
Chelsea's Fernández calls US heat dangerous, says FIFA should avoid afternoon World Cup kickoffs
'Honestly, the heat is incredible,' Fernandez said Friday. 'The other day I got a little dizzy during a play. I had to lie down on the ground because I was really dizzy. Playing in this temperature in very dangerous."
FIFA slashed ticket prices again ahead of the final, as it has throughout the tournament.
Chelsea and PSG play starting at 3 p.m. EDT in MetLife Stadium, also site of next year's World Cup final. Because of the heat, Fernandez recommended FIFA avoid afternoon kickoffs at the 2026 tournament.
'The speed of the game is not the same,' he said. 'Everything becomes very slow. Well, let's hope that next year they change the schedule, at least so that it remains a beautiful and attractive football spectacle.'
Temperature at kickoff is forecast to be 83 degrees Fahrenheit (28 Celsius) with humidity that will make it feel like 91 F (33 C).
"The game will be harder for the team that don't have the ball,' Chelsea captain Reece James said. 'I think we've played in it a fair amount now, so I'd say we're slowly, slowly getting used to it.'
Both teams were allowed by FIFA not to have media availabilities on Saturday.
PSG seeks to complete a quadruple after winning Ligue 1, the Coupe de France and its first Champions League title.
Chelsea is trying for its second world championship after winning in 2021. The Blues have a fourth day of rest after beating Fluminense 2-0 on Tuesday, a day before PSG routed Real Madrid 4-0.
Lowest ticket prices dropped from $330 earlier in the week to $199.60 on Saturday.
'I agree with most of the people that they say that they are the best team in Europe, the best team in the world, and the reason why is because they are showing this — they show in France, they show in the Champions League, they are showing in this competition," Chelsea manager Enzo Maresca said.
PSG clinched the French league title on April 5 with six games to spare, won the French Cup on May 24 and the Champions League a week later, romping over Inter Milan 5-0 in the final.
'We really want to go grab this title and this would make it an absolutely perfect season, which would be very hard to replicate," PSG captain Marquinhos said. 'We really want to make history.'
Chelsea had a more modest season, finishing fourth in the Premier League, losing to Brighton in the fourth round of the FA Cup, to Newcastle in the fourth round of the League Cup and winning the third-tier UEFA Conference League.
'Everyone is picking up our opposition,' James said. 'We are preparing right and we are going to win.'
___
Hashtags

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


New York Times
37 minutes ago
- New York Times
Cole Palmer really is ‘scary good'. This was his superstar moment
On Friday evening, a short clip made its way around social media. It was a young man, hood up, riding around Times Square on a scooter. Few people noticed who it was, but the man weaving through New York's iconic landmark would scoop the Golden Ball Award for the best player of this summer's Club World Cup barely 48 hours later. Advertisement Cole Palmer cannot help being a normal 23-year-old who just wants to play football, but given the manner in which he dominated the final against the European champions Paris Saint-Germain he might have to accept that he is rapidly becoming one of the game's superstars. Anyone lucky enough to watch a post-match interview with him will know he does not seek the limelight with his words — he would rather his feet do the talking. He might shy away from attention off the pitch, but the juxtaposition lies in the fact that the very face under the hood was plastered across billboards within the epicentre of New York. 'Scary good' was the title that sat above Palmer's name on the billboard, and it proved to be prophetic of the 23-year-old's performance in Sunday's Club World Cup final. Much like he did on two wheels in a crowd of tourists, Palmer was able to wriggle through bodies and find space against PSG's defence as he almost single-handedly dispatched the French side before half-time. Having played on the left of Chelsea's attack and as a drifting No 10 this summer, Palmer started on the right flank as Enzo Maresca looked to expose a chink in the armour of Luis Enrique's side. The selfless running of striker Joao Pedro and Malo Gusto was integral to Palmer's punishing performance — either running in behind to create space or pushing to that flank to ensure there were bodies around him. 'We used Cole and Malo to create an overload in that area,' Maresca said after the game. 