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FIFA Club World Cup 2025: Inter Milan rallies past Urawa on stoppage-time goal
FIFA Club World Cup 2025: Inter Milan rallies past Urawa on stoppage-time goal

The Hindu

time10 hours ago

  • Sport
  • The Hindu

FIFA Club World Cup 2025: Inter Milan rallies past Urawa on stoppage-time goal

Valentin Carboni scored in the second minute of second-half stoppage time to complete Inter Milan's rally to a 2-1 victory over Urawa Red Diamonds in Saturday's Group E encounter at the Club World Cup in Seattle. Carboni's strike rescued all three points for Inter (1-0-1, 4 points) 14 minutes after Lautaro Martinez's brilliant, volleyed 78th-minute equaliser from a corner kick. The result sent the Italians above Argentina's River Plate (1-0-0, 3 points), which faces Mexico's CF Monterrey (0-1-0, 1 point) later Saturday in Pasadena. Shusaku Nishikawa scored early for the second goal of the tournament and the first from open play for the Red Diamonds (0-2-0, 0 points), which was overwhelmingly on the back foot from there on. Inter led its Japanese foes 26-5 in total shots and 4-3 in efforts on target, though its first shot on frame didn't come until Martinez levelled the affair with his 24th goal in all competitions this season. Against the run of play, Watanabe put Red Diamonds in front in the 11th minute. READ: FIFA Club World Cup: Dortmund holds off Sundowns to close in on knockouts Takuro Kaneko created the opportunity with a wonderful slaloming run from the right into the penalty area that split two Inter defenders, before dragging a cross back toward the penalty spot. Watanabe met it with a first-time, side-footed shot that deflected off another defender, wrongfooting goalkeeper Yann Sommer on its way into the bottom right corner. Inter finally began to show more menace in the final stages, beginning with Martinez's leveler. Nicolo Barella sent in the outswinging service. With his back to goal, Martinez shielded a defender from the ball, then met it waist high with a volley sent over his back past goalkeeper Shusaku Nishikawa. It was Martinez's second goal of the tournament after he pulled Inter level with CF Monterrey on a set piece goal late in the first half of a 1-1 draw on Tuesday. Then in stoppage time, Carboni was first to the rebound of Petar Sucic's blocked shot from the edge of the penalty area, driving a low and hard finish from 10 yards into the bottom left corner.

River Plate ease past Urawa to start Club World Cup tilt
River Plate ease past Urawa to start Club World Cup tilt

Express Tribune

time4 days ago

  • Sport
  • Express Tribune

River Plate ease past Urawa to start Club World Cup tilt

River Plate overcame a spirited Urawa Red Diamonds 3-1 on Tuesday to make a strong start in Club World Cup Group E. The Argentine side overpowered their Japanese opponents at Lumen Field under the Seattle sun, in an entertaining battle. Under 12,000 fans attended the clash at the 69,000-capacity stadium but those who were there, many travelling from Japan and Argentina, created a vibrant atmosphere at both ends of the stadium. "Thanks to all River fans, we knew it wasn't going to be easy to get all the way to here, it's a very long journey, there's no direct flights," said striker Facundo Colidio, who opened the scoring for River Plate. "Nevertheless they made it, they were here and they were amazing with their support throughout the game... "The venue was really tricky, it's not close to Argentina." All six South American teams that have played in the expanded Club World Cup thus far have stayed undefeated. Marcelo Gallardo's River started the stronger and took the lead when Colidio powered a header home from former Sevilla defender Marcos Acuna's cross. The Red Diamonds played their way into the match and River goalkeeper Franco Armani was forced into an excellent save from Yusuke Matsuo, although he was offside. New Real Madrid signing Franco Mastantuono almost created a second for River, with the 17-year-old teeing up Nacho Fernandez, but the midfielder's drive flew narrowly off target. The Argentine, who will join Spanish giants Madrid after the tournament, was otherwise quieter than expected. The Red Diamonds, who won the Asian Champions League in 2022 to qualify as the only Japanese team at the tournament, shot themselves in the foot at the start of the second half. Marius Hoibraaten sent a foolish back-header towards goalkeeper Shusaku Nishikawa, without noticing Sebastian Driussi sneaking in behind. The striker bravely nodded home past the helpless stopper but hurt himself as he fell and had to be replaced. Matsuo pulled the Red Diamonds back into the game from the penalty spot after Acuna's ungainly mistimed barge on Takuro Kaneko, sending Armani the wrong way. Maximiliano Meza put the game to bed for River with a header from Acuna's corner after he was left unmarked. "Unfortunately we lost today but we're going to learn a lot and take that into the next match," said Matsuo. Polish Urawa coach Maciej Skorza was unhappy with the defeat. "The result is disappointing, what can I say?" he mused. "We've done a lot of work, put in a lot of effort, and the beginning of this game was far from what we expected.

