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Extreme Heat, Storms Take Toll At Club World Cup

Extreme Heat, Storms Take Toll At Club World Cup

Furnace-like heat and the threat of thunder and lightning are wreaking havoc at the Club World Cup -- and more of the same is likely at the 2026 World Cup.
With a brutal heatwave blanketing swathes of the eastern United States, adapting to the weather has become a key focus for coaches and players.
Borussia Dortmund took the unusual step of leaving their substitutes in the dressing room for the first half of their game against Mamelodi Sundowns in Cincinnati, rather than have them sitting on the bench in blazing sunshine.
Chelsea coach Enzo Maresca meanwhile cut short his team's training session in Philadelphia on Monday as the City of Brotherly Love baked in temperatures of 99 degrees Fahrenheit (37.2 degrees Celsisu).
Dortmund coach Niko Kovac, meanwhile, said the weather could ultimately shape the destiny of the tournament.
"I think that this tournament will be decided not by the best team, but the team that can adapt to these weather conditions the best. They will probably win this tournament," Kovac said.
While cooling breaks midway through each half have become standard during the tournament, Dortmund, like other teams, are taking extra steps to mitigate the brutal heat and humidity.
"Our boys are very well taken care of by our doctors and the medical staff," Kovac said.
"We have very cold towels. We put them in ice baths. The boys also need to cool down their legs and their feet in cold water and ice baths."
The experience of the Club World Cup is likely a preview of what can be expected at next year's men's World Cup in the United States, Canada and Mexico.
A recent study published by the International Journal of Biometeorology warned of the risk posed by extreme heat at the tournament for players and spectators, citing climate change as a cause of "extreme heat" events that were "more frequent and intense".
The study concluded that 14 of the 16 host cities being used for the 2026 World Cup experienced temperatures that frequently exceeded the commonly accepted safe thresholds for wet bulb globe temperature (WBGT) -- a widely used measure for heat stress.
The study argued for games to be scheduled outside of the afternoon windows when conditions were typically at their most fierce.
In addition to the brutal heat and humidity, teams at the Club World Cup have also had to deal with matches being halted due to the threat of lightning.
On Tuesday, Boca Juniors' game against Auckland City became the fifth match of the tournament to experience a lengthy delay due to public safety regulations used in the United States that mandate play is halted whenever lightning is within 10 miles (16.1 kilometres) of a stadium.
A weather delay in Benfica's game against Auckland led to an interruption in play of nearly two hours.
National Weather Service official Ben Schott, who advises FIFA and the US World Cup taskforce for 2026, says the kind of weather affecting the ongoing competition is not out of the ordinary, and said teams and fans next year should plan accordingly.
"Nothing that we're seeing right now is unusual even though we are breaking records," Schott told AFP.
"Most of the eastern United States is breaking records, and then that happens almost every summer. To expect something similar next year as a possibility is something that people should prepare for if you're going to come and enjoy the games."
While roasting heat was an issue when the United States last hosted the World Cup finals in 1994, no games at that tournament were halted by storm warnings.
That is due to increasingly sophisticated forecasting technology, Schott said.
"We're at a point now where we can start to see things almost a week in advance and predict them pretty accurately, as compared to 15-20 years ago," Schott said. "The advances in meteorology since we last had the World Cup here in 1994 have been substantial."
Schott said thunder and lightning were "par for the course" in several regions of North America.
"This is pretty typical for United States weather for this time of the year," Schott said.
"We get a lot of moisture that pumps in from the Gulf of Mexico, and they get the afternoon thunderstorms pop up.
"So as we move towards World Cup 2026, things that we're seeing right now would be quite typical to be seen again."
FIFA did not immediately respond to a request for comment when contacted by AFP. Benfica and Auckland City's Club World Cup game is one of five matches at the tournament halted due to bad weather AFP
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Why was Poland the only eastern European team at Euro 2025? – DW – 07/21/2025
Why was Poland the only eastern European team at Euro 2025? – DW – 07/21/2025

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Why was Poland the only eastern European team at Euro 2025? – DW – 07/21/2025

