
Ronaldo won't play at Club World Cup despite interest from 'quite a few' teams
Cristiano Ronaldo says he's almost certain he will not be playing at the Club World Cup, dealing a blow to FIFA president Gianni Infantino's hopes of having one of soccer's biggest attractions at the tournament.
The Portugal captain confirmed Saturday that he received "quite a few" offers from participating clubs to play for them at the tournament starting June 14, but had decided against accepting any of them.
"Some things make sense to talk about, other things don't, and, as a person says, you can't take part in everything," Ronaldo said. "You have to think about the short, medium and long term. It's a decision practically made on my part not to go to the Club World Cup, but I've had quite a few invitations to go."
The 40-year-old soccer great was speaking in Munich a day before Portugal's Nations League final against Spain.
Infantino had suggested last month that Ronaldo, who is still contracted to Saudi team Al-Nassr until the end of June, could switch to one of the 32 clubs taking part in the Club World Cup because of a unique transfer window created for the tournament.
Ronaldo did little to quell that speculation when he posted " this chapter is over " after Al-Nassr's last Saudi Pro League game of the season.
He was linked with several Club World Cup participants, including Brazil's Palmeiras.
A switch to Al-Nassr's crosstown rival Al-Hilal — the one Saudi club that qualified — was also mooted as a potential solution to having Ronaldo play at the tournament, where his great rival Lionel Messi will be playing with Inter Miami.
FIFA would have welcomed the boost that Ronaldo's presence could provide for ticket sales, though such a switch to a bitter local rival for a short period would be unthinkable for players in Europe's leagues.
Both Al-Nassr and Al-Hilal are among the four big Saudi clubs backed by the country's Public Investment Fund, which has a 75% stake in each. On Thursday, FIFA announced PIF as an " official partner " of the Club World Cup. Saudi state money is also effectively funding the tournament's broadcasting deal that has largely backed its $1 billion prize fund being shared among the participants.
"This is irrelevant right now," Ronaldo first said when asked Saturday about the Club World Cup. "It makes no sense to talk about anything other than the national team."
Ronaldo fired Portugal into the Nations League final on Wednesday with a 2-1 win over host nation Germany.
His winning goal was his record-extending 137th for Portugal. If he plays Sunday he will make his record-extending 221st national team appearance.
Reporting by The Associated Press.
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New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
Club World Cup team guide – Real Madrid: Europe's superstars who will expect to dominate with Kylian Mbappe
Their failure to win any major trophies last season has led to a revolution at Real Madrid, starting with a change of head coach: Xabi Alonso in for Carlo Ancelotti. The Italian, who already has a new job managing Brazil's national team, was given an honourable farewell by the Santiago Bernabeu as the coach with the most titles (15) in the club's history, though the arrival of Alonso has brought a boost of enthusiasm. Advertisement The board has also acted quickly to improve the squad. Luka Modric, the player with the most trophies (28) in the club's history, and Lucas Vazquez will not have their expiring contracts renewed — both will leave, but not until after a last hurrah at this tournament. Jesus Vallejo, another whose contract ends on June 30, has been informed he won't be part of the squad travelling to the United States for the Club World Cup. In terms of playing arrivals, there are two big names in already. Centre-back Dean Huijsen signed from Bournemouth after Madrid triggered his £50million ($67.7m) clause. Trent Alexander-Arnold could have arrived for free on July 1 once his contract at Liverpool ran out but Madrid have paid €10million (£8.4m; $11.4m) for to get him a couple of weeks early specifically so he can play in this tournament. And The Athletic reported last month that Madrid were in talks with Benfica about left-back Alvaro Carreras. These early moves are no coincidence: Madrid is very interested in this new-look Club World Cup, for footballing, prestige and economic reasons. Follow the Club World Cup on The Athletic this summer… Their past year has been very disappointing. After winning the Champions League and La Liga in 2023-24, and despite bringing in Kylian Mbappe as a free agent from Paris Saint-Germain, Madrid failed to land any of the three main trophies this campaign. They did lift the European Super Cup in August by beating Europa League winners Atalanta and added the Intercontinental Cup — the annual competition that used to be called the Club World Cup before FIFA got fancy — in December against Mexico's Pachuca (now one of their three opponents in the group stage of this tournament), but failed to make the grade in the other competitions. They finished second in La Liga behind Barcelona, who also beat them in the final of the Copa del Rey (and also the Spanish Super Cup), and were eliminated by Arsenal in the quarter-finals of the Champions League, losing 