
Club World Cup: The best and worst moments, standout players, fans, games and what should change
Advertisement
Yes, it's fair to say the newly-expanded 2025 Club World Cup was a football tournament unlike any other.
Here a selection of The Athletic's writers on the ground in U.S. reflect on the best and worst of the event, what impact it may have on the season ahead, what it suggests the 2026 World Cup will be like and what should change before it is staged again.
James Horncastle: I enjoyed seeing a relaxed Pep Guardiola playing on the beach with his Manchester City players. It needed to be cut like a Top Gun montage with some Kenny Loggins music. The fact Loggins, a master of the 80s movie soundtrack, was overlooked as one of the musical ambassadors for this tournament feels like a missed opportunity.
Oliver Kay: I can't claim to have witnessed it myself, but I walked through Times Square so many times over the past week that I would like to think it happened under my nose and I didn't see it. It was that video of Cole Palmer wobbling awkwardly on a scooter, through the crowds, pretty much unnoticed, in one of the world's biggest tourist spots, where there's a giant billboard with his image on it. I love his ability on the pitch, as showcased in the final, and I love his authenticity off it.
Jordan Campbell: Thiago Silva channeling his inner Al Pacino. The Fluminense captain delivered a stirring speech to his team-mates about not leaving things for later as tomorrow is not promised. It inspired the Brazilian side to a shock 2-0 win over Inter Milan and they then went on to beat City's conquerors Al Hilal to make the semi-finals. It was a moment that emphasised how big a role leadership still plays in the sport and captured the significance of this competition to the South Americans.
Mario Cortegana: From a purely footballing point of view, Al Hilal's victory against Manchester City. It was a very beautiful game, with a lot of drama, and left us with surely the biggest surprise of the tournament. It was also a warning of what Saudi football can or intends to do ahead of the World Cup they will host in 2034.
Advertisement
I also really enjoyed being able to watch live and from so close (in Valdebebas they put us far away!) the first training sessions of Xabi Alonso and his staff at the helm of Real Madrid. It is very different from what we were used to with Carlo Ancelotti since 2021.
Felipe Cardenas: When Boca Juniors fans took over Miami and then turned Hard Rock Stadium into a modern version of La Bombonera. With Bayern Munich as the opponent, it was Boca's moment to shine under the global spotlight. The stadium shook, the chanting never stopped. Miguel Merentiel's equaliser amounted to absolute bedlam. Boca fans sang the entire game and cried tears of joy even after the loss.
Jeff Rueter: For all of the atmosphere created by their fans, Boca Juniors left much to be desired with their onfield performance. That shouldn't tarnish the achievement of Auckland City, taking a point off of Boca to close the group stage. For the only amateur team in the field to get a result against any team, much less one of the world's most ubiquitous legacy clubs, is the sort of game that only an event like this can create.
Mark Carey: Leaning into the Americanisms of this tournament, I found it funny that legendary boxing announcer Michael Buffer screamed: 'Let's get ready to rumble!' ahead of both semi-finals and the final. Having each player enter the pitch individually in their own respective 'ring walk' is one thing, but come on — that is too much. I found it entertaining, but not necessarily for the right reasons.
Liam Twomey: This tournament will not go down as a high point in the history of the football fan experience, but the South American supporters had the best time. One memory that will always stick with me was seeing — and smelling — the Brazilian barbecue tailgate parties that Flamengo fans had in the car parks outside Lincoln Financial Field before and after their win over Chelsea. FIFA will want to see more of that fusion of local and American culture at the World Cup next year.
Asli Pelit: I loved watching a handful of beloved South American teams bring that unmistakable garra Sudamericana back to a sport increasingly warped by sovereign funds, private equity, and billionaire ownership. A handful of players from these clubs also reminded me that no matter how old a player is (nor how many times he's bounced between Europe's elite clubs) when they come back home to retire swiftly, there's still joy in the fight. Shout out to Thiago Silva for proving it's never just a farewell tour.
Advertisement
And the fans. Not the casuals who swap jerseys like yesterday's gym shirts, but the die-hards, the ones who live for their club, who travel across continents, and who chant through the scorching sun until their legs give out. They made me remember why I do this. Why I still love this game, even when so much of it feels lost.
James Horncastle: When the Oval Office became a mixed zone and Donald Trump spoke about the Middle East and then turned and asked a bemused set of Juventus players: 'Could a woman make your team, fellas?' A club nicknamed the Old Lady has rarely looked so uncomfortable amid stately locker-room talk.
