain to watch Vinicius Junior come alive with Real Madrid. Everyone’s hoping for some magic in the round of 16 and, if the group stage matches were any indication, we can expect plenty more drama too. With the final whistle of group play now behind us, one of the major talking points from this competition so far has been the volume of disciplinary action handed down by referees. Across 48 games so far, 10 red cards have been issued. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Have Club World Cup attendances really been that bad?
“The group stage of the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup has concluded and 48 of the tournament’s 63 matches have now taken place. The competition, which is being hosted in the United States, drew plenty of criticism in the build-up — including for how many games were being held in large, out-of-town stadiums in cities traditionally lacking in football (or soccer) fandom. So what have attendances actually been like? How many stadiums have come close to filling all of their seats? How have crowd sizes compared to the American-hosted 1994 men’s World Cup and previous Club World Cups? And which have been the most and least-watched teams and groups at the tournament? …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Maresca, the ‘joke’ Club World Cup weather delays and an ominous warning for World Cup 2026
“It had been a long day. Much, much longer than Enzo Maresca had wanted. Play was suspended for nearly two hours waiting for the weather to pass over Charlotte, but the storm whipped up by the Chelsea coach’s post-match comments threatens to rumble on much longer. ‘It’s a joke,’ he said after Chelsea’s Club World Cup knockout clash with Benfica was held up for 113 minutes, the sixth storm-enforced delay of the tournament and the third hour-plus interruption. And he kept using those words — ‘a joke’ — while making clear he did not see the funny side, despite seeing his team run out 4-1 winners after extra time in a match that kicked off at 4pm local time and did not conclude until 8.38pm. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Club World Cup: Best player, team and supporters so far – and what could happen next
“With the group stages of the FIFA Club World Cup over, it’s a good time to catch our breath and take stock. From the searing heat and dodgy pitches, to the major shocks and stars of the future (both in the dugout and on the pitch). The Athletic asked our reporters covering the tournament to give their assessment of the group stages in the United States and what they want to see in the knockout rounds… …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Marcos Acuna loses his head as River Plate exit the Club World Cup fighting in defeat by Inter

“Facundo Colidio headed their best chance of the game into the arms of Yann Sommer midway through the second half and when Inter countered, Lucas Quarta brought down Henrikh Mkhitaryan as the last man and was sent off, adding to River’s awful disciplinary record at the tournament. Francesco Pio Esposito sealed Inter’s progress against the ten men after 71 minutes when he received the ball with his back to goal on the left side of the box, opened his body up and fired into the opposite corner before Alessandro Bastoni. River had Gonzalo Montiel sent off at the death for a second yellow card as the match ended with Inter players running off the pitch showered by items from the stands and followed by a furious Acuna until he was restrained by Chivu and players from both sides. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Extreme heat at the Club World Cup: Players and fans voice concerns as temperatures soar
“As temperatures rose towards 90F at Cincinnati’s TQL Stadium on Saturday while Borussia Dortmund played South Africa’s Mamelodi Sundowns, the German team posted on social media: ‘Our subs watched the first half from inside the locker room to avoid the blazing sun — never seen that before, but in this heat, it absolutely makes sense.’ The message was accompanied by a picture of players who would usually be pitchside instead sitting in shorts and T-shirts around a table stocked with drinks. Players, coaches and supporters were already concerned about high temperatures during matches in the opening week of the Club World Cup, and now a heatwave across the United States in the coming days will cause temperatures to rise even further, with participants expressing their worries to The Athletic and experts suggesting FIFA take proactive moves. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Where does the word ‘soccer’ come from?
“The word ‘soccer’ remains at the heart of one of the most enduring, if comparatively low-key and petty fronts of the culture war. At its most basic level, it’s a transatlantic disagreement over language, but there seems to be more to it than that. The most basic and probably most sensible point of view is that it’s simply one country — America, though there are others — using a word to differentiate one extremely popular sport from a slightly less popular sport. But use the word in the wrong context — which is to say, ‘in England’ — and you can expect paroxysms of disgust from people who seem to think it represents something much deeper. These people are, admittedly, those who are far too easily outraged (check their sent email files and there’s a reasonable chance they have also complained to a TV station about a newsreader not wearing a tie), but it seems like these people think of this as somehow chipping away at the identity of the game, and even themselves. It’s an Americanism, as everyone knows, and this is apparently something to be suspicious of. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
The Origin, History, and Invention of Soccer