5-1 over the two legs. However, Madrid have 15 European Cup/Champions League titles compared to Milan's next-best seven, 36 Spanish championships compared to Barcelona's second-biggest total of 28 and five Club World Cups, two more than anyone else (also Barca) — in other words, they are historically the dominant team in Spain, in Europe and worldwide, so are always going to be among the favourites. Madrid are one of 12 European sides in the 32-team tournament, which they qualified for via the continental champions' route, winning the Champions League in 2022 (which by itself ensured their presence at the Club World Cup) and doing so again in 2024. We don't really know yet, as Alonso will make his debut as Madrid coach at this Club World Cup. However, from his time at Bayer Leverkusen in Germany, we can expect a very vertical and entertaining style of football. Alonso said when he was presented to the media as Ancelotti's replacement that he wanted to 'ignite the fans'. He said his goal is to 'transmit emotions, joy, that people enjoy, that they go to the stadium to enjoy, that on TV all over the world watching us they say, 'That's the team I like; that's my team, that's my Real Madrid''. He added: 'If we manage to ignite that, we will have an unstoppable force.' Advertisement In terms of his likely line-up, Eduardo Camavinga and Endrick are injured and will not play at this tournament, and Antonio Rudiger and David Alaba are not expected to be involved in Madrid's first group game for the same reason. Dani Carvajal and Eder Militao, out since October and November with serious knee injuries, might be unfit too. Alonso has returned to Madrid as a coach almost 11 years after his last game for them as a player, having won a Champions League and La Liga among other titles in his five seasons. After retiring as a Bayern Munich player in 2017, he began his coaching career at Madrid's academy, before moving on to lead the B team at Real Sociedad — another Spanish club he also played for — and then getting the top job at Leverkusen in October 2022. He quickly won the first Bundesliga in that club's history in 2024, going through the 34-game league season undefeated, and also steered them into the Europa League final, losing that game to Italy's Atalanta. Now, with the experience from his playing days in Spain, England (with Liverpool) and Germany under big names including Jose Mourinho, Pep Guardiola and Ancelotti, he is considered one of the best coaches in the world, despite being just 43 years old. He was long ago picked out by Madrid's decision-makers as the one to succeed Ancelotti when the Italian's time at the helm came to an end. Kylian Mbappe. The French striker's first few months at Madrid were very disappointing, with only nine goals in his first 19 games until early December. 'In Bilbao (on December 4, he missed a penalty away against Athletic Club as Madrid lost, 2-1), I hit rock bottom,' he admitted. After that, he played much better and the 26-year-old finished with the best goal stats ever for a Madrid debut season, his 43 in all competitions surpassing the 37 of Chilean forward Ivan Zamorano in the 1992-93 season. His total of 31 league goals earned Mbappe the 'Pichichi' award as La Liga's top scorer and also the European Golden Boot for the most goals across Europe's top domestic divisions. Arda Guler, a 20-year-old known as 'The Turkish Pearl', is one of Madrid's latest big bets on young talent. Signed in 2023 from Fenerbahce in his homeland, Guler's debut season was marred by injuries. But he ended the most recent campaign as a starter for Ancelotti. Now, with Alonso, who wanted him for Leverkusen before Madrid bought him, he is looking to cement himself in the line-up. He can operate in attack both from the right flank and as a playmaker and has also been used, for Turkey's national team and in recent months by Madrid, as an offensive midfielder. He has quality, precision and a magical left foot. Madrid fans are crazy about him. 'Hasta el final, vamos Real!' ('Until the end, come on Real!') is probably the most iconic. It speaks of the unwavering ambition, confidence and faith of a team who can never be given up on, because they rise to improbable comebacks, especially when playing at the Santiago Bernabeu. Their 2021-22 Champions League campaign, where they lifted the trophy after rallying from being behind at home in second legs to win ties against Paris Saint-Germain, Chelsea and Manchester City in the knockout rounds, is a good example. Barcelona. At the beginning of the 20th century, the rivalry was greater with neighbours Atletico Madrid, who will also play in this Club World Cup, but over the years their matches with Barcelona, a fixture now called El Clasico, have become heated and drawn the most interest, although the cities are almost 400 miles apart. Many voices at Madrid, in the offices more than the dressing room, have long pointed to this Club World Cup as the most important competition of the lot for them. They want to be the first club to win the expanded tournament to help them become a reference among the North American public — and they want the €100million+ in prize money that goes to the eventual champions, too. Their many successes and proud history are well known, so there are plenty of arguments to support Madrid in this competition… and also to want anyone but them to win it. Perhaps a point in their favour is the beautiful and modern football Alonso is expected to pursue. (All kicks-offs ET/BST) (Top photos: Getty Images; design: Kelsea Petersen/The Athletic)