'It was just the game plan, and we try to get the players in positions where they can do everything. It worked quite well.' Gusto's runs were being consistently found by goalkeeper Robert Sanchez, with Palmer on hand to receive any cutbacks, just as he did excellently for Chelsea's first goal. His second was a near carbon-copy of the first in terms of shot selection — and very similar to his quarter-final finish against Palmeiras — but this time it was Palmer running in behind himself to stretch PSG's back line on the counter-attack. Advertisement Chelsea's No 10 will get the credit, but note the selfless overlapping run from Joao Pedro to create tension in Vitinha's mind. An extra half-a-beat allowed Palmer to sit centre-back Lucas Beraldo down before passing into the bottom corner with ice in his veins. Power is less of a priority when you have such an accurate technique to direct the ball through the eye of a needle. For Chelsea's third, Palmer's assist was just as special as his two finishes, as he picked up the ball in his own half before driving forward to thread Joao Pedro through with a perfectly-weighted pass. It speaks to his intelligence to drop in and find the space, but the dovetailed runs of Palmer and Gusto were particularly impressive, as one comes short and the other goes forward. With PSG's Khvicha Kvaratskhelia not tracking back, left-back Nuno Mendes is forced to follow Gusto's run, which provides Palmer with the space to run at the back line. Note Mendes's fury towards his team-mate below, as he knows that danger is imminent. Such an impressive individual performance was reminiscent of Chelsea's recent Europa Conference League final victory against Real Betis, where Palmer took matters into his own hands to assist two goals in the second half and scoop another player of the match award. That now makes it seven goal contributions in the six finals that he has played, but his performance was so much more than the two goals and one assist Sunday. As shown in The Athletic's player dashboard, no player made more progressive carries on the day, and no one was more involved in attacking sequences than Palmer. He was truly worthy of his player of the match award. Did he lap up the attention in the aftermath? Briefly, as he was obliged to accept his match and tournament awards — but it was clear from Palmer's unassuming nature that he was more comfortable having a quick kickabout on a confetti-strewn pitch with some of the squad's young family members. Whether it is Nuno Mendes or a team-mate's son, it does not matter. It is all fun and games when Palmer has a ball at his feet. It is great to see Palmer hit the headlines for his positive performances after recently admitting he has struggled on and off the pitch in recent months. Having gone 18 games without scoring a goal for club or country this year, the scrutiny on the 23-year-old was building — largely as a consequence of the unsustainable attacking output he was posting since he arrived at Stamford Bridge. A glance at the underlying numbers would have told you that the process had never left him in those barren moments. In the Premier League, no one was more involved in Chelsea's attacking sequences — via shots, chances created, or a pass within a shot-ending sequence — than Palmer across the whole of 2024-25. Advertisement Despite the confusion over his attacking form, his 0.38 non-penalty expected goals (xG) per 90 minutes were identical across his two seasons in West London. Sometimes the output does not match the underlying process, but perspective is crucial — as he outlined himself in an interview with Sky Sports in May. He is yet to be the talisman for his country in the same way he is for his club, but manager Thomas Tuchel would be foolish not to find a place for the 23-year-old in the starting XI alongside Jude Bellingham, as England's chief artists. If Palmer carries this summer's form into the new Premier League season, he might need more than a hood to hide him from adoring fans when he next returns to the United States. (Carmen Mandato – FIFA/FIFA via Getty Images)


Forbes
44 minutes ago
- Forbes
Trump Met With Boos During FIFA Club World Cup Final
President Donald Trump was booed by some spectators at the FIFA Club World Cup Final at the MetLife Stadium in New Jersey on Sunday, as English soccer club Chelsea capped off the controversy-plagued tournament with a dominant 3-0 victory over Paris Saint-Germain. President of the United States Donald Trump and FIFA President Gianni Infantino present medals to ... More the players following the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 Final match between PSG and Chelsea at MetLife Stadium. Anadolu via Getty Images The president attended the final along with First Lady Melania Trump, Attorney General Pam Bondi, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy. Trump was first met with jeers as he appeared on the stadium's giant screen, alongside FIFA president Gianni Infantino, while the national anthem was being played. Chelsea won the final after their midfield star Cole Palmer scored twice, before providing an assist to striker João Pedro, as the English club notched up three goals in the first half. The president's attendance at the Club World Cup event comes just a year before the U.S. is set to co-host FIFA's marquee tournament—the 2026 World Cup—along with Canada and Mexico. Infantino appears to have developed strong ties with Trump since the start of this year, and the FIFA chief even attended the president's inauguration in January. Infantino has defended his relationship with the president, calling it 'crucial,' and has played down concerns about Trump's immigration crackdown impacting attendance at next year's event. Last week, Infantino was present at the Trump Tower in New York as FIFA announced it was opening a representative office in the building. Gianni Infantino talks up the Club World Cup at Trump Tower – 'We will make it better' (The Athletic) Trump and Infantino's 'bromance' at the Club World Cup (Le Monde) FIFA chief dismisses US border policy fears in private World Cup remarks (Politico)