Jordan Campbell: The tears of Joao Cancelo and Ruben Neves, Diogo Jota's best friend, as a minute's silence was held for the Liverpool forward. As the game started, both of them were visibly still trying to trick their brains into game mode, but how could they? It was heartbreaking to watch. In that moment, it showed that the melodrama that tends to come with football is exactly that.
Mark Carey: The pain of seeing current, and former, team-mates do their best to hold their emotions together during a moment's reflection for Diogo Jota is a memory that will not go away in a hurry. How they found the strength to think about kicking a football after recent events is beyond comprehension.
Oliver Kay: I agree with Mark. Not directly Club World Cup-related, but it was waking up in Atlanta to the tragic news about Diogo Jota and Andre Silva and then seeing and feeling what a profound effect that had on the whole tournament and the whole sport. It still doesn't seem real.
Jeff Rueter: Gianni Infantino and Juventus' appearance at the White House was particularly catastrophic coming a day before the U.S.'s air strikes in Iran, with reporters posing questions about Trump's plans while Infantino watched on. Mind you, Iran qualified for the 2026 World Cup in March. For an organization that went to great lengths to keep politics away from the last instalment in Qatar, it was a flagrant instance of hypocrisy.
Mario Cortegana: Real Madrid's painful semi-final defeat against PSG, in which the best thing for Los Blancos was the result (4-0). This thrashing has restored some worries inside and outside the team when it seemed that the arrival of Alonso had changed that.
Liam Twomey: Sadly I fear this is doomed to become the defining image of Infantino's inaugural expanded FIFA Club World Cup: a beaming President Trump keeping himself front and centre of Chelsea's trophy lift at MetLife Stadium, generating the most emphatic visual riposte possible to the notion that sport can ever be kept separate from politics.
Advertisement
Felipe Cardenas: Hard to argue against the politicization of the Club World Cup. It was blatant and completely unnecessary. I will say that seeing Jamal Musiala's leg break in person (even from a distance in the press tribune) was heartbreaking. In Qatar three years ago, Musiala was a 19-year-old phenom and arguably one of the tournament's best players. Now his injury has put his participation at the next World Cup at risk.
Asli Pelit: There is a creeping Americanization of football, no one asked for and no one needs, least of all at something like the Club World Cup which is supposedly happening to make casual fans love and understand the sport. We don't need player-by-player intros and we definitely don't need 'Let's get ready to Rumble' echoing across a football pitch. The beauty of this sport is in its existing rituals, its global soul, not in theatrics borrowed from sports that stop every 10 seconds for commercials. Keep the gimmicks out. Let football be football.
James Horncastle: Angel Di Maria. I still don't think enough is made of how important this guy is to Argentine football. He got the gold medal goal in the 2008 Olympic final, the only goal in the 2021 Copa America final and scored in the 2022 World Cup final. It was a privilege to watch him play his last games for a European team before heading home to Rosario Central.
Jordan Campbell: Since Fluminense winger Jhon Arias has gone from hipster to mainstream (and maybe Wolves) I shall avoid naming the Colombian. Ruben Neves' pinpoint passing and set-piece delivery was a joy to witness for Al Hilal, while Palmer is just so imaginative that he excites every time he gets on the ball. But, even after all these years, it was still Lionel Messi. The narrative that he is no longer an elite player is lazy. Of course he has faded but there were very few players who proved they are clearly above him in his ability to dominate a game. Playing alongside players way below his level, he carried Inter Miami and even against PSG he had a dozen moments where he showed why his brain works differently to everyone else.
Oliver Kay: I share Jordan's enduring love of watching Messi, as well as Palmer. But unlike Jordan, I'm not too cool to have been anything other than spellbound by Fluminense's Arias. What a player: so skilful, so creative, so clever but also so direct in what he does. I would love to see how he fares in Premier League if he does join Wolves, but I kind of love the fact that he's 27, at the peak of his powers, and still playing in South America.
Mark Carey: I enjoyed Arda Guler dropping into a deeper role and dictating Real Madrid's build-up from deep. Guler has struggled for regular minutes since moving to Spain, but was billed as an heir to Luka Modric by Ancelotti before he left the club. It looks like next season will be the biggest of the 20-year-old's career under Alonso.
