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FIFA Club World Cup: the biggest shitshow of all time

Luca Fontana
13/6/2025
Translation: Jessica Johnson-Ferguson

Prestige, profit, power: the new Club World Cup is FIFA President Gianni Infantino’s biggest deal – and quite likely the greatest absurdity in the history of global football. Time to pick this circus apart.

Whoever controls the calendar controls football. For a long time it was UEFA, the organiser of club football. While it shifts billions every year with the Champions League, FIFA only gets its huge show every four years: the World Cup.

This is what FIFA wants to change. It wants a piece of the pie, or rather take the whole thing. By hook or by crook if necessary. That’s why the association quickly came up with the Club World Cup: 32 teams, every four years, from 14 June to 13 July taking place in the USA in 2025. A festival of globalised club football, somewhere between a World Cup show and Champions League drama.

At least that’s how FIFA’s president Gianni Infantino described it. In reality, the tournament is a colossal display of self-aggrandisement. Plus another massive effort for a sport where the players, fans and clubs have long been overexerted.

FIFA poaching in club football

No, the new Club World Cup isn’t a gift to the fans. It’s an attack on UEFA. On national leagues. But above all on their sources of money. It’s the association’s first attempt to gain a regular foothold in highly lucrative club football – an area that’s largely been closed to FIFA to date.

The current system poses a problem for FIFA. Its main source of income, the men’s World Cup, only takes place every four years. In 2022, it generated around 7.5 billion US dollars in revenue through TV rights, sponsorship and tickets. A record number. But one that can only be broken every four years.

Not bad for a charitable, tax-privileged and self-proclaimed non-profit organisation.

A tournament nobody wants

But it’s not just about control and money for Infantino. It’s also about his legacy. His name’s engraved twice on the new trophy. The fact that he managed to enforce this tournament despite the resistance of almost all stakeholders – UEFA, the players the leagues and the coaches – doesn’t seem to preoccupy him one bit.

Clubs including Premier League winners Liverpool and Spanish champions Barcelona aren’t part of the tournament. Unlike Inter Miami: they’re guaranteed a spot based on their «host wild card» status – not because they’re the best team in the US, but because Lionel Messi plays for them Then there’s Auckland City, because Oceania also needs a participant. And Red Bull Salzburg from Austria, because, erm, who knows?

But all the outrage had no consequences. All the players are on the pitch, shoulder to shoulder with FIFA, the association they were massively criticising.

Not to mention that this was done in the USA, where every semi-large sporting fixture with an event status equals full stands.

The ominous deal with DAZN and Saudi Arabia

As if that wasn’t enough, whoever owns a tournament is also allowed to sell it. And FIFA had big plans: broadcasting rights for one billion dollars, global reach, new markets and new sponsors. But there were no buyers. At least not at first.

FIFA itself has kept shtum about the details. As has DAZN. But the timing is striking. At first, nobody wants to pay for the Club World Cup Then the Saudis get on board with DAZN. And suddenly, DAZN is able to stream the entire tournament throughout the world. In some countries, such as Germany, even for free. And FIFA still gets its money. A mere coincidence? Or another building block in the Saudi master plan to use sports to gain global authority?

Either way, there’s a nasty aftertaste to it.

Three Ferraris, two Porsches and zero introspection

Because even the most ludicrous transfer fees at least remain in football’s own economy, where they’re reinvested in new transfers or even in the club’s own infrastructure. Salaries and commissions for players and agents, on the other hand, are swallowed by yachts, sports cars and villas and don’t benefit the game. Instead, they’re lost in luxury. And to enable this level of luxury, schedules need to be filled and new competitions invented.

FIFA’s simply supplying the pitch and everyone’s playing along – players, clubs, agents and sponsors. Modern-day football has long since degenerated into a global wheel of fortune. And everyone’s happy to spin it.

Header image: Giorgio Rossi / Shutterstock.com

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I'm an outdoorsy guy and enjoy sports that push me to the limit – now that’s what I call comfort zone! But I'm also about curling up in an armchair with books about ugly intrigue and sinister kingkillers. Being an avid cinema-goer, I’ve been known to rave about film scores for hours on end. I’ve always wanted to say: «I am Groot.» 


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