River Plate ease past Urawa to start Club World Cup tilt
River Plate ease past Urawa to start Club World Cup tilt

The Sun

time5 days ago

  • Sport
  • The Sun

River Plate ease past Urawa to start Club World Cup tilt

RIVER PLATE overcame a spirited Urawa Red Diamonds 3-1 on Tuesday to make a strong start in Club World Cup Group E. The Argentine side overpowered their Japanese opponents at Lumen Field under the Seattle sun, in an entertaining battle. Under 12,000 fans attended the clash at the 69,000-capacity stadium but those who were there, many travelling from Japan and Argentina, created a vibrant atmosphere at both ends of the stadium. 'Thanks to all River fans, we knew it wasn't going to be easy to get all the way to here, it's a very long journey, there's no direct flights,' said striker Facundo Colidio, who opened the scoring for River Plate. 'Nevertheless they made it, they were here and they were amazing with their support throughout the game... 'The venue was really tricky, it's not close to Argentina.' All six South American teams that have played in the expanded Club World Cup thus far have stayed undefeated. Marcelo Gallardo's River started the stronger and took the lead when Colidio powered a header home from former Sevilla defender Marcos Acuna's cross. The Red Diamonds played their way into the match and River goalkeeper Franco Armani was forced into an excellent save from Yusuke Matsuo, although he was offside. New Real Madrid signing Franco Mastantuono almost created a second for River, with the 17-year-old teeing up Nacho Fernandez, but the midfielder's drive flew narrowly off target. The Argentine, who will join Spanish giants Madrid after the tournament, was otherwise quieter than expected. The Red Diamonds, who won the Asian Champions League in 2022 to qualify as the only Japanese team at the tournament, shot themselves in the foot at the start of the second half. Marius Hoibraaten sent a foolish back-header towards goalkeeper Shusaku Nishikawa, without noticing Sebastian Driussi sneaking in behind. The striker bravely nodded home past the helpless stopper but hurt himself as he fell and had to be replaced. Matsuo pulled the Red Diamonds back into the game from the penalty spot after Acuna's ungainly mistimed barge on Takuro Kaneko, sending Armani the wrong way. Maximiliano Meza put the game to bed for River with a header from Acuna's corner after he was left unmarked. 'Unfortunately we lost today but we're going to learn a lot and take that into the next match,' said Matsuo. Polish Urawa coach Maciej Skorza was unhappy with the defeat. 'The result is disappointing, what can I say?' he mused. 'We've done a lot of work, put in a lot of effort, and the beginning of this game was far from what we expected. 'The second half was better but the ease with which we conceded was too much.' Elsewhere in Group E Champions League runners-up Inter Milan face Mexican team Monterrey later Tuesday at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena.

River Plate eases past Urawa at Club World Cup
River Plate eases past Urawa at Club World Cup