Mario Cortegana: Gonzalo Garcia. Even for those of us who follow the Real Madrid academy, his emergence has been impressive. It's not normal for a kid from Castilla (Madrid's reserve team) who had only played 61 minutes this season under Ancelotti to have taken advantage of injuries to Kylian Mbappe and Endrick in this way, with four goals and an assist in six games. And his impact has gone beyond this very good data: we must highlight his defensive work, his reading of the game, the feeling he puts into each play…. The best summary of his tournament is that Alonso compared him to club legend Raul.
Advertisement
Jeff Rueter: Nottingham Forest fans should feel bullish about Igor Jesus's chances of acclimating to the Premier League. With Botafogo, the 24-year-old showed clever movement to pair with his immense physicality to win headers and create separation in the box. Having earned four caps for Brazil since debuting in October, he'll be determined to make the World Cup roster.
Felipe Cardenas: I thought that none of us were going to pick Arias. Well done, Oli. No one, and I mean no one, was able to take the ball off of the Colombian. His low center of gravity and apparent casual way of transporting the ball around the pitch is so impressive. However, I covered PSG multiple times during the tournament and came away as a fan of both Desire Doue and Bradley Barcola. Both players are street-ball type dribblers that any football fan would enjoy watching.
Liam Twomey: No player made a bigger impact on the business end of this Club World Cup than Joao Pedro. The Brazilian was on holiday when Chelsea signed him from Brighton & Hove Albion during the mid-tournament player registration window, but his holidays are clearly nowhere near as indulgent as mine. He arrived in prime shape and immediately transformed Chelsea's attack, providing a clinical edge to Enzo Maresca's possession play with two brilliant goals in the semi-final win over Fluminense and one more in the final against PSG. Given the riches on offer at this tournament, he has already repaid his transfer fee.
Asli Pelit: Ousmane Dembele. His football IQ and spatial understanding were remarkable. I don't know what happened to him at the final but until then, he was brilliant and a joy to watch.
James Horncastle: I'd expect everyone to say Boca, and with good reason. Bayern's captured some of the sentiment with their banner at the Auckland City game. 'Ten years Baur au Lac. World football is more poorly governed than before. Smash FIFA!' I'm going to go with the fans who actually turned up for the Mamelodi Sundowns-Ulsan game in Orlando. To be one of the 3,000 that felt like 300, now that's hardcore.
Jordan Campbell: Flamengo. It is difficult to decide between them, Palmeiras and Botafogo but, from what I witnessed, Flamengo showed why they have the biggest fan base in Brazil. They turned out in swathes and organised themselves at games so that it felt like a domestic setting with blocks of red generating the best buzz of the live games I witnessed. An honourable mention must go to the estimated 15,000 Saudis who were in Orlando to see Al Hilal beat Manchester City as they were seriously boisterous.
Oliver Kay: Urawa Red Diamonds' fans were amazing. I loved the constant singing, the bouncing up and down, and the overall commitment to supporting their team and enjoying the experience, thousands of miles from home, when they were losing every game. They even did that wonderfully Japanese thing of cleaning up the terraces after themselves. I had a nice chat with a couple of their fans in Charlotte. They'd bought tickets for a knockout game there in anticipation of winning the group. They agreed that was hilarious.
Mark Carey: The Brazilian fans have had such rave reviews, and I agree. I watched Palmeiras twice in the flesh, and their fans did not stop bouncing the whole game from behind the goal. When Paulinho scored an extra-time winner against Botafogo? Bedlam. Unlike anything I have seen in England.
Felipe Cardenas: Supporters for every Brazilian club really showed out during the tournament. I'll add River Plate's fans as well. Perhaps they weren't given the credit they feel they deserve. River played all three group matches on the West Coast of the U.S., which for River fans and some pundits in Argentina, was a slap in the face. 'How dare they put Boca in Miami and River in Seattle?', they argued. But still, Los Millonarios didn't make headlines with their traveling band of loyalists, but they were well supported in a part of the country that wasn't as accessible for their fans.
Advertisement
Mario Cortegana: From what I have been able to experience live, those of Real Madrid. Several players actually expressed that it was almost like playing at home. From what I have seen and heard on television, I would highlight the Argentines, above all, and the Brazilians.
Jeff Rueter: It's one thing to travel around the world to follow a tournament favourite. For fans who made the trip to catch the field's lesser-followed clubs, like the Mamelodi Sundowns-Ulsan match as well as those of Auckland City, it seemed like an unforgettable chance to see their teams play on a global stage.
Liam Twomey: Flamengo's supporters were the best I saw in person, both in terms of numbers and volume, and I was fortunate enough to see them twice. A word of acknowledgement for the fans of Esperance de Tunis, however, who brought their songs and their drums to Philadelphia and never allowed their spirit to be dampened even as Chelsea ruthlessly dispatched their team.