Only one team from eastern Europe made it to Euro 2025, and only three have ever made it to any Euros. The story is different in men's football, so why has women's football in the region struggled to make a mark? "This is more than a tournament. It's a movement, and the response from across Europe and beyond proves that women's football is not only here to stay – it is setting the new standard." Those were the words of Nadine Kessler, a former Germany international who is now UEFA's women's football director during Euro 2025. Much of that appears undeniable: UEFA says they sold more tickets before the group stage even began than it had in the whole of Euro 2022. Social media engagements are up 55% since then and the prize pot has increased by 156% to €41 million ($47.5 million). But, although Poland made their Euros bow this year, the movement has not quite reached the rest of the east and parts of southern Europe. Despite winning their final group game against Denmark, Poland exited at the group stage, as have the only other sides ever to have qualified from eastern Europe (as defined by the United Nations) — Ukraine in 2009, and Russia five times between 1997 and their ban from international football in 2022. This stands in stark contrast to men's football, where 11 of the 24 teams at the last men's Euros, in Germany in 2024, were from the region, albeit without enormous success. Croatia (again, defined as eastern Europe by the UN) were one of those teams, and were losing finalists in the 2018 World Cup and semifinals in Qatar four years later. Their women, on the other hand, have not yet come close to qualifying for a World Cup or Euros. Goran Ljubojevic, the former coach and now sporting director of serial Croatian women's champions ZNK Osijek, told DW that the region was always playing catch-up, with clubs only starting to add women's programs in the 90s, and that investment in the women's game was scarce. But he also believes societal norms are holding the sport back. "The cultural problem in our countries is that people think girls should not play football, that mostly they should stay home and be housewives or something," he told DW. The European Union's Gender Equality index, published in 2024, bears this out to some degree, with no eastern countries above the EU average. "I don't know that it will ever happen that we will see a shift in the male brain in Croatia, and that this part of Europe will ever accept women's football on that level like they do in western Europe and or the USA." But Ljubojevic, who played for NK Osijek (ZNK Osiek is the women's section of the club) and Dinamo Zagreb, said seeing sold-out stadiums and widespread interest in tournaments like the Euros is having an impact in his homeland, and the east and south of the continent more broadly. "People saw the games in the European Championship, they saw the World Cup in Australia [and New Zealand in 2023], they saw full stadiums and were like 'wow, I really didn't know that many people watch women's football.' So, something shifts in their mind. But even with that, I think the infrastructure is still not good enough for women's football to rise up here.' Despite being the most successful side in the country, ZNK Osijek draw crowds of only about 300 for their home matches. As Ljubojevic sees it, the talent is there, it just requires investment in coaching, infrastructure and paying players enough for them to be full-time professionals. UEFA has put new schemes in to place in the region in recent years, and these are starting to have an impact, according to Professor Dariusz Wojtaszyn, from the University of Wroclaw in Poland. "There have been many positive developments in recent years. They are driven by initiatives of UEFA and local football associations, which, albeit slowly, are beginning to recognize the potential of women's football," the academic, who has written extensively on eastern European women's football, told DW. "Women's football budgets have increased significantly (usually more than 100%) in all CEE [Central and Eastern European] countries. That is why I view UEFA's initiatives very positively. They really do bring tangible results." To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video UEFA told DW in a written statement that the revamped competitions, including the Champions League and Europa League "have ensured that all competitions and all final tournaments remain open and accessible to clubs and teams from all associations. Over this period we've seen impressive performances from eastern European clubs at both club, national team and youth national team level and we will continue to work with the respective associations, as we do with all our member associations, with the goal of improving performance and the development of football on a pan-European level." But Wojtaszyn thinks that the politics of the region have been holding it back. Although the communist systems that governed many of these countries until the 1990s professed to be gender-equal, they actually produced a "paternalistic model of family and traditional social relations, which limited the possibilities for women's emancipation," according to Wojtaszyn. The fall of communism then entrenched issues still further. "The collapse of the state sponsorship system that had existed in previous decades caused significant economic problems for football clubs. Under such conditions, women's football, which was generating less interest, found it extremely difficult to compete for sponsors in the free market with its male competitors. Therefore, teams struggled financially, pitches were in very poor condition and female players played amateur sports," he said. More recently, he added, the rise of right-wing parties in countries like Romania, Poland, Slovakia and Hungary — and a resurgence of "traditional" values that came with that — have made professional football an unattractive proposition for many women. Although his players still need other jobs to make ends meet, Ljubojevic has great hope for the future, even if he feels significant investment and education is required. "We have a huge talent pool, the same as in men's football, but nobody has coached them properly," he said. "It will be much, much better in a few years. I will tell you that we have great talents, we have great players, and we [ZNK Osijek] are now really working at the highest level." Poland are expecting to see a surge in participation from their Euros campaign, with national team head coach Nina Patalon predicting growth from 30,000 to 300,000 female players in the country post-tournament. Ljubojevic thinks that Croatia, and perhaps other countries in the region, need something similar to kick-start their women's football scene. Although Poland lost out on hosting 2025, and no eastern European countries have bid for 2029, he would like to see Croatia become the first country in his region to host a tournament. "Yes, we can do it. But we have to take it seriously. The federation, the country and everything — they have to invest money and time. Women's football is the new wave and we have to ride that new wave. But we are still not doing it yet."