What Brazil’s early success at the Club World Cup says of its status as a football power
“This is a public service announcement. You may think that this Club World Cup is an American affair. You probably looked at the list of host cities, saw FIFA president Gianni Infantino glad-handing with Donald Trump in the Oval Office, noted the distinctive bombast of those grating individual player walk-ons and heard the U.S. national anthem being played before each of the 32 matches so far. All very American. Fair enough. Hence your confusion. But sorry, no. Appearances have deceived you. This is actually a Brazilian tournament. The rest of the world just hasn’t realised it yet. First, there are the demographics. 508 players took to the field in the first round of group matches. Seventy of these — 14 per cent — were from Brazil. Argentina had 57 players on that list. Next came Spain with 26. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Monterrey’s split defensive wall: Cool, clever, but not as new as you may think

“Twenty-six minutes into what was, in truth, a fairly forgettable Club World Cup match between River Plate and Monterrey, the Argentine side were awarded a free kick just outside the penalty area. As Franco Mastantuono prepared to take it, Monterrey goalkeeper Esteban Andrada barked instructions at his team-mates. Four of them grouped together, positioning themselves to cover the near side of the goal. A couple of metres away, another Monterrey player formed his own barrier, in line with the far post. A similar scene played out shortly after half-time. River’s free kick was wider this time; the main wall was only two strong. Again, though, there was a gap and another Monterrey player on the other side of it: …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Chelsea were mesmerised by Flamengo’s wide combinations. This is how Filipe Luis’ side do it
“After beating Esperance de Tunis with two goals that perfectly encapsulated their offensive style, Flamengo’s wide combinations proved effective in their 3-1 victory against Chelsea on Friday. Luis continued with the regular Flamengo setup, with Jorginho partnering Erick Pulgar in midfield and Luiz Araujo, Giorgian de Arrascaeta and Gerson behind the striker. However, the deviation came up front, where Gonzalo Plata, who is more of a winger than a centre-forward, started in place of Pedro. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Does football have a doping problem?
“Arsene Wenger had a lot to get off his chest in the autumn of 2015. His Arsenal side were in danger of exiting the Champions League at the group stages and their 2-1 loss away to Dinamo Zagreb had become an acute source of irritation. Not because Arsenal had stumbled against their weakest opponents, but because the Croatian side had triumphed with a player — Arijan Ademi — who had returned a positive drugs test after playing the full 90 minutes. Ademi would eventually be given a four-year suspension (later reduced to two on appeal) after traces of the banned steroid stanozolol were found in a routine urine sample, but Wenger bristled at Zagreb facing no disciplinary sanctions from UEFA, European football’s governing body. ‘That means you basically accept doping,’ he said. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic – Mykhailo Mudryk’s doping charge explained: Can Chelsea sack him if found guilty and could he appeal?
Off-target shots: How the rise of the ‘good miss’ is aiding talent ID in football
“Off-target shots are football’s missed opportunity, in more ways than one. As the analytics revolution began to sweep through the sport in the early 2010s, shots on goal quickly became a key area of interest, with the aim of identifying the game’s most ruthless finishers firmly in mind. Some years after expected goals (xG) came expected goals on target (xGOT) — a metric that estimates the quality of on-target shots, taking into account factors such as the angle from which the shot was taken from, and its placement within the goal frame, to give an indication of how likely the subsequent effort was likely to find its way in. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Winning fosters USMNT belief at a time when fans need a team they can trust
“The U.S. men’s national team is just a few weeks removed from the bitterness of two friendly defeats, the second of which was particularly ugly. Not nearly enough time has passed to have forgotten completely the feeling those results wrought on the group. That made it easier for Mauricio Pochettino to deliver his postgame message after the U.S. gutted out a not-so-perfect 1-0 win over Saudi Arabiaon Thursday night to secure a spot in the Concacaf Gold Cup quarterfinals. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Donald Trump stunt proves FIFA is happy to play politics when it suits