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
Club World Cup team guide – River Plate: An illustrious history and a future South American star
The inaugural Club World Cup starts in the United States on June 14, with its 32 teams split into eight groups of four in the opening phase. As part of our guides to the sides that will feature in the tournament, James Horncastle gives you the background on River Plate. Follow the Club World Cup on The Athletic this summer… El Mas Grande ('the greatest'), this club from Buenos Aires need little introduction. The 38-time Argentine league champions also boast one of the most talked-about young stars in South American football (more on Franco Mastantuono later). River should be very good after spending more than €50million (£42.2m; $57m) in the transfer window. That's a huge amount for Argentine football. The funds were raised by selling players to Russian teams, as Spartak Moscow and CSKA Moscow signed a trio of River old boys. 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They were the top-ranked eligible CONMEBOL (South American) team and sealed their place by beating Libertad 2-0 in last season's Copa Libertadores group stages with a brace from Miguel Borja, their experienced Colombian striker. River have a tradition of playing slick football going back to La Maquina, the legendary side of the late '30s and early '40s, which nudged South American football forward. Renato Cesarini and Carlos Peucelle, the most consequential coaches in River's history until Gallardo, used to say: 'What's the ball made of? Leather. And where does leather come from? Cows. And what do cows eat? Grass.' The ball has to eat grass. In other words, it has to move. Gallardo knows this better than anyone, but he is also a pragmatist who has always adapted his system to the players available and the opponent River are facing. Gallardo is only 49 and yet there is a towering bronze statue of him outside River's Estadio Monumental in Buenos Aires. It shows him holding aloft the Copa Libertadores, a trophy he won as a player with River Plate in 1996 and then as a coach in 2015 and 2018. Known as the Muneco ('doll'), the baby-faced Gallardo is the most successful manager in River's illustrious history. This is his second spell as manager after Al Ittihad briefly lured him away to work in the Saudi Pro League. The statue that River unveiled of him raised eyebrows because it seemed Gallardo had stuffed another Libertadores trophy in his trouser pocket. 'Alisson? No! Franco Armani.' He is 38 and, let's be honest, isn't as good as Alisson in goal. But River's veteran goalkeeper has been caught up in too many legendary moments to count. He won his first Libertadores with Atletico Nacional in Colombia, married a Colombian and could have played for Colombia. Then Armani returned to Argentina, played another couple of Libertadores finals, winning one with River. He was a member of Argentina's World Cup-winning squad in Qatar in 2022 and helped advise Emiliano Martinez in the shootouts that decided the quarter-final and final. Daniele Adani, the former Inter centre-back turned pundit, who became a River fan because of his former team-mate Matias Almeyda, once said: 'Armani isn't the best goalkeeper in football, he's the best in humanity.' This is all an exaggeration. River continue to have arguably the best academy in Argentina and their latest graduate is the most talked about talent in South America. Franco Mastantuono made his debut for the national team in early June. He does not turn 18 until August yet his appearance for Argentina somehow felt overdue. A playmaker who operates from the right, Mastantuono finished the first half of the season in remarkable form, scoring and assisting seven times in his last nine club appearances in all competitions. The crowning moment was his incredible Superclasico-winning free kick against Boca in April, which flicked the hype machine into overdrive. There are so many to choose from. One is about a tarot card reader who tells a River fan to give up smoking weed and the booze, otherwise they'll go to the grave. She throws her cards and decrees River will be champions, their rivals in the mud, and frankly, that's all that matters. That would be Boca Juniors. It is South America's fiercest rivalry. Both clubs were founded in the same working-class neighbourhood, known as the mouth of Buenos Aires. Boca took its name and stayed. River moved around instead. They were social climbers, pitching up in Caballito, Palermo and Recoleta before settling down in well-to-do Nunez. This led River to be nicknamed the Millionaires. Their stadium, the Monumental, has a capacity of over 85,000, significantly larger than Boca's Bombonera, which holds 57,200. One of the huge stands of the Monumental was bankrolled by the transformational transfer fee Juventus paid for forward Omar Sivori in 1957. There are a couple of recent animating elements to this rivalry. Boca, for instance, revelled in River's relegation in 2011. River then got their own back by beating Boca in the 2018 Libertadores final. Boca's stadium is known as the 'chocolate box'. It is a bowl-shaped stadium except for one stand, which is square. The lore says that the houses behind that stand are owned by generations of River fans who refuse to sell up, stopping Boca from completing the curved look of the Estadio Alberto J Armando, known more colloquially as La Bombonera. Because River are El Mas Grande. The greatest. (All kicks-offs ET/BST) (Top photos: Rodrigo Valle/ Eurasia Sport Image/Getty; design: Kelsea Petersen/The Athletic)


