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🔎 The Debrief as Man City and Juve cruise whilst Trent struggles on debut

🔎 The Debrief as Man City and Juve cruise whilst Trent struggles on debut

Yahoo6 hours ago

The first round of group games were completed overnight with all 32 teams now having played once.
Here's what happened.
You can sign up to DAZN to watch every FIFA Club World Cup game for free.
What happened? 📝
Manchester City got their tournament underway with a fairly routine 2-0 win over Moroccan giants Wydad. First half goals from Phil Foden and Jeremy Doku were enough to hand Pep Guardiola's side all three points.
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Xabi Alonso and Simone Inzaghi then took their debut bows in the Real Madrid and Al Hilal dugouts respectively, with the Saudi side holding the European giants to a 1-1 draw.
Red Bull Salzburg took advantage of those dropped points as they scored late on to beat Pachuca 2-1 and go top of Group H.
The final game of the evening saw Juventus run out comfortable 5-0 winners over Qatari club Al Ain, with Randal Kolo Muani and Francisco Conceição both getting doubles.
Player of the day 🔥
📸 Dan Mullan - 2025 Getty Images
Al Hilal goalkeeper Yassine Bounou, otherwise known as 'Bono', was outstanding as he helped secure a point against Real Madrid.
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The Moroccan shot-stopper was equalled to six shots that Los Blancos fired his way, including a 92nd minute penalty from Federico Valverde.
Stat of the Day 📊
Xabi Alonso joined a select group of Real Madrid coaches who drew their first game in charge of the capital club.
What this means 🤔
Barring any major surprises, it looks as if Group G is all wrapped up with Juventus and Manchester City leading the way there.
The two European behemoths meet on June 26 in Orlando for what looks like a direct shoot-out as to who will finish top there.
In Group H, it's Salzburg who lead the way with Al Hilal and Real Madrid tussling out for second.
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A shock in Los Blancos' next game against Pachuca on June 22 would really open things up.
What they said 🗣️
Manchester City goalscorer Phil Foden admitted he was struggling with the Philadelphia heat during his side's win over Wydad: "I'm very happy for the team to start the tournament with a win. It was difficult at times with the heat. They were a top team on the counter-attacks. The tournament is very important, not just for me, but all the players. It is important to get your sharpness now in this big competition."
Xabi Alonso was critical of his Real Madrid side after their draw with Al Hilal: ""It's a mixed bag of feelings. It's a pity we weren't able to get the win. I didn't really enjoy our performance in the first half, to be honest. We played better in the second. We were more balanced and handled the ball better. I'll take that with me . We tried to play very fast in the first half and lost the ball a lot."
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Juventus boss Igor Tudor insisted there was still room for improvement despite his team's 5-0 victory: "We started really well. In the second half, I was still saying to slow down a bit because it's hot, to try to maybe manage a bit more. There, we could have done better, but yeah, it's an important result because this team has a lot of quality. It has interesting players."
What's next? 👀
There are four more games later today with Groups A and B really starting to take shape.
Palmeiras will take on Al Ahly in New Jersey whilst Inter Miami travel up to Atlanta for their match with Porto.
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Seattle Sounders then host Atlético de Madrid at their home stadium with Paris Saint-Germain taking on Brazilian giants Botafogo.
📸 Megan Briggs - 2025 Getty Images

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Barcelona and La Liga's salary limit: Can they afford Nico Williams?
Barcelona and La Liga's salary limit: Can they afford Nico Williams?

New York Times

time16 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Barcelona and La Liga's salary limit: Can they afford Nico Williams?