Asli Pelit: I spent most of the tournament with Fluminense and Palmeiras fans: pure passion, non-stop music, the kind of energy that makes you feel alive. But when it comes to sheer fandom, Boca fans in Miami and Los Millonarios out on the West Coast put everyone else to shame. You could feel it through the screen, even with DAZN's spotty coverage trying its best to ruin the vibe.
James Horncastle: I enjoyed a lot of the football at this tournament. It wasn't played at a pre-season pace. If it looked like it did at times that was a consequence of the heat. Manchester City-Al Hilal stands out. Mamelodi-Borussia Dortmund was great fun and there were some good 0-0s, notably Sergio Ramos' Monterrey against River Plate, which was studs up and guards down; a Street Fighter arcade.
Jordan Campbell: Manchester City 3-4 Al Hilal. It had everything. The Saudi side refusing to kick off until the Venezuelan referee (called Valenzuela) checked the VAR monitor (he didn't), a goalkeeping clinic from Yassine Bounou, Malcom becoming the world-class player many believed he would for half an hour and, after a late extra-time winner, a major upset. Don't forget the geopolitics, either. It was one of those rare games that once it burst into life, literally anything could have happened and it would not have been a surprise. Utter chaos.
Oliver Kay: The most enthralling game was Al Hilal's 4-3 victory over Manchester City, as others have said, but I also really enjoyed PSG's 2-0 win over Bayern in Atlanta. It was outstanding, lots of drama and high-quality performances on both sides. It wouldn't have looked out of place in the Champions League knock-out round — which, although Infantino won't like this, remains the gold standard for club football.
Advertisement
Mark Carey: Not just because I was lucky to see the game live, but PSG's dismantling of Real Madrid was nothing short of the perfect performance. Luis Enrique's side made Madrid look like a European minnow, bagging three goals before we had reached half an hour. A 4-0 victory was actually a mercy, as PSG took their foot off the gas in the second half in the scorching New Jersey heat.
Mario Cortegana: Although it could also be the PSG-Real Madrid, I'll take the Manchester City 3-4 Al Hilal. The result was a surprise, the game was a rollercoaster, there were so many goals and it went all the way to extra time. The reactions and the faces of Guardiola and his players also showed how much they cared.
Jeff Rueter: Botafogo's 1-0 upset of PSG and Flamengo's ensuing 3-1 win over Chelsea provided this tournament with its proof of concept that teams from beyond Europe could spring surprises. Botafogo's win saw Renato Paiva concoct a bold scheme, defending with an aggressively advancing defensive line to limit PSG's space. And, in true 'big club' fashion, Botafogo fired Paiva after a round of 16 exit. So it goes.
Felipe Cardenas: Aside from Musiala's horror injury, the PSG-Bayern clash was, as they say, a proper football match. Both sides were absolutely going for it, with the French champions admitting the day prior that revenge was on their minds. PSG had not forgotten a loss they suffered at the Allianz Arena in November of 2024 during the Champions League. Before over 65,000 people in Atlanta, this European battle was tactical, attacking and full of dramatic moments. PSG eliminated Bayern 2-0 with nine men. It was an incredible theatre.
Liam Twomey: At the risk of being skewed by the matches I attended, I'll go for Bayern's 4-2 win over Flamengo in Miami. Filipe Luis' side played the best football of any non-European team at this tournament and after a horrendous opening 10 minutes they really turned the screws on Bayern, who were rescued ultimately by the clinical finishing of Harry Kane.
Asli Pelit: Echoing Jeff, I loved how Flamengo and Botafogo beat Chelsea and PSG unexpectedly in the group stages. I love a good underdog story in football. Monterrey vs Inter Milan was also a good one.
James Horncastle: Better. Of course, it'll be better than this tournament. But it will also be disrupted, it'll be hot, expensive, knackering and the U.S. and its cities are so sprawling I think there will still be times when you ask yourself: is a major tournament going on here? I left the Club World Cup seeing cracks in the facade of America as the greatest place on earth to experience live events.
Advertisement
Mark Carey: Hot. You can improve things elsewhere — you can even have a bigger PR push to get more fans in the stadium — but you cannot change the weather conditions. In club football, established patterns of play means that players can adapt tactically to the conditions a little more, but internationally you are not afforded that same time to work on those ideas. Therefore, next summer could be quite an attritional tournament.