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
Club World Cup team guide – Seattle Sounders: The culmination of a decade-long project
Since making their MLS debut in 2009, the Seattle Sounders have been among the most competitive men's teams in North America, perennial contenders on all domestic fronts. They will now be tested in the Club World Cup. The Rave Green have one of the clearest identities of any team in MLS and few teams in the league see less year-to-year squad turnover. The biggest question is whether their cohesion can overcome the league's competitive ceiling, given the salary cap and roster limitations that affect any MLS team's ability to compete in a global arena. Follow the Club World Cup on The Athletic this summer… The club was founded in 1974 and has played in several leagues since debuting in the NASL, but the Sounders' modern era began when they became an MLS expansion team in 2009. They have arguably been the league's most successful club beyond its original members, winning the MLS Cup in 2016 and 2019, finishing as runners-up in 2017 and 2020, topping the regular season table in 2014, and winning the U.S. Open Cup on four occasions. In October, Opta's league rankings model assessed MLS to be the ninth-strongest men's league in world football, trailing only Brazil's Serie A among non-European circuits. Its model assigns an ability score to nearly 13,500 domestic football teams on a scale of 0-100, where zero is the worst-ranked team in the world and 100 is the best. As of May 27, Seattle ranks 151st in the world with a score of 82.0 — fifth-best in MLS and ahead of recently relegated Premier League side Southampton. Seattle have missed the MLS Cup play-offs just once since debuting in 2009, failing to make the postseason in 2022. They had a justifiable excuse, as they became the first MLS team to win the Concacaf Champions League in its modern era. They gave the league its first champion after the competition had been dominated by Liga MX, thwarting Pumas in the final by drawing 2-2 during the first leg in Mexico City before an emphatic 3-0 triumph at the home second leg. Advertisement That triumph punched their ticket to two Club World Cups, having travelled for the last pre-expansion instalment in 2023. They exited in their first match against Al Ahly, but had only just begun their preseason preparations a few weeks beforehand. Now, at midseason levels of fitness and form, they'll hope for a better showing on home soil. For much of the past decade, the Sounders have leaned into a 4-2-3-1 with true full-backs and creative inverted wingers. But the past couple of years have seen the team replace veterans with younger alternatives who offer greater positional versatility. As such, 2025 has seen Seattle more often use a base 3-4-3, with width coming from a pair of throwback wide midfielders. On either side of the striker are two attacking midfielders who can pull the strings in the half-spaces. No matter the formation, the Sounders are a physical team. Only two sides in MLS win more possession gains in the attacking third (5.1 per game), while their 27.1 fouls committed per game also rank third in the 30-team league. The result is a model that keeps the Sounders in control of multiple game phases, yielding a field tilt (that is, possession only considering attacking-third touches) of 59.2 per cent. In the league, the Sounders often outshoot their opponents. They also have multiple capable crossers from wide areas and more than a few central-channel creators to play through balls or cutback passes. Of course, these are tactical hallmarks of a team that can confidently dictate the tempo as one of their league's top sides. It'll be fascinating to see how that model translates against opposition from other continents. Few coaches around the world are as synonymous with one team as Brian Schmetzer is with the Seattle Sounders. Born in Seattle, Schmetzer was a true two-way midfielder as a player with defensive steel and an eye for creating chances. His professional debut came with the NASL iteration of the Sounders in 1980, while he landed his first head coaching role with the club in 2002, when they were in the United Soccer League. Advertisement He stepped into an assistant role when the club moved to MLS in 2009, deputising for the late and legendary Sigi Schmid, before taking over on an initial interim basis midway through 2016. The midseason coaching change led to the club's first MLS Cup title, taking the 'interim' modifier off Schmetzer's job title. It kicked off a bounceback run which ended in the team's first MLS Cup title, as well as a near-decade of contention that is still ongoing. On May 10, Schmetzer notched his 131st regular-season win, the 10th-most of any coach in league history. 