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Does Club World Cup title make Chelsea 'undisputed champions of the world'? Even its captain doesn't seem to think so
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — The winners walked onstage past a trophy designed to represent 'the pinnacle of global club football.' They shook hands with the most powerful man in sports, then the most powerful man in the world. They partied beneath fireworks and flames, amid golden sparks and blue smoke. They, Chelsea, were 'winners of the 2025 Club World Cup,' a PA announcer boomed, 'and the new undisputed champions of the world!' But back in London, their home, no trophy parade is planned. Advertisement And here at MetLife Stadium, even Chelsea players downplayed or resisted the notion that Sunday's triumph over PSG put them atop global soccer. 'I think that's a big statement,' captain Reece James said Friday, in advance of the final. 'If we win on Sunday, we were probably the best team on the day; does it make us the best team in Europe? I'm not sure. We're striving to get there. Whether one game decides that, that's probably up to you to decide.' Two days later, having routed PSG, James stood by that statement; and British reporters seemed to have decided. Their first two questions for James were forward-looking, about the implications of this Club World Cup title for the 2025-26 English Premier League and UEFA Champions League. 'For sure, we are headed in the right direction,' James said. But he seemed to agree: Sunday wasn't a coronation. Advertisement 'I'm happy with how much the club has progressed,' he said. 'And I hope next season we're competing in the Premier League to win the title, and competing to go far in the Champions League as well.' It was 'a huge step in the right direction,' and a 'statement,' James assured. It was a 'top achievement,' his head coach, Enzo Maresca, said. 'It's something that we ought to be proud of.' But was it as significant as victory in the Premier League or Champions League, two competitions steeped in decades of history and prestige? Maresca said he told his players: 'I [have a] feeling that this competition will become just as important, or even more important, than the Champions League.' Advertisement The unsaid context: For now, it is not. Chelsea captain Reece James, alongside coach Enzo Maresca, raises the Club World Cup trophy — a historic title, if not without complications. (Photo by Richard Sellers/Sportsphoto/Allstar via Getty Images) (Richard Sellers/Allstar via Getty Images) FIFA has tried to hype it and build it, instantaneously, into the sport's premier club competition. Soccer's global governing body commissioned what is likely the sport's most expensive trophy, and granted Chelsea the 'right' to wear a gold 'WORLD CHAMPIONS' badge on uniforms for the next four years. But the players? The ones who, ultimately, will decide how much this novel tournament means? After some tempered celebrations, they sounded ready for a break. At the final whistle, they bounded onto the field, spraying water into the air. After a post-match fight with PSG, they pranced toward fans for a fleeting moment. But there were no champagne showers, as there were a month earlier after Chelsea won the third-tier UEFA Conference League. There was no double-decker bus rolling through Manhattan, like the one that carried Argentina through Qatar in 2022. There was an awkward trophy lift with U.S. President Donald Trump, then some standard showers, and then? Advertisement A reporter asked James: What's next? 'The first and only plan is to rest,' he said. 