Why was Poland the only eastern Europe team at Euro 2025? – DW – 07/21/2025
Why was Poland the only eastern Europe team at Euro 2025? – DW – 07/21/2025

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time10 hours ago

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Why was Poland the only eastern Europe team at Euro 2025? – DW – 07/21/2025

Only one team from eastern Europe made it to Euro 2025, and only three have ever made it to any Euros. The story is different in men's football, so why has women's football in the region struggled to make a mark? "This is more than a tournament. It's a movement, and the response from across Europe and beyond proves that women's football is not only here to stay – it is setting the new standard." Those were the words of Nadine Kessler, a former Germany international who is now UEFA's women's football director during Euro 2025. Much of that appears undeniable: UEFA says they sold more tickets before the group stage even began than it had in the whole of Euro 2022. Social media engagements are up 55% since then and the prize pot has increased by 156% to €41 million ($47.5 million). But, although Poland made their Euros bow this year, the movement has not quite reached the rest of the east and parts of southern Europe. Despite winning their final group game against Denmark, Poland exited at the group stage, as have the only other sides ever to have qualified from eastern Europe (as defined by the United Nations) — Ukraine in 2009, and Russia five times between 1997 and their ban from international football in 2022. This stands in stark contrast to men's football, where 11 of the 24 teams at the last men's Euros, in Germany in 2024, were from the region, albeit without enormous success. Croatia (again, defined as eastern Europe by the UN) were one of those teams, and were losing finalists in the 2018 World Cup and semifinals in Qatar four years later. Their women, on the other hand, have not yet come close to qualifying for a World Cup or Euros. Goran Ljubojevic, the former coach and now sporting director of serial Croatian women's champions ZNK Osijek, told DW that the region was always playing catch-up, with clubs only starting to add women's programs in the 90s, and that investment in the women's game was scarce. But he also believes societal norms are holding the sport back. "The cultural problem in our countries is that people think girls should not play football, that mostly they should stay home and be housewives or something," he told DW. The European Union's Gender Equality index, published in 2024, bears this out to some degree, with no eastern countries above the EU average. "I don't know that it will ever happen that we will see a shift in the male brain in Croatia, and that this part of Europe will ever accept women's football on that level like they do in western Europe and or the USA." But Ljubojevic, who played for NK Osijek (ZNK Osiek is the women's section of the club) and Dinamo Zagreb, said seeing sold-out stadiums and widespread interest in tournaments like the Euros is having an impact in his homeland, and the east and south of the continent more broadly. "People saw the games in the European Championship, they saw the World Cup in Australia [and New Zealand in 2023], they saw full stadiums and were like 'wow, I really didn't know that many people watch women's football.' So, something shifts in their mind. But even with that, I think the infrastructure is still not good enough for women's football to rise up here.' Despite being the most successful side in the country, ZNK Osijek draw crowds of only about 300 for their home matches. As Ljubojevic sees it, the talent is there, it just requires investment in coaching, infrastructure and paying players enough for them to be full-time professionals. UEFA has put new schemes in to place in the region in recent years, and these are starting to have an impact, according to Professor Dariusz Wojtaszyn, from the University of Wroclaw in Poland. "There have been many positive developments in recent years. They are driven by initiatives of UEFA and local football associations, which, albeit slowly, are beginning to recognize the potential of women's football," the academic, who has written extensively on eastern European women's football, told DW. "Women's football budgets have increased significantly (usually more than 100%) in all CEE [Central and Eastern European] countries. That is why I view UEFA's initiatives very positively. They really do bring tangible results." To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video UEFA told DW in a written statement that the revamped competitions, including the Champions League and Europa League "have ensured that all competitions and all final tournaments remain open and accessible to clubs and teams from all associations. Over this period we've seen impressive performances from eastern European clubs at both club, national team and youth national team level and we will continue to work with the respective associations, as we do with all our member associations, with the goal of improving performance and the development of football on a pan-European level." But Wojtaszyn thinks that the politics of the region have been holding it back. 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More recently, he added, the rise of right-wing parties in countries like Romania, Poland, Slovakia and Hungary — and a resurgence of "traditional" values that came with that — have made professional football an unattractive proposition for many women. Although his players still need other jobs to make ends meet, Ljubojevic has great hope for the future, even if he feels significant investment and education is required. "We have a huge talent pool, the same as in men's football, but nobody has coached them properly," he said. "It will be much, much better in a few years. I will tell you that we have great talents, we have great players, and we [ZNK Osijek] are now really working at the highest level." Poland are expecting to see a surge in participation from their Euros campaign, with national team head coach Nina Patalon predicting growth from 30,000 to 300,000 female players in the country post-tournament. Ljubojevic thinks that Croatia, and perhaps other countries in the region, need something similar to kick-start their women's football scene. Although Poland lost out on hosting 2025, and no eastern European countries have bid for 2029, he would like to see Croatia become the first country in his region to host a tournament. "Yes, we can do it. But we have to take it seriously. The federation, the country and everything — they have to invest money and time. Women's football is the new wave and we have to ride that new wave. But we are still not doing it yet."

Del Castillo And Spain 'Full Of Hope' Ahead Of Germany Euro 2025 Semi
Del Castillo And Spain 'Full Of Hope' Ahead Of Germany Euro 2025 Semi

Int'l Business Times

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Del Castillo And Spain 'Full Of Hope' Ahead Of Germany Euro 2025 Semi

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