logo
An Argentine named Usari, not Messi, shines for Inter Miami and earns MVP in first CWC game

An Argentine named Usari, not Messi, shines for Inter Miami and earns MVP in first CWC game

Associated Press13 hours ago

MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. (AP) — An Argentine not named Messi was the MVP for Inter Miami in the Club World Cup on Saturday night. The hero in the tournament opener was goaltender Oscar Ustari.
Ustari made eight saves, including a penalty and goal-line intervention, as Miami played Egypt's Al Ahly to a scoreless draw in the Group A tournament opener. Ustari's save of a header in the 33rd minute was second only to stopping Trezeguet's penalty just before halftime and making sure danger was averted when the ball bounced back to Al Ahly's forward.
The 38-year-old Ustari returned to a World Cup stage in this new Club World Cup format for the first time since winning the U-20 World Cup in 2005 — with none other than Messi, Inter Miami's captain.
Before joining Inter Miami, Ustari was captain of C.F. Pachuca, also in the tournament, but faced controversy because Grupo Pachuca also owns Club León, which was removed by FIFA and had its appeal rejected by the Court of Arbitration for Sport.
Ustari made 124 appearances with the 'Tuzos' before playing briefly for Audax Italiano in the first division of Chile. He was signed as a free agent in September 2024 by Inter Miami. He has played 22 games, including eight in the CONCACAF Champions Cup.
What Ustari said
'I don't like to talk about myself. The team did a great job defensively and that is what I most care about.'
'I remember being retired and knew that my return would come on a field, so I'm very happy about it (being back).'
'I thought we were superior, that's what I think. The game left me with good feelings, but our next rival is very different.'
What Suarez said
'We didn't think their keeper would make so many saves, he was the key player in the game along with Oscar in the first half, but that shows that goalkeepers can earn you points as well.' — Luis Suarez, Inter Miami forward.
___
AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Suns grab Florida basketball star Walter Clayton Jr. in latest CBS Sports mock draft
Suns grab Florida basketball star Walter Clayton Jr. in latest CBS Sports mock draft

Yahoo

time32 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Suns grab Florida basketball star Walter Clayton Jr. in latest CBS Sports mock draft

Former Florida basketball guard Walter Clayton Jr. is projected to be drafted by the Phoenix Suns with the 29th overall pick in CBS Sports' latest NBA mock draft. Clayton is coming off one of the most decorated seasons in program history. The 6-foot-2-inch guard set a single-season school record with 713 points, captured Final Four Most Outstanding Player honors and shot 38.6% from three-point range while leading Florida to a national championship. Advertisement CBS Sports' Gary Parrish praised Clayton's "unique shot-making profile," noting that the former Iona transfer averaged 22.3 points and hit 43.5 percent from beyond the arc over six NCAA Tournament games. Phoenix could view Clayton as a potential instant-offense option off the bench, thanks to his deep range and proven clutch gene. His winning polished game and winning pedigree also make him an attractive selection during the late first-round window. Here is everything Parrish said about Clayton and why he thinks the Suns will draft him in the 2025 NBA draft. What CBS Sports said about Clayton "Clayton was the star of Florida's national title run while averaging 22.3 points on 43.5% shooting from beyond the arc in those six NCAA Tournament games. There are concerns about his decision-making and approach to defense, but the Most Outstanding Player of the 2025 Final Four is such a skilled and unique shotmaker that he's worthy of a serious look this deep in the first round by a Phoenix franchise that probably needs to hit the reset button." CBS Sports' 2025 NBA mock draft top 10 picks Dallas Mavericks: Cooper Flagg, SF, Duke Blue Devils San Antonio Spurs: Dylan Harper, PG, Rutgers Scarlet Knights Philadelphia 76ers: Tre Johnson, SG, Texas Longhorns Charlotte Hornets: VJ Edgecombe, SG, Baylor Bears Utah Jazz: Ace Bailey, SF, Rutgers Scarlet Knights Washington Wizards: Jeremiah Fears, PG, Oklahoma Sooners New Orleans Pelicans: Kon Knueppel, SF, Duke Blue Devils Brooklyn Nets: Khaman Maluach, C, Duke Blue Devils Toronto Raptors: Derik Queen, C, Maryland Terrapins Houston Rockets: Carter Bryant, SF, Arizona Wildcats Advertisement Follow us @GatorsWire on X, formerly known as Twitter, as well as Bluesky, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Florida Gators news, notes and opinions. This article originally appeared on Gators Wire: CBS Sports: Florida basketball's Walter Clayton Jr. projected to Suns

Now one win from repeat, why Panthers feel better equipped this year to close out Cup Final
Now one win from repeat, why Panthers feel better equipped this year to close out Cup Final