“Timothy Weah sounded like someone who felt he had been ambushed. ‘It was all a surprise to me, honestly,’ the United States national-team player told reporters of his trip to the White House, where he was part of a delegation from his Italian club Juventus standing awkwardly in the Oval Office as President Donald Trump answered media questions about a possible U.S. attack on Iran and riffed about transgender women in sport. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
The Alexander-Arnold and Rodrygo dynamic showed Real Madrid’s problems will take time to fix
“There was a theme in Xabi Alonso’s first post-match press conference as Real Madrid head coach: improvement will take time. After Madrid’s 1-1 draw with Al Hilal in their opening game in the Club World Cup, Alonso portrayed a calm figure who knew his side were still early in the process. … After a season when Madrid looked porous out of possession regardless of their defensive shape, one thing Alonso needs to improve is the team’s structure without the ball. Madrid’s 4-3-3 against Al Hilal morphed into a 4-4-2 when Alonso’s side were defending in a mid-block, with Jude Bellingham or Vinicius Junior slightly behind Gonzalo Garcia. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
The art of showboating: ‘People sometimes see it as a slur – it’s expressing yourself’
“… It was a passage of play that featured no-look passes, a backheeled volley, and a game of keep-ball that turned a Champions League match into ‘a kind of rondo’. Peter Bosz was furious. Furious with his own PSV players. … Back in January, PSV were facing a callow Liverpool side who were down to 10 men and trailing 3-2 in the closing minutes. Against the better judgment of Bosz, the PSV players had decided to showboat. … A couple of months later, in South America, Corinthians were beating Palmeiras 1-0 on aggregate in the second leg of the Sao Paulo state championship final. As the clock ran down, Memphis Depay stood with both feet on top of the ball. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
Which Premier League team has the toughest start to the 2025-26 season?
“There may be two months to go until the 2025-26 Premier League season gets underway, but the release of the fixture list has whetted the appetite of fans across the division. Consisting of 38 rounds of matches over nine months, with each team playing their 19 rivals once at home and once away, the opening few games are often decisive in building momentum to set the tone for the campaign, or derailing it through diminishing confidence. These early matches alone will not define a season but they play a significant role in shaping its course, and naturally attract the attention on fixture-release day. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
The irresistible madness of Boca Juniors
“Boca Juniors storm beaches. They plant their flags and wade through water. ‘The biggest popular movement on the planet’ is how they define themselves — and when they move, they move. They occupied Copacabana before the 2023 Copa Libertadores final against Fluminense. A sunburnt kid leant out of the crowd, his hair wet and eyes clear. His father had sold his motorbike so they could be there. The boy had also given up his PlayStation to pay for the journey to Rio de Janeiro. They didn’t have match tickets but they didn’t care because, as he said, ‘Look around you! Look at this! This is Boca! Come on, Boca!’ A club for the people, made great by their people. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
NY Times/The Athletic: Boca Juniors 2 Benfica 2 – Three red cards, sound and fury in Club World Cup’s best game so far
W – Boca Juniors

It’s Gianni’s world (cup)…

“Just weeks ago, the curtain fell on the club football season for much of the world. Instead of the usual two-month summer break, however, some of the best clubs in the world are preparing to compete in FIFA’s new Club World Cup, staged to mark one year until the 2026 North American FIFA World Cup. Organizing a rehearsal tournament is not new. … This year, FIFA has opted to break with tradition. Instead of sticking to international football, it’s dipping its toes into the club football pool. This expanded, summer version of the Club World Cup signals a strategic pivot and a quiet power play in the ongoing tug-of-war between football’s foremost governing bodies, FIFA and UEFA. …”
Africa Is a Country
YouTube: African Five-a-side podcast