'The season has been long. We've been playing for one year straight, since we started last preseason, and we know next year's gonna be tougher, harder competitions. We want to compete and win more big trophies.' The problems with FIFA's grand idea FIFA's idea, of course, was that this would be the biggest trophy, awarded to a champion among champions of Champions Leagues. It is, in some ways, the natural next step in the globalization of club soccer. A century ago, there were only national competitions. Seven decades ago, the winners of those national competitions formed continental competitions. With air travel now ubiquitous, an intercontinental competition seemed overdue. Advertisement But when FIFA president Gianni Infantino rammed through resistance to birth his brainchild, the Club World Cup, he encountered three key hurdles or problems. One is the undisputed preeminence of the European Champions League. With a vast majority of soccer's wealth now concentrated there, hardly anyone feels a need to re-confirm that Europe's top team is the world's top team. Maresca implicitly reinforced that point on Sunday. Even after toppling PSG, he reiterated: 'I consider them the best team in the world.' Chelsea FC players lifts the FIFA Club World Cup trophy after the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 final match between Chelsea FC and Paris Saint-Germain at MetLife Stadium on July 13, 2025 in East Rutherford, United States. (Photo by Jose Breton/Pics Action/NurPhoto via Getty Images) (NurPhoto via Getty Images) They're the best because, in the 2024-25 Champions League, they surged through three home-and-away series, ousting the top two teams in the world's toughest league, Liverpool and Arsenal. (They also beat the third- and fifth-best teams in England, Manchester City and Aston Villa.) That, many would agree, is a more appropriate gage of strength than four single-elimination games at the end of a grueling season in dizzying heat on shoddy pitches in America — especially if three of the four games are against Benfica, Palmeiras and Fluminense. Advertisement 'We probably got a little bit of luck with the draws,' James admitted. PSG, on the other hand, won everything there was to win in France and Europe. It won the Champions League final by a historic margin. Sunday's loss, captain Marquinhos said in Spanish, 'doesn't take anything away from the season we had up until now.' Which leads us to the second problem: timelines. PSG, by winning the 2025 Champions League in May, didn't actually qualify for the 2025 Club World Cup; it qualified for the next edition, likely in 2029. Chelsea, on the other hand, earned its place by winning the 2021 Champions League. Between then and now, it dipped to 12th place in the Premier League, and parted ways with all but one player from the 2021 title team. James is the only holdover. Maresca is the fifth head coach since then. Chelsea, if you were to construct a deserving field of 32 teams anytime in 2024 or 2025, would not have been invited. Advertisement The very logical idea underpinning the Club World Cup is that national leagues ladder up to continental Champions Leagues, which ladder up to this global summit. But the illogical reality is that many of the teams — not the clubs, the teams — who qualified for this 2025 tournament looked nothing like the teams who actually contested the 2025 tournament. Whereas a Champions League begins a few months after qualification ends, with the best and most deserving teams almost always involved, the Club World Cup felt like a somewhat random collection of participants. And then there is the third problem, its place on the calendar. It felt, at times, like a perverted preseason tour. With the 2025-26 season around a month away, and the players deprived of a proper vacation, there was simply no time for an emotional climax. 'Just rest,' James said, 'and look forward to next season.' A trophy earned, a season compromised The impact of this interminable season is the other unknown looming over the Club World Cup. Players clearly cared about it, but observers warned them. 'Whoever wins it will be the worst winner of all time,' former Liverpool coach Jürgen Klopp said last month, 'because they'll have played all summer and then gone straight back into the league.' Advertisement Even as they chased this inaugural trophy and over $100 million in prize money, some of the European superclubs worried about the impact of the chase on their performance in next season's Champions League and domestic league — two competitions their fans care more about. PSG plays Aug. 13. Chelsea hosts Crystal Palace on Aug. 17. Players, who are entitled to at least three weeks off, will either lack fitness when the season begins or risk burnout as it drones on through winter and spring. Real Madrid, which lost in Wednesday's semifinal and begins its 2025-26 season Aug. 19, reportedly petitioned La Liga to push back its opener. But the domestic leagues, which see FIFA's Club World Cup as a threat, have no incentive to accommodate the tournament or the clubs who embrace it. Advertisement So there will be an inevitable crunch. If it stunts Chelsea and PSG in 2025-26, it might stunt or slow the Club World Cup's growth, because big-time clubs might be less inclined to take it seriously. Money, though, can almost always buy off problems. If FIFA can find the money, the Club World Cup will mature. And Chelsea, an otherwise forgettable team in 2024-25, will always be its inaugural winner. That seemed to be part of why Maresca saw its importance. 'We value it just as much as winning the Champions League,' he said. 'Because we can give this championship to Chelsea fans, and it will be a source of pride to wear this badge.'