A version of his article was first published on June 5. It has been updated to reflect Barcelona's €60m pursuit of Nico Williams. Barcelona's 2024-25 campaign was thrilling on the pitch — but there were equally dramatic twists and turns off it. Hansi Flick's team won a domestic treble of La Liga, Copa del Rey and Supercopa de Espana titles while falling agonisingly short in the Champions League semi-finals against Inter. At the same time, we saw the club once again scramble to deal with their deep financial problems and La Liga's strict salary cap rules. Advertisement The most dramatic situation came during the January transfer window, when Spanish government intervention was required for Barca to field attacking midfielder Dani Olmo and back-up forward Pau Victor for the second half of last season. Further drama appears very likely this summer — as Barca are already making big moves in the transfer market. On Wednesday, Espanyol goalkeeper Joan Garcia signed after Barca met his €25million (£21.4m, $28.8m) release clause. On Thursday, The Athletic reported that the club has reached a verbal agreement with Nico Williams over personal terms before a potential €60m move. At the start of this week, however, La Liga president Javier Tebas said Barca still have big financial issues to resolve. Here, we sum up Barca's current financial situation and attempt to predict what may happen between now and the end of the transfer window. We also explain why a set of VIP seats at the Camp Nou could be key. For years now, Barca's problem has not been finding significant funds to buy players, but registering many of these signings with La Liga. The main difficulty is that they have yet to really resolve their past financial problems — including at least €1.3bn of debt from when Laporta returned as president in 2021. Another issue is that the short-term solutions — often called levers — deployed to raise money to spend on transfers have not always been accepted by La Liga, who want the club to be run in a more sustainable way. Barca have regularly viewed this as unfair limitation on their activities, and looked to find creative ways to register players — such as when Olmo and Victor were registered for the first half of the 2024-25 campaign using a rule that allows for the temporary replacement of players ruled out through long-term injuries (in that case defender Andreas Christensen). Advertisement In January, La Liga revoked their registrations after concluding Barca were in breach of their salary limit. Barca were only able to re-register the players when, in April, the Spanish government's High Council of Sports (CSD) sports court forced La Liga to do so. That CSD ruling did not question Spanish football's financial controls, but stated the joint committee formed by La Liga and the Spanish football federation (RFEF) did not have the power to revoke Olmo and Victor's licenses in early January. La Liga has confirmed to The Athletic this means the pair are now registered to play for Barca until the end of their contracts in 2030 (Olmo) and 2029 (Victor) — although a La Liga appeal of that CSD decision to a different court has yet to be heard. La Liga still maintains Barca did not have space in their salary limit to register Olmo and Victor back in January. And on Tuesday, La Liga president Javier Tebas said Barcelona are still not in line with their salary-limit rules. Commenting on Barca's €25m move for goalkeeper Garcia (which was completed on Wednesday), Tebas said: 'Barca need to do some things to register Joan Garcia. Not a lot of things, but they know what they need to do in that regard. I am not going to reveal them here. One thing is to make the signing official, the other one is: can they register him?' Right now, Barca's room for manoeuvre this summer will be limited unless they can raise more money — either through selling players or growing the club's income. Through autumn 2024, Barca's club hierarchy tried various ways to raise money to register Olmo and Victor permanently with La Liga. A new kit deal with Nike helped, but was not enough. Barca even took a legal case against the regulations to a Catalan court but were unsuccessful. In December, Barca's board decided to sell future revenues from 475 VIP seats at the revamped Camp Nou, which remains under construction, as another new 'lever'. Few details of what the club called a new Personal Seat License (PSL) business model were made public, but Laporta said at a news conference in mid-January that this raised €100m from two different investors. This includes €70m from the UAE-based New Era Visionary Group (NEVG) owned by Moldovan businessman Ruslan Birladeanu, and €30m from the Qatari-backed, UK-based investment fund Forta Advisors Limited. Nuevas fotos del Spotify Camp Nou 🏟️ — FC Barcelona (@FCBarcelona_es) June 3, 2025 Barca had already received the entire €30m sum from the Qatari investors and 40 per cent of the remainder (€28m), Laporta said. Barca said when announcing the deal that both sets of investor groups had been subject to a mandatory review before the deal, and received positive reports from the club's compliance department and economic commission. Advertisement In early April, La Liga questioned the financing of these deals, saying they had been certified by an unnamed auditor back in January. La Liga also said Barca's previous auditors, Grant Thornton, did not mention the €100m in its financial update on the club filed in December, nor did the new auditors, Crowe Global, mention the