FIFA spent more than $50million on Club World Cup marketing to boost ticket sales
“FIFA has spent over $50 million on marketing to promote this summer’s Club World Cup tournament in the United States, including increasing their original budget by millions in the past month as they sought to drive attendances for the tournament, according to multiple people briefed on their budget. The Club World Cup, a project driven by the organisation’s president Gianni Infantino, had been beset by organisational challenges as FIFA sought to make a splash for the first edition of the revamped 32-team tournament. In a statement released last week, FIFA said they ‘anticipate great attendances and electric atmospheres’ across the twelve venues and eleven cities hosting the competition. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
****NY Times/The Athletic: FIFA drops anti-racism, anti-discrimination messages for Club World Cup
Ranking the best and worst Club World Cup home kits: Divorcee vibes, pixel madness and flawless Tunisian flair

“The revamped Club World Cup is effectively a brand new tournament and with a fresh competition comes a selection of mostly new kits. For this summer’s 32-team extravaganza in the United States, teams are allowed to play in new looks, whether that be special-edition tournament-only strips or what they’ll be strutting their stuff in for the entirety of the 2025-26 season. Or, should they wish, they can carry on wearing the same shirts as they have done already this year. Whatever the approach of each of these Club World Cup competitors, nothing can spare them from the critical eye of The Athletic’s Nick Miller, who has ranked all 32 home strips from worst to best. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
The offside law, Bill McCracken and, a century on, the decision that changed football forever

“One hundred years ago today, at a meeting at 22 Rue de Londres, Paris, association football — soccer — changed forever. The International Football Association Board voted that Law 11 of the game, the offside law, would be altered from season 1925-26 so that two players would need to be between an attacker and the goal line to remain onside, not three as it had been previously. This was arguably the most significant rule change since football was professionalised in the mid-1880s. It is possibly the most significant until the introduction of the back-pass rule in 1992. It may even have a claim to be the biggest moment in the history of the professional sport. Every organised match played since 1925 has had its geometry defined by the June 1925 offside law. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Chelsea players react furiously after referee GC Denton rules out a goal for offside
Who is the real Gianni Infantino, FIFA president and ‘the king of soccer’?
“… Gianni Infantino threw his head back in laughter before smiling and nodding along, looking delighted by the United States president’s description of him. It was the same a couple of months earlier at the launch of a White House Task Force for the 2026 World Cup, when Donald Trump described the FIFA president as ‘my great friend’ and ‘sort of the king of soccer… I guess… in a certain way’. He is. Sort of. I guess. In a certain way. As the head of FIFA, football’s governing body, Infantino is the most powerful figure in the sport, able to make what sound like wild, off-the-cuff proposals — a 32-team Club World Cup, a 48-team World Cup — and make them a reality while travelling around the world on a Qatari private jet, rubbing shoulders with sporting superstars and heads of state, sharing his adventures with his three million Instagram followers and frequently resembling the excited child of Trump’s description. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Watch Messi for $4 at Club World Cup? FIFA offering drastic discounts to opening game
“FIFA’s latest attempts to fill Hard Rock Stadium for the Club World Cup opening match between Inter Miami and Egyptian team Al-Ahly involve offering students at an affiliated local college a single ticket for $20 — but with the promise of up to four complimentary tickets. The Athletic last week revealed the launch game, which takes place on Saturday night, still had tens of thousands of tickets unsold for a match likely to star Lionel Messi for MLS side Inter Miami. Hard Rock Stadium has a capacity of 65,326. FIFA denied that fewer than 20,000 tickets had been sold for the match — insisting the number was ‘much higher’ — but they did not specify the number. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
DAZN will broadcast the Club World Cup around the world. What is the streamer’s big idea?
“Six months before the planned start of the Club World Cup came word that FIFA had finally found the grease to make its new wheels turn. A global broadcast partner had been secured and in its hands was the billion dollars that could be repurposed as a prize pot to demand the attention of the 32 competing teams. FIFA called it a ‘landmark agreement’, the first of its kind. All 63 games in its expanded now-summer club competition would be made available free, with the body’s president Gianni Infantino calling it the ‘most widely accessible club football tournament ever’. The partner selected to make it all happen, though, raised eyebrows. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Guardian – Uncontested: Dazn’s $1bn story reveals why the Club World Cup is really here
WorldCup2026, one year to go: What still needs to be sorted?