Miami Herald

time32 minutes ago

  • Miami Herald

Now one win from repeat, why Panthers feel better equipped this year to close out Cup Final

Sam Bennett said it was tough to sleep last year. When the Florida Panthers got within one win of their first Stanley Cup, the moment got big. Really big. 'It's extremely tough,' Bennett said. 'It's a moment you think about your whole life and it's in the back of your head.' It almost slipped away. Florida had a 3-0 series lead against the Edmonton Oilers, but the series ended up going the full seven games as Edmonton scratched away its deficit and Florida struggled to close things out. The Panthers ultimately achieved their goal, winning the decisive seventh game on home ice to unleash the euphoria of achieving that childhood dream. The Panthers are back in that familiar position once again. Following their 5-2 win Saturday in Game 5 of their Stanley Cup Final rematch against the Oilers, the Panthers have a 3-2 series lead over Edmonton. Florida can clinch its second consecutive title as early as Tuesday, when it plays Game 6 on home ice at Amerant Bank Arena (8 p.m., TNT, truTV, Max). This has always been the goal, always been the destination. And after going through all the emotions of trying to win it all last year, the Panthers feel like they are in a better place this time around when it comes to closing out the playoffs. 'We're hopeful,' Panthers coach Paul Maurice said. 'Certainly the context changes when you get this close. ... We were all pretty wired after Game 3 last year, and I think we can handle it better now.' Added Bennett: 'This year we have a little more experience as a team, more composure. I'm sure it's still going to be in the back of our minds, but I think we're going to be a little bit better at staying composed and just worrying about getting the job done first.' They got the job done on Saturday. The Panthers jumped out to a two-goal lead in the first period and the defense shut down a high-flying Oilers offense, limiting Edmonton to a series-low 21 shots on goal. The Oilers scored twice in the third period, but the Panthers were up by three goals each time when Edmonton found the back of the net. Brad Marchand scored twice on a pair of highlight-reel goals. Bennett added to his league lead with his 15th goal. Sam Reinhart and Eetu Luostarinen rounded out scoring. 'We were close to our identity,' Maurice said. 'It's a hard thing to establish. It's a hard thing to get to. It's solely based on the will of the players to play a game, and then we've had a little bit of success with it.' That success — not just on this playoff run, but the playoff runs before it — has allowed to understand what it truly takes to win it all. They are in the Stanley Cup Final for a third consecutive year, with a core of 10 players who have been along for the ride for all three trips and 15 who were with the team last year when it finally won it all. 'The more times you're in situations like this, the more comfortable you're going to be,' Reinhart said. 'It's just about handling your day. We did what we set out to do, and now it's about recovering and getting back out in a couple days.' When that time comes, when the puck drops Tuesday for Florida's first chance to become just the third team this century to repeat as Stanley Cup champions (also Tampa Bay in 2020 and 2021, Pittsburgh in 2016 and 2017), they'll get focused by ... not focusing on it. That nearly got the better of them just 12 short months ago. They don't want to let it happen again. 'I feel like last year we learned a lot,' center Anton Lundell said. 'I think the biggest thing is to stay in the moment, not think too much ahead or think behind. So stay in the moment, rest, and prepare for a new game because we know it's the hardest one.' But the Panthers also know they're built for this. They spent all season preparing for this exact situation, to be in position to win it all again, to keep this rising dynasty churning. They're one win away from making that happen. 'It's going to be a good hockey game,' goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky said. 'We have to play our best. They're going to bring their best as well.'

'Merit based' or Messi based? How Inter Miami became the Club World Cup's controversial opening act
'Merit based' or Messi based? How Inter Miami became the Club World Cup's controversial opening act

Yahoo

time34 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

'Merit based' or Messi based? How Inter Miami became the Club World Cup's controversial opening act