new income in its report to the league in early April. Barca responded with 'surprise and indignation', claiming that making public such information was 'inappropriate' and that Tebas' public comments on the matter were aimed at 'destabilising' Barca. Reports in the Catalan media have said that the 475 VIP seats (a small part of the 9,400 VIP seats the Camp Nou will have when complete) must be built for the current auditors to count this money within the club's 2024-25 accounts. Barca did not reply when asked for details on this, but Laporta told media outlet Jijantes in mid-May: 'The (VIP seats) are done. Probably, they can be taken into account starting this month. We need to remember that La Liga fixes the salary limit when they receive our budgets.' In early June, La Liga said it had not yet received any details about money coming from the sale of the VIP seats and so has not been able to include it yet within salary limit calculations for the coming season. The first 'levers' pulled by Laporta's board were the sale of 25 per cent of Barca's future La Liga TV rights in 2022 for a total of €400m. That means Barca make season-on-season payments of around €40m a season to U.S. investors Sixth Street. More complex is the Barca Studios/Barca Vision project, which Laporta's board had previously viewed as an asset that strengthened the club's financial situation. In August 2023, it was ambitiously valued at $1billion. Advertisement Last October, with money counted on from past investors in the project not having arrived, Barca's previous auditors mandated the value of the Barca Studios/Barca Vision asset be partly written down. This meant that instead of a €12m profit, the club's 2023-24 loss accounts actually showed an overall net loss of €91m. Unless new investors are found for the project — now known as Barca Media — the current auditors will have to decide whether another write-down is required for the 2024-25 accounts. Should this happen, La Liga's rules mean the salary limit for 2025-26 would likely need to be lowered. Asked about this issue, Barca told The Athletic that any new partners for Barca Media would be communicated using the club's official channels. Another unknown is a new Barca Mobile arm of the club's commercial activities, a virtual mobile operator where users pay for roaming data plans via Barca's website, which was launched in April 2025. Laporta predicted it would be a 'goldmine' for the club. The club's main partner in Barca Mobile is NEVG, the same group owned by Moldovan businessman Birladeanu which bought a chunk of the VIP seats at the new Camp Nou. NEVG's only business activities, per its website, are the contracts it has with Barca. Predicting Barca transfer windows is generally difficult, and even many of those involved behind the scenes have been surprised by events during previous summers. As of early June, about €42m of the money being paid by NEVG for its share of future VIP revenues was yet to be received by Barcelona. Catalan media reports have suggested Birladeanu will facilitate another payment by June 30, so it can be included in the 2024-25 final accounts, but it remains to be seen whether this will actually happen. Asked about this possibility by The Athletic, Barca declined to comment, and NEVG did not reply. Barca will also be looking to raise money and open space in their salary limit by moving on unwanted players — including Ansu Fati and Inaki Pena. Other more important squad members could potentially be sold, with defender Ronald Araujo and goalkeeper Marc-Andre ter Stegen the subject of transfer speculation over their futures. Barcelona have actually secured some funds via a few sales this summer. Como met the €6m release clause in the contract of 21-year-old full-back Alex Valle, who had been on loan at the Italian club, while West Ham United's €39m signing of Jean-Clair Todibo from Nice, following his season on loan, means Barca are set to earn another €7.8m, as they inserted a 20 per cent sell-on clause in the deal when selling the defender to the French side in 2021. Advertisement They have also terminated Clement Lenglet's contract — the defender had two years left on it, and has now joined Atletico Madrid, where he was on loan last season. Barca will want to bring in enough money to bring themselves below their squad salary limit. That would mean they can spend any funds raised, rather than being forced by La Liga's rules to put a significant percentage (around half) towards paying off past debts. This is known as the 1:1 rule in Spain, given clubs can spend a euro for every euro they raise. 'I believe we'll be able to sign players, we'll be at '1:1', and I hope we stay like that for many years,' Laporta told Jijantes in May. 'It's true we were pretty tight, so what we have to do is keep working. It's always difficult, as the 'fair play' rules are, let's say, 'sui generis' (unique). The regulations are open to interpretation. We'll have to keep fighting. It won't be easy, but that way it'll be even sweeter when we do it.' More 'fighting' over the interpretation of the salary limit rules looks likely. That will not be easy, given relations with La Liga were strained even before the Olmo/Victor saga. 'I hope Barca can be 1:1 next window, but you'd have to ask them if they can do that,' Tebas told The Athletic in April. 'They know what they have to do, and we hope it does not happen 48 hours before the window closes in August. We hope not to have any more surprises.' (Top image: Edith Geuppert –)

