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Chelsea routs PSG in stunning Club World Cup final, wins first edition of expanded global tournament

Chelsea routs PSG in stunning Club World Cup final, wins first edition of expanded global tournament

Yahoo7 days ago
Chelsea's Cole Palmer bagged a brace, then assisted on a goal by João Pedro all before halftime of the Club World Cup final against PSG.
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — The rout began with a sweep of a cultured left foot, and continued with a crippling counterattack. It was complete before halftime here at the 2025 Club World Cup final between Paris Saint-Germain and Chelsea. One side exploded up and down the field, and out to a 3-0 lead, while the other staggered, as if exhausted, disrupted and dumbstruck.
It was everything that everybody expected PSG to do Sunday at MetLife Stadium.
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But, remarkably, it was Chelsea doing it.
The Blues, who were +370 underdogs to win in regulation, only needed 43 minutes to race past PSG. They beat the European champions, 3-0, and won the first edition of this expanded, lucrative, spectacular yet controversial tournament.
Cole Palmer, who'd been freezing cold from January through June, sank the favorites with two goals inside the first half hour, then an exquisite assist before halftime.
Palmer's stealthy assault on the PSG goal began 22 minutes after the soccer began, after a pre-match show filled with Americana, after Michael Buffer boomed to a sold-out crowd: 'Let's get ready to rumbllllleeee!'
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The first 21 minutes had been relatively even. But then a long ball boinked off the head of PSG fullback Nuno Mendes, into the path of a suddenly free Malo Gusto. Moments later, it was on Palmer's left foot at the top of the box, and then curling into the bottom corner.
The sequence was slightly fluky. But the lead was arguably deserved. Chelsea started strong, stronger than anybody else had against PSG in months. And eight minutes later, Palmer made it 2-0.
This time, the 23-year-old Englishman made his own space at the top of the box. After Reece James blocked an Ousmane Dembélé pass, and Levi Colwill launched a counter, Palmer sensed João Pedro steaming forward on an overlapping run. Palmer, with a subtle fake, sent PSG midfielder Vitinha retreating toward Pedro, away from the ball. Palmer carried on into the box, sat down another PSG defender with a hesitation, and found the same bottom left corner.
To chase the game, from then on, PSG continued to commit numbers forward. Chelsea handled the pressure, and punished the Parisians for all the space they left gaping.
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At one end, goalkeeper Robert Sanchez was flawless, darting off his line to punch away crosses, scrambling across his goal to claw away would-be PSG goals.
At the other end, in the 43rd minute, Palmer slipped a clever through-ball into Pedro, who dinked a cute finish over PSG keeper Gianluigi Donnarumma.
Chelsea fans, packed behind the far goal, erupted. Bodies leapt, and limbs punched the air.
And PSG never recovered.
For much of the 2024-25 season, and never more so than in Wednesday's semifinal stomping of Real Madrid, the Parisians looked like a generational team. After that 4-0 win over Madrid — which followed a 5-0 destruction of Inter Milan in the Champions League final, a 4-0 takedown of Atlético Madrid on the second day of the Club World Cup, and a 4-0 beatdown of Inter Miami — Spanish reporters began to toss around a weighty word: 'imbatable,' unbeatable.
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But that, of course, was an exaggeration. No team is perfect. In soccer, no result is preordained, no conclusion foregone.
And on Sunday, Chelsea drove home that point.
By the latter half of the second half, PSG resorted to frustration fouls. João Neves was sent off for pulling Marc Cucurella's hair.
Chelsea, meanwhile, bubbled with joy, and celebrated an unlikely title.
The Blues, for most of the month, felt like outsiders. They'd qualified for this Club World Cup via their win in the 2021 Champions League final, a match in which only one current player appeared. They arrived in the United States having finished fourth in the English Premier League, and having rolled through a third-tier continental competition, the UEFA Conference League. They were not favorites to win this tournament. Their only superlative was chief complainers. When they lost to Flamengo in the group stage, frankly, they didn't seem like they were all that thrilled to be here.
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But they grew into the knockout stages. They took advantage of a relatively soft half of the bracket, beating Benfica, Palmeiras and Fluminense.
And then, in the final, they did what nobody thought anybody could.
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5 position battles to watch at Steelers training camp

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Dustin Poirier's final war: Even in defeat, UFC legend retires with storybook fight
Dustin Poirier's final war: Even in defeat, UFC legend retires with storybook fight

New York Times

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  • New York Times

Dustin Poirier's final war: Even in defeat, UFC legend retires with storybook fight

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WNBA players wisely use All-Star spotlight for CBA leverage: ‘Pay us what you owe us'
WNBA players wisely use All-Star spotlight for CBA leverage: ‘Pay us what you owe us'

New York Times

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A post shared by WNBPA (@thewnbpa) After years of fighting an existential battle for the survival of the league, WNBA players enter this bargaining cycle with a rare power: leverage. The league is generating record revenue, it's expanding, and it's become part of the national consciousness. Now is the time for the players to cash in on what they have brought to the table. They want a business model that allows them to share in the growth of the WNBA and direct more of the revenue towards salaries and player experience. Advertisement 'We see the growth in the league and as it stands, the current salary system is not really paying us what we're owed,' said union president Nneka Ogwumike, a Seattle Storm forward. 'We want to be able to have that fair share moving forward, especially as we see all of the investment going in, and we want to be able to have our salaries be reflected in a structure that makes sense for us.' 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This effort allowed players to tap into the community that supports them and wants to help. At a panel earlier Saturday, fans asked Dawn Staley, Sydney Colson and Kate Martin how they could make a difference in the negotiations. Fans brought 'Pay the Players' signs to the game, and Mystics guard Brittney Sykes displayed one visible on the broadcast behind Engelbert during postgame interviews. The crowd also drowned out Englebert's speech with chants of 'pay them.' 'Pay them!' WNBA All-Star fans drowned out commissioner Cathy Engelbert during her presentation of the game's MVP award. With several CBA conversations in Indy this weekend, players warmed up in shirts that read 'Pay Us What You Owe Us.' — The Athletic (@TheAthletic) July 20, 2025 'It's huge to have the fans backing us,' union vice president Napheesa Collier said. 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At a moment that is critical to determine their future, players don't want to leave any stones unturned. They need participation from throughout the union, which is why a record number of players showed up to the bargaining meeting. For instance, Satou Sabally was unable to play in the All-Star Game but flew to Indiana on Thursday to attend the negotiations. Players have to publicly apply pressure on the league, using their collective, consistent messaging and their fan bases to rally behind them. They are preparing for a lockout, putting money away in case negotiations stall. They are appealing to Engelbert's legacy: Does she want to be the commissioner who presided over the most significant growth in women's sports history, or the one who oversaw a work stoppage? The wording of 'owe us' on the T-shirts was clarifying. The players have talked about getting what is fair, but this was a crucial change in the strategy to signify that a piece of the business already belongs to them. 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