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A guide to the Club World Cup as Man City, Chelsea and Messi prepare for action

A guide to the Club World Cup as Man City, Chelsea and Messi prepare for action

The Fifa Club World Cup, which involves Premier League sides Manchester City and Chelsea, begins this weekend.
Here, we examine the new-look 32-team tournament.
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The basics
Manchester City were the last winners of the Club World Cup in its old format in 2023 (PA)
The Club World Cup is not a new concept but this is the first to be staged on a scale more akin to an international tournament. Previously a short annual event featuring each continent's champions, the competition has been expanded hugely. It will now be played every four years and follow the format used from 1998-2022 by the traditional World Cup (without the third-place play-off). There are eight groups of four with the top two from each advancing to the last 16. The first game takes place on June 14th (the early hours of June 15th Irish time) with the final on July 13th.
Hosts
📍Where the
#FIFACWC
action will unfold. 🏟️
pic.twitter.com/DcsgDQTr8s
— FIFA Club World Cup (@FIFACWC)
June 2, 2025
The tournament is being staged in the United States – one of the hosts of next year's World Cup – with venues predominantly along the eastern side of the country including New York, which will host the semi-finals and final, Philadelphia, Washington DC, Atlanta, Orlando and Miami. Seattle and Los Angles are the only two west coast venues.
Teams
The
#FIFACWC
group-stage is locked in. 🔐
— FIFA Club World Cup (@FIFACWC)
June 1, 2025
There are 12 European qualifiers and six from South America, four each from Africa, Asia and North America/Caribbean and one from Oceania. An extra side from the host nation (Inter Miami) make up the 32. In European terms, the Champions League winners from 2021-24 were automatically entered – Chelsea (2021), Real Madrid (2022 and 2024) and City (2023). Paris St Germain's recent success counts for 2029 qualification but they claimed their slot based on ranking points alongside Inter Milan, Atletico Madrid, Bayern Munich and Borussia Dortmund. There is a limit of two teams per country, meaning the likes of Liverpool, Barcelona, Napoli and AC Milan miss out despite having a higher ranking than other teams. The cap was relaxed for Brazil because the country produced four different South American champions in succession (Palmeiras, Flamengo, Fluminense and Botafogo).
Chelsea and City
Chelsea will be bidding to follow up their Conference League triumph with further success (Jane Barlow/PA)
Chelsea are first in action against LAFC in Group D on June 16th, with games against Flamengo and ES Tunis to follow. Bayern Munich could lie in wait in the last 16. City open against Morocco's Wydad Casablanca on June 18th and also play Al Ain of Abu Dhabi and Juventus in Group G. Real Madrid are a potential first knockout round opponent.
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Other notable games
England captain Harry Kane will lead the attack for Bayern Munich (Andrew Milligan/PA)
The tournament begins with Lionel Messi's Inter Miami taking on Al Ahly of Egypt on June 14th. PSG's first outing since winning the Champions League sees them play Atletico Madrid the following day. Trent Alexander-Arnold could make his debut when favourites Real Madrid start against Saudi Arabia's Al Hilal on June 18th and Harry Kane's Bayern have an intriguing opener against Boca Juniors on June 20th.
Prize money
32 clubs, one tournament, one champion.
Be there when history is made at the
#FIFACWC
! 🤩🏆
— FIFA Club World Cup (@FIFACWC)
May 28, 2025
The tournament has had its detractors but Fifa has sought to banish any apathy by allocating a huge prize pot of $1 billion (€861 million). This makes it the most lucrative event, on a per-game basis, ever staged. The money to be awarded will vary by continent but European teams will take home around €35 million just for participating and could scoop €114 million if they win it.
Controversies
Lionel Messi's involvement in the tournament has raised eyebrows (Mike Egerton/PA)
The revamped Club World Cup has not been without issue, primarily due to its positioning in the calendar. With European seasons beginning in mid-August, the complaints about fixture congestion and workload have been numerous.
Fifa also received considerable criticism for awarding the host nation spot to Inter Miami – and therefore Messi – without them having been crowned Major League Soccer champions. Recent comments by president Gianni Infantino apparently urging participating clubs to sign another ratings-driver in Cristiano Ronaldo alerted the cynics further.
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There was also a late change to the line-up with LAFC winning a 'play-in' to replace Mexico's Club Leon, who were excluded over their owners' links to another entrant in Pachuca.
Where to watch
Streaming service DAZN has the primary rights to the competition and will show all matches live and free of charge.

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