“The men’s World Cup is one year away and 13 nations — including its host countries the United States, Canada and Mexico — have secured their places in the expanded 48-team competition. Some 75 per cent of the matches will be played in the U.S., across 11 cities. Mexico will host the opening matchday in Mexico City and Guadalajara, but the involvement of Canada and Mexico will cease after the round of 16, with all games from the quarter-finals onwards to be played in the States, including the final at MetLife Stadium, in New Jersey, a short distance from New York City. … As the clock ticks down, The Athletic details just some of the most pressing challenges, reputational risks and supporter concerns about the United States’ portion of the competition, which will encompass 78 of the 104 games that will be played between June 11 and July 19 next year. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic – World Cup 2026: Who’s qualified, who’s struggling and which underdogs have a shot at glory?

The National Guard was brought in after protests in Los Angeles
Your complete guide to the 2025 Club World Cup – the groups, the teams and the storylines to watch
“The Club World Cup begins on Saturday, June 14, when Inter Miami take on Al Ahly at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami. How will Lionel Messi and friends get on? Are they likely to get out of Group A? And what about Real Madrid? The world’s biggest club have replaced Carlo Ancelotti with Xabi Alonso, their former midfielder, and signed Trent Alexander-Arnold and Dean Huijsen in the mini transfer window before the tournament. They’re also after Alvaro Carreras from Benfica and one of the hottest prospects in world football, River Plate’s 17-year-old forward Franco Mastantuono. Benfica and River are part of the fun in the United States, too. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic: One year from a home World Cup, USMNT with fanfare has fear of being a flop
W – 2025 FIFA Club World Cup

The history of the sash, a football shirt status symbol

“Whether it is the red stripe of Peru, River Plate or Rayo Vallecano, the diagonal sash — in all its forms and colourways — is fundamental to football kit heritage. But where does it come from and who started the trend? That depends on who you ask. In their early days, football shirts were completely plain, so to distinguish two opposing teams, it is believed that a sash band was first introduced as a tool for players to differentiate between team-mates and the opposition. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
A History of Football Kit Design in England and Scotland

Peru, pictured at the 1936 Olympics, are classic purveyors of sashed shirts
Uzbekistan’s World Cup dream realised: Tears, near-misses and making amends for ‘stolen goals’
“As the enormity of what they had achieved started to sink in, the emotions of Uzbekistan’s football squad became too much to bear. This was the greatest moment of all of their careers. The players were crying, the staff were crying, even the unused substitutes were in tears. Heroic goalkeeper Utkir Yusupov, who made several outstanding saves including one in the eighth minute of added time, was on his knees, blubbing like the rest of them. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Uncovering the secrets of football’s goalkeeper gloves

“When Liverpool sealed the Premier League title in April with a 5-1 win against Tottenham Hotspur at Anfield, Alisson followed another goalkeeping great into one particular record book. The 32-year-old became the first goalkeeper since Manchester United’s Peter Schmeichel in 1999 to win the English top flight wearing gloves manufactured by Reusch. When Liverpool won the Premier League in 2020, Alisson wore Nike gloves, but in October 2023, he signed a deal with Reusch, which meant a return to a brand he used as a young goalkeeper in Novo Hamburgo, just north of Porto Alegre in Brazil. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

