
Days before the Club World Cup kicks off, fears over player welfare are being raised
MIAMI (AP) — Days before the start of the Club World Cup, soccer chiefs are facing renewed calls to safeguard players over growing fears of injuries and burnout.
The sport's global players union, FIFPRO, said Thursday there should be an immediate implementation of guaranteed four-week breaks for players during the offseason, as well as time off mid-season.
'If we can all agree that health comes first, then we should take steps to implement these safeguards,' said Prof. Dr. Vincent Gouttebarge, FIFPRO Medical Director.
FIFPRO has been critical of the extra workload placed on players as a result of tournaments like the Club World Cup, which kicks off in Miami on Saturday.
The newly-expanded tournament involving 32 of the world's best teams has faced pushback since FIFA announced it would be added to an already saturated calendar.
The month-long tournament will be played every four years, sandwiched in between the men's World Cup, European Championship and Copa America.
It is going ahead against the backdrop of legal challenges in Europe, strike threats and repeated concerns over players' mental and physical welfare due to the increased number of games.
FIFA president Gianni Infantino this week said the competition was 'writing history.'
'For the first time in history, the 32 best clubs in the world will compete in a tournament to determine finally who is the best club in the world,' he said.
But many players at the Club World Cup have entered the tournament on the back of a full regular season.
Players such as Paris Saint-Germain's Ousmane Dembele and Vitinha have headed to the Club World Cup just two weeks after winning the Champions League final, having also competed in the UEFA Nations League in between.
The tournament ends July 13. That is likely to pose a problem for teams like Manchester City or Chelsea if they play in the latter stages, with the Premier League season kicking off on August 16 and leaving little time to rest before beginning the preseason preparations.
FIFPRO said it carried out scientific study involving 70 medical and performance experts to come up with '12 consensus-based' safeguards to protect players from from calendar congestion and excessive workload.
It said international soccer lacked 'standardized frameworks or regulations.'
Among the safeguards it is calling for, FIFPRO wants two weeks in the offseason to be 'completely commitment free.'
It wants mid-season breaks to be mandatory. Many European leagues have a winter break, but the Premier League does not. It also wants a minimum four-week retraining period before players return to action after the offseason break.
Winnipeg Jets Game Days
On Winnipeg Jets game days, hockey writers Mike McIntyre and Ken Wiebe send news, notes and quotes from the morning skate, as well as injury updates and lineup decisions. Arrives a few hours prior to puck drop.
Other safeguards include protection for academy players under the age of 18 and 'travel fatigue management' to schedule rest periods after long-haul flights.
___
James Robson is at https://twitter.com/jamesalanrobson
___
AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBC
39 minutes ago
- CBC
This championship kickboxer got her start by saying ‘sure b'y' when asked if she wanted to fight
Isabelle Quinton is powering her way through the competition. She won gold at the national championships, is headed to Turkey for the world cup, and has much more ahead of her. The CBC's Jeremy Eaton caught up with Quinton, where he saw (and felt) what she could do.


Winnipeg Free Press
44 minutes ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Tigers' Gavin McKenna third-youngest recipient of CHL player of the year award
TORONTO – Gavin McKenna has etched his name into the history books. The Medicine Hat Tigers' superstar forward was named the David Branch Player of the Year at the Canadian Hockey League Awards on Friday. McKenna is the third-youngest player to ever win the award at 17 years, five months, 24 days old. Only Sidney Crosby in 2003-04 (16 years, nine months, 11 days) and John Tavares in 2006-07 (16 years, eight months, seven days) were younger. The player from Whitehorse, Yukon, had 129 points (41 goals, 88 assists) in 56 regular-season games, including a 40-game point streak. He extended that streak to 54 games during the Western Hockey League playoffs, establishing a modern CHL record (since 2000) for the longest single-season point streak across the regular season, playoffs, and Memorial Cup. McKenna led Medicine Hat to its first WHL title since 2007 and to the Memorial Cup final, where the Tigers fell to the London Knights. He was second in Memorial Cup scoring with six points (three goals, three assists) in four games. Winnipeg Jets Game Days On Winnipeg Jets game days, hockey writers Mike McIntyre and Ken Wiebe send news, notes and quotes from the morning skate, as well as injury updates and lineup decisions. Arrives a few hours prior to puck drop. Meanwhile, Landon DuPont became the second-youngest recipient of the rookie of the year award. The Everett Silvertips defenceman is just 16 years and 16 days old. Tavares won the award at 15 years, eight months and seven days. DuPont, from Calgary, is the first blueliner in 30 years – and just the third in CHL history after Philippe Boucher (1990-91) and Bryan Berard (1994-95) – to earn the honour. Dupont had 60 points (17 goals, 43 assists) in 64 games. Saginaw Spirit forward Michael Misa was honoured as top scorer after leading the CHL with 134 points (62 goals, 72 assists) in 65 games. Erie Otters blueliner Matthew Schaefer was named the top prospect award winner being the No. 1-ranked North American skater according to NHL Central Scouting. Other award winners included the Knights' Sam Dickinson as defenceman of the year, Jackson Parsons of the Kitchener Rangers as the goaltender of the year, Berkly Catton of the Spokane Chiefs as sportsman of the year, Mathieu Cataford of the Rimouski Oceanic as scholastic player of the year, and Maxwell Jardine of the Charlottetown Islanders as humanitarian player of the year. This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 13, 2025.