Jordan Campbell: Peripheral. I say that because while I think the football at the Club World Cup itself was a success, it just never seemed to be the centre of attention in any city. It didn't help that it was competing for attention with the Gold Cup, NFL, NBA and MLB but I'm not sure you can truly have a captive audience spread across three different countries. Major tournaments are supposed to feel like the centre of the universe for a few weeks . The World Cup is the biggest prize in the sports world but there were regular challenges in trying to find bars who knew the tournament was happening, or who were prepared to show it on one of their million screens. It could make the whole thing seem a little numbing next summer.
Oliver Kay: Big … and hot … and possibly chaotic. The past four weeks have barely scratched the surface of next summer's potential, but the World Cup will be a different matter. It will be spread out across three countries, but I think it will really resonate in the host cities, with so many more fans arriving from overseas. There'll be more pressure on airlines and public transport, that is for sure.
Mario Cortegana: There is plenty of room for improvement, though I have my doubts over how much will change. It is clear that the weather has been a very negative factor, as well as the quality of the grass (although I expected more serious injuries and thankfully there were few). Ticket sales, prices and the press facilities also left much to be desired.
Jeff Rueter: More 'business as usual' than spectacular. Don't get me wrong: a World Cup will always break away from the churn of the sport's routine, and there's no like-for-like comparison to be found against the Club World Cup. Still, there's a bit of big event fatigue settling in for ticket-buying fans, players, coaches and stadium staff. From the 2024 Copa América to this Club World Cup — plus the looming 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles — the world's biggest tournament just feels like the latest in a litany of biggest tournaments.
Felipe Cardenas: Overwhelming. The cross-country travel, 48 teams and their supporters, an aviation industry that's understaffed and under fire will all become significant factors. I agree with James that this Club World Cup, while described as a 2026 dress rehearsal, cemented the fact that the U.S. still has work to do as the host of a major football tournament. The Copa America last summer broke open the cracks in the infrastructure that Americans so often boast about.
Liam Twomey: Slower to gain momentum. Even in a Club World Cup group stage that sagged at times, the performances of the South American teams created some fun early intrigue. A 32-team tournament maintained some semblance of urgency; now imagine a format which requires an entire group stage to go from 48 to 32 teams. There will be more interest in next summer's World Cup, but more boredom early on too.
Advertisement
Asli Pelit: Here's my wish list for next year: More cooling stations around stadiums. If noon kickoffs are non-negotiable, then keeping fans hydrated and safe in 110-degree heat isn't optional. People need shade structures and water fountains. And while we're at it: simplify public transportation to the stadiums. No one should need a GPS, a prayer, and three train transfers just to get to a game.
James Horncastle: The participants will be late back, less rested and more injury-prone. People still haven't realised AFCON is in January and it clashes with the expanded Champions League. PSG aside, I wonder how many of the teams involved will win their domestic league.
Jordan Campbell: From speaking to performance and fitness coaches in the Premier League a few months back, those not working at a club competing at this tournament have thanked their lucky stars. They believe it is a logistical nightmare as a three-to-four week gap either side of the tournament does not allow enough time for proper recovery and a full pre-season, meaning it is likely that some players will come in undercooked and take time to get going or could be overcooked and trail off, potentially due to injuries, as the season wears on.
Oliver Kay: I honestly don't know yet because it's such an unknown. I felt pre-tournament that it could really undermine Chelsea, Manchester City, Real Madrid etc, because no sports scientist would recommend the kind of summer they have had. It might actually work in the opposite way and benefit in the short term, but I think the effects will be felt more in the medium term. Even if they battle on through to May, how many of these players will be in peak condition for the World Cup?
Mark Carey: Actually not that much. I do not agree with FIFA flogging players with too many games at all, but I don't think this summer's tournament will have a tangible impact on the outcome of next season. If there were one thing, it should put more onus on managers rotating their squads a little at the start of the campaign, but otherwise I think its influence will be negligible.
Mario Cortegana: Madrid, the Spanish club to go furthest, will have a three-week vacation, so I don't expect a big impact. I was expecting more in terms of injuries during the tournament, as it was stretching an already very demanding season by almost a month. I do think it could have more damage on clubs in leagues that start the competition earlier.
Jeff Rueter: To Mark's point, I'm very curious if it will be remembered more than a few months from now. Given its branding, one would think this should be a major pillar of the 2025 calendar year. But will Ballon d'Or voters really give outsized considerations to performances in this Club World Cup? Or will this be treated as little more than the most lavish preseason tournament in history for European clubs?