West Ham United goalkeeper Mervyn Day makes a save with his bare hands against Tottenham Hotspur in 1973
Ten players who could steal the show at the 2026 World Cup
“Brace yourselves, the World Cup countdown officially starts…now. … Having 16 more teams means even more of the globe’s best players can showcase their talents on the biggest stage, but who do we expect to be the protagonists next summer? Some names might be obvious, others might not have even earned their first international cap or play for countries whose qualification hangs in the balance. It’s a tricky assignment, but it is fun to try. So, almost one year out, this is The Athletic’s shortlist of those predicted — or expected — to light up World Cup 2026. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Football’s capacity to make men cry: ‘I was buying milk and just burst into tears thinking about Palace’
“Forget the scoreline in the top corner of the screen. The image of the distraught Inter Milan supporter who flashed up on television screens around the world, as his team prepared to take a meaningless corner in the 76th minute, told the story of the Champions League final. Crestfallen and broken, his bottom lip was quivering and tears were streaming down his face. A fourth Paris Saint-Germain goal had not long been scored at the other end of the stadium and it was all too much for a man who looked like his world had come to an end. … It’s hard to explain to people who have no interest in the game why so many of us are so immersed and emotionally invested in this sport that it leads to the kind of behaviour — uncontrollable tears (of joy as well as despair), hugging total strangers, or even turning the air blue after something totally innocuous — that would be almost unthinkable in a public space anywhere else. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
How fanzine culture gave a voice to supporters and changed English football

“The titles were often gloriously creative and diverse, some paying homage to terrace anthems, others making a clever play on words. Sales were decent, too, with more than one million copies shifted per year at the height of what quickly became a phenomenon. We’re talking about the rise of football fanzines in the 1980s. Those purveyors of insight and irreverence who arrived on the scene when the game was on its knees in a troubled decade and helped spark a revival. … But, by giving supporters a long overdue voice at a time when they were considered pariahs by wider society, fanzines revealed those on the terraces to be intelligent, passionate people who had something to say beyond the cliched ‘Ere We Go!’ battle cry so beloved of the tabloid newspapers when generalising fans as hooligans. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Football, fanzines and the media today
The Times: If fanzines die, part of the game dies – they give fans a voice (Henry Winter)
Football fanzines from print to the digital age: call for academic partners
Voice of the Fans Exhibition | A Celebration of Football Fanzines

“The first association football fanzine is regarded as being Foul, a publication that ran between 1972 and 1976.[54] In the UK, most Premier League or Football League football clubs have one or more fanzines which supplement, oppose and complement the club’s official magazine or matchday programme. A reasonably priced zine has a guaranteed audience, as is the culture of passion in being a football fan. The longest running fanzine is The City Gent, produced by supporters of Bradford City FC, which first went on sale at Valley Parade in November 1984 and is now in its 26th season. Following close on its heels was Nike, Inc. which was first released in 1989. At the time it was not the first of its kind with Terrace Talk (York City), which was first published in November 1981 and Wanderers Worldwide(Bolton Wanderers) having already been established but since disappeared. …”
W – Fanzine
A Football Fanzine Archive – Where (hopefully) Fanzines Live On
“Thank you for following whatever link brought you here. This blog is where I intend to post scans of all the fanzines I posses(ed), along with pithy reviews. All of the ‘zines were mostly bought between 1985 to 1990. There are a number from the 90’s and even one from 2000 (the last one I bought in the UK). … If are looking for particular ‘zine, that I might have up, scroll below. …”
Football Fanzine List
W – Category:Football fanzines