The Alexander-Arnold and Rodrygo dynamic showed Real Madrid's problems will take time to fix
The Alexander-Arnold and Rodrygo dynamic showed Real Madrid's problems will take time to fix

New York Times

time31 minutes ago

  • New York Times

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. 'Whoever thought everything was going to work perfectly…,' said Madrid's head coach. 'We knew what things were going to work well and others that we have to keep working on to improve.' Advertisement 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. The defensive problems mainly came down the right side, where Al Hilal's intricate wing play mesmerised Trent Alexander-Arnold and Rodrygo. In terms of their positioning, Madrid's players were usually a couple of yards short or blocking passing lanes that were already covered. Below, as Garcia presses Kalidou Koulibaly, Rodrygo holds his position to force the ball wide. However, Al Hilal's left-winger, Salem Al-Dawsari, is dragging Alexander-Arnold inside the pitch, which means Renan Lodi is able to exploit the space once he receives the pass from Koulibaly. The lack of communication between Madrid's right-back and winger, and the speed of the move, catches them out. Alexander-Arnold is left in between Lodi and Al-Dawsari, who is attacking the space from the right-back's blind side… … and the ball is played into his path, but Raul Asencio intercepts it. Rodrygo is miles away from the action and it is alarming that Al Hilal's left-back, Lodi, is in position to receive the return pass if Asencio does not stop Al-Dawsari. In this next example, Alexander-Arnold, Federico Valverde and Rodrygo are in the correct positions as Al Hilal are rotating their left side. When Al-Dawsari plays the ball back to Lodi… … Rodrygo takes a couple of steps inside the pitch to maintain Madrid's horizontal compactness. Meanwhile, Aurelien Tchouameni is keeping an eye on Sergej Milinkovic-Savic, as Lodi plays the ball to Ruben Neves. However, Tchouameni leaves Milinkovic-Savic free when the Serbia midfielder drops to receive the ball from Neves. On top of that, Rodrygo does not adjust his position in time to support Alexander-Arnold, who is in a one-versus-two situation and being dragged inside by Nasser Al-Dawsari. This allows Milinkovic-Savic to find the other Al-Dawsari in space… … and the captain dribbles inside, before combining with the Serbia midfielder, but his shot misses the target. In another example, Al Hilal's holding midfielder, Neves, is in a left-back position and Lodi is higher up the pitch while the ball is at Yassine Bounou's feet. Before the goalkeeper plays the long pass to Lodi, Madrid's right-winger Brahim Diaz is in a peculiar position, where the only assumption possible is that he does not want to leave Garcia defending Koulibaly and Neves on his own. However, that leaves Lucas Vazquez, who replaced Alexander-Arnold, in a one-versus-two situation. Madrid's right-back is initially narrow due to the positioning of Al-Dawsari, and when the ball is approaching Lodi, he hesitates about contesting the aerial duel… … which leaves him in no-man's land. Diaz's weird positioning and Vazquez's hesitancy allow Lodi and Al-Dawsari to combine… … before the left-winger sets up Marcos Leonardo, but the centre-forward misses the target. There were other instances where the reaction of Madrid's right-winger was simply late. Here, Koulibaly chips the ball towards Lodi… … and Alexander-Arnold is in position to contest the aerial duel. But Rodrygo reacts late to the second ball, and Al-Dawsari wins it, with his left-back in a position to support the attack. Al Hilal's captain then carries the ball into space with Lodi in an advanced position… … before putting the latter through on goal, but the Brazilian's opener is ruled out for offside — if Al-Dawsari plays the pass a second earlier, it would surely have been 1-0 to Al Hilal. Later in the game, Al Hilal are overloading the left wing and as Milinkovic-Savic is playing the ball to Mohamed Kanno, Lodi dashes forward from behind Diaz. Kanno then finds the underlapping left-back, with Tchouameni unable to commit due to Al-Dawsari's position between the lines. Tchouameni's decision to protect his zone and maintain his position proves to be the correct one as he blocks Lodi's cross and changes its path. Madrid's out-of-possession problems were not going to disappear after three training sessions — improving the team's structure without the ball will take time and commitment. The reaction in the second half, especially with the introduction of Arda Guler and the improvements on the ball, is a miniature example of the essence of patience and time. Advertisement 'Every game we need to take positives and learn from what we can improve,' Alonso told DAZN after the match. 'Every game will give us lessons to get improving.' Madrid will need to be patient as Alonso hones the team's structure in and out of possession. 'We are demanding the result because we are in a competition,' said Alonso. 'But what we want to learn and what we want to be also takes time.'

🌎 The Club World Cup guide to...Juventus
🌎 The Club World Cup guide to...Juventus

Yahoo

time36 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

🌎 The Club World Cup guide to...Juventus

Our guide to all 32 clubs participating at the FIFA Club World Cup continues. Today we're looking How did they qualify for the Club World Cup? As part of UEFA's four-year ranking system, Juventus were the eighth highest ranked side which allowed them to secure their place in the revamped competition. History at the Club World Cup Under its previous guise, Juventus have contested the final of the Intercontinental Cup on three occasions - facing Argentinean opposition each time. Advertisement In 1973, they represented their continent in the fixture despite not winning the European Cup (they were beaten finalists but Ajax declined the invite on financial grounds) and lost to Independiente. They fared better in subsequent outings, beating Argentinos Juniors on penalties in 1985 and River Plate in 1996. How did they perform in the 2024/25 season? This has been, arguably, the most disappointing season for Juventus since the post-Calciopoli days. Juve needed until the last day to finish fourth in Serie A and were knocked out of the Champions League by PSV at the first knockout hurdle. Who is the coach? Igor Tudor is currently in charge of the Old Lady, having replaced Thiago Motta in late March after an underwhelming run of results under the former Bologna boss. Advertisement The Croatian, a popular player with the Bianconeri, is Juventus' first foreign coaching appointment since Didier Deschamps almost 20 years ago. Who is their star player? It has largely been a season of struggle for the Turin giants, not helped by injuries to key men like Bremer but amid the turmoil, Manuel Locatelli has been a model of consistency. The midfielder may not be the most glamorous name but keeps his side ticking and is a vital cog in their machine who is set to impress in the USA. Expected performance at the Club World Cup In a group with Manchester City, Al Ain and Wydad AC, Juventus can justifiably expect to qualify for the next stage. Advertisement While lifting the trophy is likely to be beyond them on current form, they could reasonably be counted among the dark horses who can spring a surprise or two. 📸 Paolo Bruno - 2025 Getty Images

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