'He holds everyone to a high standard, but he's also willing to allow people that he brings in to work to their strengths, and he's going to question you on your decision, and it gets that individual to think, 'Am I actually doing the right thing?'. 'And then when you feel like you are, Schmetz then (puts) trust in you,' assistant coach Freddy Juarez told the club website as Schmetzer reached his latest milestone. 'He gets the best out of everyone.' Surprisingly, despite all of his success, Schmetzer has never been named MLS Coach of the Year. While Jordan Morris and Cristian Roldan represented the United States at the 2022 World Cup, attacking midfielder Albert Rusnak is the creative heart of Schmetzer's side. Capped 37 times by Slovakia, albeit now three years removed from his last international call-up, the 30-year-old is a comfortable operator on the ball. While most of MLS's most notable playmakers (those under age 35, anyway) are often agile and pacey, Rusnak breaks the mould by relying on his reading of the game and his close-quarters technical acumen. Rusnak initially came to MLS in 2017 with Real Salt Lake, before joining Seattle as a free agent for the 2022 season. Since then, he ranks fifth in MLS with 13 game-winning goals — nearly half of the 27 total goals he's scored over the last three-plus seasons. In recent years, the Sounders' academy has consistently churned out technically capable central midfielders. The latest, Obed Vargas, may also be their best homegrown product to date. He initially left Alaska at age 15 to begin his development in earnest, needing just two years before securing an MLS contract. Now 19, Vargas starts regularly in Schmetzer's midfield and has already amassed 105 appearances for the Sounders in all competitions, including a 63-minute shift in the second leg of the 2022 Concacaf Champions League final. While he still fills multiple midfield roles given his youthful versatility, Schmetzer's change to a 3-4-3 has seen Vargas go from primarily operating as a defensive midfielder to playing in a more box-to-box sort of role. He's embraced the freedom to advance, leading all Sounders midfielders with an 84.2 per cent pass completion rate in the final third. Advertisement Despite being born in the United States' northernmost state, Vargas filed a one-time switch with FIFA to represent Mexico, his family's nation of heritage. Vargas made his debut for El Tri in a late 2024 friendly against the USMNT. Given his considerable backlog of performances, his eye for a pass and his eagerness to defend, he's one to watch for a future move to Europe. One for the romantic in us all, sporting or otherwise. Cribbing from a 1969 hit made popular by Perry Como, Seattle can be downright stunning when sung by thousands as a match kicks off: The bluest skies you've ever seen are in Seattle, And the hills the greenest green, are in Seattle Like a beautiful child, growing up, free and wild Full of hopes and full of fears, full of laughter, full of tears (beers) Full of dreams to last the years, in Seattle… in Seattle! The most organic rivalry MLS has to offer, the Sounders' regional squabble with the Portland Timbers dates back to each club's 1970s origins in the NASL. Over the decades, these Cascadian rivals have amassed 142 matchups, with Seattle registering 66 wins to Portland's 57. Since moving to MLS, the Timbers have enjoyed a narrow 20-18 edge, gaining a lead in the league-specific balance in August 2022. From 2015 through 2021, each MLS season ended with one of the Sounders or Timbers representing the Western Conference in MLS Cup; Portland won the region's first title in 2015, while the Sounders won twice in 2016 and 2019. Any time these teams clash, there's genuine animosity between players and coaches. 'It's the best rivalry in MLS in my opinion,' Schmetzer said after their latest clash in May. 'It's been a long storied history. (Portland) like(s) to say they're Soccer City USA, but I tend to disagree. We've done things better than them.' Although his eponymous sitcom has forever tied Drew Carey to the city of Cleveland, Ohio, the comedian was one of four initial investors when the club was awarded an MLS expansion spot in 2007. He became just the first of many celebrity owners of this club, a trend that has since extended across the entire league. Few clubs around the world can match the social cache of Seattle's current stable of owners, though: among the notables are NFL quarterback Russell Wilson, pop singer Ciara, rapper Macklemore, and baseball Hall of Fame outfielder Ken Griffey Jr. Of the three MLS teams participating in this year's Club World Cup, Seattle's was by far the least convoluted, not reliant on FIFA finding an excuse to bring Lionel Messi into the fold or pulling together a last-gasp play-off to replace a disqualified team. Their presence is the culmination of a decade-long project under Schmetzer, the latest big game for a club well-accustomed to the spotlight. And, if you're a tournament sceptic, this might be your punk rock participant. Before a league match on June 1, their players spent pre-match warm-ups donning T-shirts with a clear message: 'Club World Cash Grab.' (All kicks-offs ET/BST) Note: All data taken from TruMedia via StatsPerform (Opta) before June 2, 2025.