Trump travel ban sparks World Cup questions — and raises more soccer issues
“On Wednesday night, U.S. President Donald Trump signed a travel ban against 12 countries in a move he described as ‘protecting the national security and national interest of the United States and its people.’ The ban goes into effect on Monday, and it entails a ban against travel into the United States by citizens of Afghanistan, Myanmar (Burma), Chad, the Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen. This ban relates to the entry of both immigrants and non-immigrants. Trump also imposed partial restrictions and limits on the entry of nationals from Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan and Venezuela. From a soccer perspective, the news is particularly significant because FIFA is hosting two tournaments in the United States over the next 13 months — first the FIFA Club World Cup, which will begin June 14, and then the World Cup in 2026, which will be shared with Canada and Mexico. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic – World Cup travel ban fallout is ‘part of what it means to host an event’: State Dept
NY Times/The Athletic – Donald Trump’s travel ban undermines Gianni Infantino’s World Cup vision
xGenius: Expected Goals and the Science of Winning Football Matches – James Tippett
“xGenius takes a tour of the world’s most pioneering football clubs, uncovering how elite teams are using xG to win more matches. Any club not adopting this model will be left behind. The concept of Expected Goals – or xG – has changed how we understand football. Every fan will have heard of xG, many will understand what it is, but few will know exactly how it’s being used by football teams to improve their chances of winning matches. xGenius explores the interplay between analysis, tactics and decision-making. It seeks to put the sport of football under the microscope with the aim of getting closer to the ultimate truth of what makes players, managers and teams successful. What, ultimately, wins matches.”
amazon
How each of the 32 teams qualified for the 2025 Club World Cup
“It is billed as FIFA’s new era of club football, a ‘prime club competition’ involving 32 clubs from around the world all descending on the United States from this month to try and win the Club World Cup. Clubs from six federations and 20 nations will be competing in the expanded competition from June 14 to July 13, starting with a group stage then three knockout stages until the final, which will be at the MetLife Stadium in New Jersey. The decision to expand it from seven clubs to a full-blown tournament a year before the 2026 World Cup in the U.S., Canada and Mexico has prompted criticism from the global players’ union, some national associations and some clubs due to the congested fixture calendar. Ticket pricing and the impact on the transfer window have been topics of debate too — players will possibly be changing clubs during the tournament — as has the way qualification was decided. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
How West Germany won the 1954 World Cup: Herberger tactics, injured Puskas, group stage mind games?

“…There are two clear examples in World Cup history of the most exciting team at the tournament, and the neutral’s favourites, being foiled by West Germany in the final. The most obvious example is the Netherlands in 1974, but two decades beforehand, Hungary experienced almost exactly the same thing. If anything, it was even more egregious because this legendary Hungary side had previously destroyed West Germany 8-3 in the group stage — a huge victory, even by the standards of a World Cup that featured a record goals-per-game tally of 5.38. At that point, there seemed little chance anyone would stop the Olympic champions Hungary, let alone the Germans. …”
NY Times/The Athletic – Michael Cox

England (including Wales) – Map of all clubs drawing above 1,000 per game (2024-25 attendance figures)
“… The map shows all clubs in the English football system which drew above 1,000 per-game in 2024-25 (home domestic league matches): 156 clubs, including 64 non-League clubs.
Also, there is an inset-map for all the clubs drawing above 1-K-per-game from Greater London-plus-the-immediate surrounding area (18 clubs from Greater London + 3 clubs from surrounding areas of the Home Counties). …”
billsportsmaps
W – Truro City F.C.
Champions League final: PSG 5 Inter 0 – Desire Doue stars as Parisians end long wait to become European champions

“Paris Saint-Germain landed European football’s biggest prize on Saturday night, dismantling Inter 5-0 in Munich to win the 2024-25 Champions League, only the second French side to win the competition after Marseille in 1993. PSG have made a habit of starting quickly in the Champions League this season and the final was no different, Luis Enrique’s team finding themselves 2-0 up after 20 minutes thanks to goals from Achraf Hakimi and Desire Doue. In an era in which showpiece events can be sterile, cagey affairs, this was very much business as usual for the French champions. To their credit, Inter improved after half-time but the game was sealed just after the hour mark when Doue scored his second of the evening after delightful work from Ousmane Dembele and Vitinha. Further goals from Khvicha Kvaratskhelia and Senny Mayulu were merely the icing on a highly impressive cake. Their winning margin of five goals is the biggest ever recorded in a Champions League final. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Guardian: Désiré Doué joins the global A-list to lead PSG’s coronation as kings of Europe
Wikipedia – 2025 UEFA Champions League final
The Analyst – PSG 5-0 Inter Stats: Doué Dazzles as PSG Record Biggest Ever Champions League Final Win
YouTube: UEFA: PSG 5-0 Inter Milan Champions League
***NY Times/The Athletic: We watched PSG win Champions League final with a professional head coach – here’s what we learned