Liam Twomey: It's hard to imagine their Club World Cup exertions helping Chelsea from a physical perspective next season. They're going on holiday while all of their Premier League rivals build up the conditioning that is vital to sustain a 10-month campaign. On the other hand, the collective confidence this triumph — and particularly the manner of their win over PSG — will give everyone at Chelsea could be genuinely transformative.
Advertisement
Felipe Cardenas: Player welfare will remain a talking point and players, coaches, fans and pundits will refer to the Club World Cup as one reason the players may look fatigued in 2025-26. On the flip side, the competition did prepare teams for their trophy quests. When the Copa Libertadores and Champions League rolls around (and other domestic and international tournaments), perhaps we'll see more battle-tested personalities from teams who were in the competition this summer.
James Horncastle: Be less about Infantino, although I understand why this edition was about him. It was the first and it is his baby. So much of the focus was on him and whether or not the tournament worked. There were no other narratives to fall back on. In time, that will change as was the case with the World Cup through the 1930s and 1950s and the European Cup into the 1960s and 1970s.
Jordan Campbell: Lean into continental rivalry. It billed itself as 'best vs best' and gave many a stick to beat it with after a 10-0 in the second game but the competitiveness of this tournament showed that there is a concept worth pursuing. The South American pride coming up against the wealth of Europe was a strong narrative throughout with all the cultural and stylistic differences it brings. If the Saudi Pro League can provide a few of the Asian representatives in 2029 there should be a third pole capable of competing.
Oliver Kay: See revenue distributed in a way that genuinely benefits the game, rather than just the richest clubs in each region. Before the tournament, Infantino lamented how, in modern football, 'the elite is very concentrated in very few clubs, in very countries', which is certainly true. And yet more than $300million of an (absurd) $1billion prize fund will be split between Paris Saint-Germain, Chelsea, Real Madrid and Bayern Munich. If Infantino genuinely thinks this helps football's financial inequalities, rather than compounds them, then he hasn't learned much from his time at UEFA. If a huge prize pool was the only way to make it attractive to the biggest clubs, then what does that tell us about the tournament?
Mark Carey: Have better playing surfaces. It has been widely spoken about, but the bounce of the ball — or lack thereof — has been notable from the television coverage, never mind from the perspective of the players. Considering this is being pitched so favourably by Infantino, the very least you should expect in future is a pitch that is befitting of the elite level. This would be a major step forward.
Mario Cortegana: Selling this tournament as if everything has been rosy may have felt necessary to FIFA for the first edition, but for the next one I hope they leave that a little behind. I also hope that during these years they show real interest in improving the schedules to protect professionals and fans from the heat or the quality of the pitches.
Jeff Rueter: Have some sense about kick-off slots. Mid-afternoon games in the American summer looked unnecessarily gruelling. With apologies to my friends in Europe who could catch games in primetime, it did a disservice to players and fans alike.
Advertisement
Asli Pelit: I've got a long list of suggestions echoing my colleagues who touched upon my concerns above. But maybe the place to start is simply asking players and fans: do they even want this tournament to continue? Before expanding formats and squeezing in more fixtures, maybe ask whether we actually need yet another tournament.
Liam Twomey: Make player welfare a bigger consideration than maximising viewer numbers. It feels mildly miraculous that we reached the end of this tournament without a significant player health scare on the pitch, given the brutality of the heat inside many stadiums.
Felipe Cardenas: Never use Freed from Desire as the tournament's soundtrack ever again. I used to like that song.