Japan Today

time5 days ago

  • Sport
  • Japan Today

River Plate eases past Urawa at Club World Cup

soccer River Plate overcame a spirited Urawa Red Diamonds 3-1 on Tuesday to make a strong start in Club World Cup Group E. The Argentine side overpowered their Japanese opponents at Lumen Field under the Seattle sun, in an entertaining battle. Under 12,000 fans attended the clash at the 69,000-capacity stadium but those who were there, many travelling from Japan and Argentina, created a vibrant atmosphere at both ends of the stadium. "Thanks to all River fans, we knew it wasn't going to be easy to get all the way to here, it's a very long journey, there's no direct flights," said striker Facundo Colidio, who opened the scoring for River Plate. "Nevertheless they made it, they were here and they were amazing with their support throughout the game. The venue was really tricky, it's not close to Argentina." All six South American teams that have played in the expanded Club World Cup thus far have stayed undefeated. Marcelo Gallardo's River started the stronger and took the lead when Colidio powered a header home from former Sevilla defender Marcos Acuna's cross. The Red Diamonds played their way into the match and River goalkeeper Franco Armani was forced into an excellent save from Yusuke Matsuo, although he was offside. New Real Madrid signing Franco Mastantuono almost created a second for River, with the 17-year-old teeing up Nacho Fernandez, but the midfielder's drive flew narrowly off target. The Argentine, who will join Spanish giants Madrid after the tournament, was otherwise quieter than expected. The Red Diamonds, who won the Asian Champions League in 2022 to qualify as the only Japanese team at the tournament, shot themselves in the foot at the start of the second half. Marius Hoibraaten sent a foolish back-header towards goalkeeper Shusaku Nishikawa, without noticing Sebastian Driussi sneaking in behind. The striker bravely nodded home past the helpless stopper but hurt himself as he fell and had to be replaced. Matsuo pulled the Red Diamonds back into the game from the penalty spot after Acuna's ungainly mistimed barge on Takuro Kaneko, sending Armani the wrong way. Maximiliano Meza put the game to bed for River with a header from Acuna's corner after he was left unmarked. "Unfortunately we lost today but we're going to learn a lot and take that into the next match," said Matsuo. Polish Urawa coach Maciej Skorza was unhappy with the defeat. "The result is disappointing, what can I say?" he mused. "We've done a lot of work, put in a lot of effort, and the beginning of this game was far from what we expected. "The second half was better but the ease with which we conceded was too much." Elsewhere in Group E Champions League runners-up Inter Milan face Mexican team Monterrey later Tuesday at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena. © 2025 AFP

River Plate ease past Urawa to start Club World Cup tilt
River Plate ease past Urawa to start Club World Cup tilt

France 24

time5 days ago

  • Sport
  • France 24

River Plate ease past Urawa to start Club World Cup tilt

The Argentine side overpowered their Japanese opponents at Lumen Field under the Seattle sun, in an entertaining battle. Under 12,000 fans attended the clash at the 69,000-capacity stadium but those who were there, many travelling from Japan and Argentina, created a vibrant atmosphere at both ends of the stadium. "Thanks to all River fans, we knew it wasn't going to be easy to get all the way to here, it's a very long journey, there's no direct flights," said striker Facundo Colidio, who opened the scoring for River Plate. "Nevertheless they made it, they were here and they were amazing with their support throughout the game... "The venue was really tricky, it's not close to Argentina." All six South American teams that have played in the expanded Club World Cup thus far have stayed undefeated. Marcelo Gallardo's River started the stronger and took the lead when Colidio powered a header home from former Sevilla defender Marcos Acuna's cross. The Red Diamonds played their way into the match and River goalkeeper Franco Armani was forced into an excellent save from Yusuke Matsuo, although he was offside. New Real Madrid signing Franco Mastantuono almost created a second for River, with the 17-year-old teeing up Nacho Fernandez, but the midfielder's drive flew narrowly off target. The Argentine, who will join Spanish giants Madrid after the tournament, was otherwise quieter than expected. The Red Diamonds, who won the Asian Champions League in 2022 to qualify as the only Japanese team at the tournament, shot themselves in the foot at the start of the second half. Marius Hoibraaten sent a foolish back-header towards goalkeeper Shusaku Nishikawa, without noticing Sebastian Driussi sneaking in behind. The striker bravely nodded home past the helpless stopper but hurt himself as he fell and had to be replaced. Matsuo pulled the Red Diamonds back into the game from the penalty spot after Acuna's ungainly mistimed barge on Takuro Kaneko, sending Armani the wrong way. Maximiliano Meza put the game to bed for River with a header from Acuna's corner after he was left unmarked. "Unfortunately we lost today but we're going to learn a lot and take that into the next match," said Matsuo. Polish Urawa coach Maciej Skorza was unhappy with the defeat. "The result is disappointing, what can I say?" he mused. "We've done a lot of work, put in a lot of effort, and the beginning of this game was far from what we expected. "The second half was better but the ease with which we conceded was too much." Elsewhere in Group E Champions League runners-up Inter Milan face Mexican team Monterrey later Tuesday at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena.

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