Exile to ecstasy: How PSG’s ultras made their city seen and heard
“When Paris Saint-Germain face Inter on Saturday, hoping to lift the Champions League trophy for the first time in their history, they will be supported by a group of fans who have made themselves seen — and heard — throughout the season. Around 3,000 of PSG’s ultras will be at the Allianz Arena in Munich for the final. Their colourful and noisy displays have become a defining feature of the team’s Champions League run, featuring huge tifos or banners, supporters with megaphones leading songs and drums punctuating the air at their Parc des Princes stadium. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic – Battle of the Broadcasts: Reviewing TNT, CBS Sports’ Champions League final (Video)
Wikipedia – 2024–25 UEFA Champions League

Two people die and hundreds arrested in France after PSG Champions League victory
“Two people have died and hundreds have been arrested amid violence on the streets of France which marred Paris Saint-Germain’s Champions League final victory and provoked political recriminations. Cars were torched as flares and fireworks were set off while supporters clashed with police in the French capital on Saturday night after the match in Munich. Police arrested 491 people in Paris when crowds converged on the Champs-Élysées avenue, the French interior ministry said on Sunday. A further 68 people were arrested across France. …”
Guardian (Video)
YouTube: PSG fans clash with riot cops with 500 arrested and 2 dead after final win

Paris Saint-Germain are in the Champions League final, but has Qatar already won?
“On November 23, 2010, a lunch was hosted at the Elysee Palace, the official residence of the French president. Among President Nicolas Sarkozy’s guests that day were Sheikh Tamim Bin Hamad al-Thani, now the Emir of Qatar, and Hamad bin Jassim bin Jaber al-Thani, who was Qatar’s prime minister at the time. Also in attendance was the legendary French footballer Michel Platini, then-president of UEFA, European football’s governing body, and a member of the FIFA executive committee that was about to hold a vote to decide which countries would host the 2018 and 2022 World Cups. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Inter left their last Champions League final with an aura. Now they’re seeking immortality
“From the dugout at San Siro, Lautaro Martinez and Federico Dimarco were helpless. The Inter captain and his team-mate — a hometown hero and lifelong fan of the club — had already been taken off against Barcelona. A 2-0 first-half lead had been cut to 2-1, the visitors equalised soon afterwards, and then, with only three minutes remaining, Inter’s dream of reaching the Champions League final was apparently shattered, as Raphinha completed a remarkable remontada. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
Relocation of Wimbledon F.C. to Milton Keynes

Graffiti on the locked gates of Wimbledon F.C.‘s home ground, the original Plough Lane, in 2006. The club, nicknamed “the Wombles” or “the Dons”, last played first-team matches there in 1991, and the stadium was demolished in late 2002. Blocks of flats have covered the site since 2008.
“Wimbledon Football Club relocated to Milton Keynes in September 2003, 16 months after receiving permission to do so from the Football Association on the basis of a two-to-one decision in favour by an FA-appointed independent commission. The move took the team from south London, where it had been based since its foundation in 1889, to Milton Keynes, a new town in Buckinghamshire, about 56 miles (90 km) to the northwest of the club’s traditional home district Wimbledon. Hugely controversial, the move’s authorisation prompted disaffected Wimbledon supporters to form AFC Wimbledon, a new club, on 30 May 2002. The relocated team played home matches in Milton Keynes under the Wimbledon name from September 2003 until June 2004, when following the end of the 2003–04 season it renamed itself Milton Keynes Dons F.C. (MK Dons). Wimbledon F.C. spent most of its history in non-League football before being elected to the Football League in 1977. …”
W – Relocation of Wimbledon F.C. to Milton Keynes
Wimbledon playing against Oxford United at Plough Lane during the 1981–82 season