Speculation mounted with 10 months to go, and with the Club World Cup in a cloud of uncertainty. Thirty of 32 teams had qualified for the first-of-its-kind tournament. But negotiations with Apple TV had collapsed, and other broadcasters were 'skeptical.' Sponsors were also lukewarm (and litigious), in part because the inaugural competition, now billed as 'The Best v The Best,' lacked some star power. Neither Barcelona nor Liverpool would be involved, nor would Lionel Messi nor Cristiano Ronaldo. And so, the theory goes, somewhere behind closed doors, FIFA concocted plans to fix that. Advertisement One of the two final seats at the Club World Cup would go to South America's 2024 champion. The other was a 'host country' slot that, for more than a year, had remained unexplained and unfilled. FIFA, even when asked, would not say how a U.S. team, presumably one from Major League Soccer, could claim it. MLS clubs waited, eyeing the global stage, hoping for a chance to play on it. Then, on the final day of the MLS regular season, FIFA president Gianni Infantino appeared in South Florida. He stepped onto a podium at Chase Stadium, and announced that Messi's Inter Miami, with a record-breaking tally of 74 regular-season points, had qualified. In fact, they would host the opener. The announcement rankled some MLS clubs, who felt that others — perhaps the Columbus Crew, the reigning champions and Leagues Cup winner — were more deserving. Some felt that the playoffs, and December's MLS Cup, should have settled the debate. Some took issue with the opacity of the process. FIFA felt otherwise. Advertisement And so, on Saturday, Messi will star in the Club World Cup's opening act. He'll ignite a tournament that's been both ridiculed and celebrated. He'll draw devoted viewers from all across the globe to Inter Miami vs. Egypt's Al Ahly, and help FIFA launch this 'new era of club football.' He'll also help make it controversial. FIFA president Gianni Infantino announced Inter Miami's Club World Cup spot in October, paving the way for Lionel Messi to star in the tournament. (Photo by) (Carmen Mandato via Getty Images) FIFA's vague criteria, Inter Miami's timely surge The backstory begins in February 2023, before Messi was even in Miami. FIFA allocated 31 of 32 Club World Cup slots to its six continental confederations — 12 to Europe, six to South America, four each to Asia, Africa and the rest of the Americas, one to Oceania — and the 32nd to its host, the United States. Advertisement A month later, it announced the 'principles of access,' the qualification criteria. Each continental champion from 2021-24 would get a berth. The rest would go to the best-rated clubs in objective rankings. The aim, FIFA said, was to ensure 'the highest quality possible based on sporting criteria.' It has since sold the Club World Cup as 'merit based.' But it left one piece of the criteria open. 'For the host country [spot],' it said, 'access … will be determined at a later stage.' For 19 months thereafter, the criteria remained undetermined. In the summer and fall of 2024, however, the growing suspicion — according to multiple people with second-hand knowledge of discussions, who spoke to Yahoo Sports both at the time and more recently in retrospect — was that, as one source said, 'FIFA wanted Messi in the tournament, and they were gonna do what they needed to do, engineer what they needed to do, in order to select [Inter Miami].' Inter Miami, meanwhile, made the engineering easier. The Herons were running away with the MLS Supporters' Shield, the trophy awarded to the top team in the regular season. There was talk, including from MLS commissioner Don Garber, of a high-stakes playoff between the winners of the Shield and MLS Cup, the league's postseason title. 'There's a wide variety of things that we're toying around with,' Garber said in July. Advertisement Garber said that he and the league had 'made suggestions to FIFA.' But ever since Oct. 19 — when Infantino appeared in Fort Lauderdale and told Inter Miami: 'as one of the best clubs in the world, you are deserved participants in the new FIFA Club World Cup 2025' — MLS has distanced itself from the discussions. The decision, people throughout the league say, was FIFA's. FIFA, in a news release, said that Miami was chosen 'on the basis of the club's outstanding and consistent 34-match campaign,' but never explained why no criteria were ever outlined publicly. A litmus test for MLS, a launchpad for FIFA A few weeks after their Club World Cup spot was confirmed, Messi and Miami fell in the first round of the playoffs to Atlanta. The Los Angeles Galaxy went on to win MLS Cup, their sixth. A few months later, Galaxy president Dan Beckerman told Yahoo Sports: 'We're disappointed that we were not invited to participate [in the Club World Cup]. Our hope was that being the MLS Cup champion would warrant an invitation.' Advertisement Other MLS clubs would've loved to participate, too. But many understood that Miami, in some ways, was a near-ideal representative. Inter and LAFC — who became the third MLS team to qualify, via a controversial play-in game — are the league's two most popular and valuable franchises. They have the most recognizable faces and names. They're also good — which, at the end of the day, will be the most important attribute. It will be viewed as a litmus test of the league's growth or lack thereof. And who better to exemplify that growth than Lionel Messi? To critics, the GOAT's presence will undermine the Club World Cup's 'merit-based' legitimacy. It epitomizes a tournament that sometimes seems more about dollars than soccer. It aligns with Infantino's public push to get Ronaldo on one of the 32 teams. (Ronaldo has since opted to stay at Al-Nassr, which didn't qualify.) To most of the football world, though, the GOAT is the GOAT. Messi will bring thousands to Hard Rock Stadium on Saturday night (8 p.m. ET, TBS/Univision/DAZN). He will lead Inter Miami out of a tunnel, toward FIFA's new frontier. And the Club World Cup, with more buzz than it otherwise would've had, will have liftoff.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store