(Header photo: XXX)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
24 minutes ago
- Yahoo
WNBA All-Star 2025 what to watch: Team Clark vs. Team Collier, CBA negotiations and the game around the game
The 2025 WNBA All-Star rosters are set, teams are drafted and coaches are swapped. All that's left is to play the game itself. The Saturday evening showcase (8:30 p.m. ET, ABC) between Team (Caitlin) Clark and Team (Napheesa) Collier is but one piece of the All-Star weekend puzzle, a fitting cap to a packed few days of events and anticipation. There's also the skills competition, the 3-point shootout, the parties, the festivals, the light-hearted trash talk and so much more. Here's what we have our eye on this weekend: Will Clark, Ionescu light it up … from the 4-point circle? Clark used her second All-Star draft pick on Sabrina Ionescu, a fellow former No. 1 overall pick who made her name sinking deep 3-pointers in college. They have two of the longest shooting ranges in the game and are likely to light it up from deep in the offense-heavy exhibition. That's a large reason Clark said she wanted to trade coaches, bringing on Ionescu's New York leader, Sandy Brondello. There could be a twist here, should we all be so lucky. The WNBA instituted a 4-point circle in 2022 and brought it back for the 2023 game, the last to use a captain-versus-captain format. The four circles — two on each end of the court — were placed 28 feet from the rim and counted if a player made any contact with the circle while attempting a shot. The teams combined for nine of them in the first half of the 2023 contest, led by Ionescu's three. Clark is averaging a league-high five attempts per game from between 25 and 29 feet and making a league-best 1.6 per game. She's made three between 32 and 37 feet, the same as the rest of the league combined. Ionescu is fourth at 3.9 attempts and tied for second by making, on average, 1.3. She made one between 32-37, as did All-Star teammate Aliyah Boston. And Satou Sabally, whom Clark drafted from the starters pool for size, is seventh in attempts (3.0) and makes (0.9). Team Collier's bench features two of the top five players to attempt from that deep in Kelsey Plum (3.9) and Rhyne Howard (3.1). Records ready to fall A player tied or broke the All-Star Game individual scoring record each of the past three seasons. Might that trend continue? In 2022, Plum tied the record of 30 points held by Maya Moore in the 2015 game. Plum played for Team (A'ja) Wilson against Team (Breanna) Stewart. A year later, it was Jewell Loyd scoring 31 points for Team Stewart in the same battle of captains. Plum scored 30 again for a three-way tie in second. And last year, Arike Ogunbowale dropped 34 points on USA Basketball in the Olympic year game. Breanna Stewart scored 31. Understandably, then, the previous two captain-led All-Star games featured record-breaking offensive performances. Team Stewart scored 143 points in 2023, and Team Wilson scored 134 in 2024. Clark is already tied for the second-most assists in the game. She had 10 a year ago, one shy of Sue Bird's 11 in 2017. Loyd holds the record for most 3s (10), and three players are tied for most rebounds at 14. More money, more vested interest Since players now know the cash bag in advance, and there are no Olympic Games to be mindful of, we'll see star-studded fields in the 3-point and skills competitions. Sabrina Ionescu will return to the 3-point field two years after setting a single-round WNBA and NBA record. Sonia Citron, the Mystics rookie, will also participate, and was spotted practicing shooting off a rack by using Kiki Iriafen's back. Caitlin Clark will compete in her home All-Star Game, despite her shooting slump this year. Allisha Gray is the reigning champion in both skills and 3-point entering her third All-Star appearance in as many seasons. She became the first to take home prize money committed by Aflac, totaling $55,000 for each winner. The WNBA awards $2,575 to each winner as outlined in the 2020 collective bargaining agreement. Aflac increased its commitment to equal that of the NBA, per its own CBA, of $60,000 for the 3-point competition and $55,000 for skills. More than just the game Veteran players praised the last few All-Star weekends for the increase in everything else outside of the game. Brands are hosting more parties and investing in their women's basketball athletes with activations and special fan events. The WNBA focused on its WNBA Live activation, a fan fest near the arena filled with activities and games. Players make various appearances throughout the weekend. Indianapolis will be no different. The city was awarded the exhibition about a year ago, which is earlier than normal for WNBA All-Star. The airport set up a basketball court in the entryway to welcome fans, while businesses around the city are holding events and specials that will surely make their way onto social media platforms. Lynx guards Courtney Williams and Natisha Hiedeman have already pledged a 72-hour stream of their 'Stud Budz' feed that regularly entertains fans online. 'The camera ain't stopping,' Williams said ahead of the July 1 Commissioner's Cup game in Minnesota. 