Winnipeg Free Press
44 minutes ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Reinforcements coming as recovering Vancouver Whitecaps hit the road
VANCOUVER – Tristan Blackmon's pre-game meal included some unusual sides on Sunday — pickle juice, caffeine pills and Red Bull. After battling a gastrointestinal illness that took out about half of the Vancouver Whitecaps squad earlier in the week, the veteran defender was ready to ingest whatever it took to get his energy levels back ahead of a matchup with his team's regional rivals, the Seattle Sounders. The additions worked. Blackmon was a force as the 'Caps (10-1-5) blanked the Sounders 3-0. 'It was weird circumstances. I didn't train all week. I trained the day before the game because I wasn't feeling that great,' Blackmon said of the lead up. 'But I just told the staff that I wanted to be there and help the guys out as much as I could. 'Definitely got a little winded towards the end of the game, but happy we got the result.' The result extended Vancouver's club-record unbeaten streak in Major League Soccer play to 11 games (6-0-5). The 'Caps will look to stretch the mark further on Saturday when they visit the Columbus Crew (7-3-7). Players and staff continued to recover this week, but the team was able to train more this week, said head coach Jesper Sorensen. 'We can see in training sessions, (players) have more energy now, and they get a little better every day,' he said. 'We can see it in the faces and the eyes … I think that everybody looks a little bit better than they did a week ago. And, yeah, they couldn't look any worse anyway, so it could only go one direction.' Vancouver announced Thursday that it will be without defender Sam Adekugbe for the rest of the season after he tore his Achilles tendon while playing for Canada on Tuesday. The club will also miss four players to international duty come Sunday. Forward Jayden Nelson and midfielder Ali Ahmed are with Canada as the team prepares for its Gold Cup opener against Honduras in Vancouver on Tuesday. Striker Brian White and midfielder Sebastian Berhalter are with the U.S. team for the same tournament. The Whitecaps will get four players back from international duty, though. Midfielder Pedro Vite is back after helping Ecuador secure a spot in next summer's World Cup, while defensive midfielder Andres Cubas and Paraguay inched closer to the same goal. Defender Giuseppe Bovalina (Australia U-23) and Tate Johnson (U.S. U-20) have also returned. The Whitecaps weren't far from Johnson's mind when he was with his national team in Egypt. Despite the distance, he still made a point of watching Sunday's game. 'It was at 4 a.m. where I was, so I work up at 4 and watched it and then went back to bed for a little bit,' he said. 'It was awesome to be able to get a win. … So I was trying to be quiet in my room. But I was excited.' All four returnees will figure into Saturday's game, Sorensen said. 'I think they come back with a lot of positive energy and it's always good for the group,' he said. 'We also saw last week that we also have players who really can step up when need be. So I think that it's good we have a lot of competition.' In Ohio, Vancouver will meet a Columbus side looking to rebound from a 5-1 loss to Inter Miami last weekend. The result stretched the Crew's winless skid to six games (0-2-4). The Whitecaps aren't taking the opponent lightly, though. 'Another tough game away against a really good team that likes keep the ball a lot, have dangerous players,' Blackmon said of the matchup. 'So we're going to go there with the guys we have — we don't have everybody available, people are gone for international break. But we're confident in the guys we have.' VANCOUVER WHITECAPS (10-1-5) AT COLUMBUS CREW (7-3-7) Thursdays Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter. Field, Saturday HISTORY BOOKS: The Whitecaps hold a 5-3-3 edge in all-time meetings with the Crew, and have gone 4-2-0 in previous appearances at Field. The club's last trip to Ohio didn't end well, though, with Columbus blanking the 'Caps 4-0 back on Feb. 22, 2022. LEAGUE LEADERS: Not only does Vancouver sit atop the MLS standings, the club is also No. 1 in points per game (2.19), goal differential (+18) and expected goals (36.99) TERRIFIC TANDEM: Whitecaps defenders Blackmon and Ranko Veselinovic are set to make their 100th start together for Vancouver across all competitions. Their first start together came in Columbus back in February 2022. This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 13, 2025.