'We got a phone, we got a battery pack, we got a wifi box. Thank ya. Camera is staying on. If there's certain rooms that they don't want us to be in, cool. We gonna sit outside with our camera and tell the people, they won't let us in that room. Just gonna vibe. It's gonna be a movie.' And it goes beyond basketball into a cross-cultural event. Pacers Sports & Entertainment and Hartbeat, the production company founded by Kevin Hart, will host Fever Fest ahead of the All-Star Game on the other side of downtown in the White River State Park. Cedric the Entertainer, Leslie Jones, The Kid Laroi and G-Eazy will all perform. Fever guard Sydney Colson will also make her comedy set debut. Rising tensions around CBA negotiations All-Star weekend is an opportunity unlike many others to celebrate the league. The summer exhibition includes all 13 teams in some way, while a large portion of the league's best players take the court and even more make appearances around the city. (The Connecticut Sun are the only team to not have an All-Star on this year's roster.) But those upbeat vibes will have an edge this year. The players' union and league will meet on Thursday to discuss the ongoing collective bargaining agreement (CBA) negotiations. Multiple players this week said they were not happy with the movement of those talks after opting out the day after the WNBA Finals concluded in October. 'It seems slow to me where we know this is coming and this has been building for a while,' Stewart said last week. 'We officially opted out last October. For our first response back to be now is … slow.' The weekend's events are a microcosm of the arguments each side brings to the table. The league and team owners are touting the investments they've made in the league to support its growth, including larger All-Star events and team-built practice facilities. Players see the revenue coming from that investment, and the overall growth of the league, and want a piece of it. The WNBPA's leadership includes Nneka Ogwumike (president), Plum (first vice president) and Stewart, Collier and Alysha Clark (VPs). How much will Unrivaled take over the WNBA's star-studded event? Collier sent a strong message wearing an Unrivaled T-shirt while drafting her first WNBA All-Star team as captain. She even doubled down, mentioning the league she co-founded with Stewart multiple times in the broadcast while drafting every Unrivaled teammate available to her. Her All-Star team features Unrivaled Owls teammates Allisha Gray, Skylar Diggins and Courtney Williams (also of the Lynx). Unrivaled will also have an activation in Indianapolis. Collier also drafted Ogwumike to her squad by saying on the broadcast she wanted 'madam president,' a reference to her WNBPA role. The players elected Ogwumike to her third term in December 2022. She started at the helm in 2016, earned re-election in 2019 and oversaw the 2020 CBA the players opted out of last fall.
Yahoo
24 minutes ago
- Yahoo
C.J. Gardner-Johnson says Eagles traded him because they are 'scared of a competitor'
C.J. Gardner-Johnson was too competitive and that's why he was dealt two months after helping the Philadelphia Eagles win Super Bowl LIX, the veteran safety said this week. 'Scared of a competitor,' Gardner-Johnson told The Pivot podcast. 'Simple as that. ... You can't program a dawg." Gardner-Johnson, 27, went on to say he didn't feel support from the Eagles' coaching staff after he was ejected from a Week 16 game against the Washington Commanders. He also felt unfairly blamed for a scrum during practice. 'We had a little scrum at practice,' he said. 'Nothing, just offense vs. defense, but who's the culprit of it? Me, I guess, because we're competing. Well, you tell me the period is live. You're telling us not to compete during a live period, but it's a live period and we're getting ready for a playoff game?' The mixed messages Gardner-Johnson received from coaches and executives rubbed him the wrong way. 'You want me to be a leader and outspoken but then you want me to sit back,' he said. 'There's nowhere been a locker room where I had a single issue with a teammate.' After playing in Philadelphia in 2022, Gardner-Johnson returned to the Eagles in March 2024 after signing a three-year, $27 million deal. He was dealt in March to the Houston Texans for offensive lineman Kenyon Green due to financial reasons, according to general manager Howie Roseman. In June, during a livestream on Instagram, Gardner-Johnson read a comment that said, "You won't see another ring without Philly," to which he replied, "That's crazy. They probably won't see one without me. The f*** you talking about. You saw what happened when I left. I'm popping now. F*** you talking about, I'm glad I'm in Texas. They say everything is better in Texas." Gardner-Johnson walked back those comments this week and said he would apologize to any Eagles player if approached about what he said during the team's Super Bowl ring ceremony this week. "It's a disrespect to Jalen Carter, A.J. Brown — I can name all those guys on that team — Lane Johnson," Gardner-Johnson said. "Because Lane is my big vet and Lane would tell me, 'Hey, Chaunce, I got your back, but when you do too much, I don't got your back. And that's one of those moments that's too much.' Because it's taken away from his career. He done it. He done it before me. Apologizing to the guys in Philly, I got nothing against them. And if they win six more rings without me, they deserve it, because that's the type of players they are."
Yahoo
24 minutes ago
- Yahoo
The Club Is Yours With EA SPORTS FC™ 26: Jude Bellingham and Jamal Musiala Revealed as Cover Stars of EA SPORTS FC'S Most Community-Driven Title
First look at EA SPORTS FC 26 gameplay revealed in new trailer, showcasing innovations powered by community feedback, available worldwide on September 26 REDWOOD CITY, Calif., July 16, 2025--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Today, Electronic Arts Inc. (NASDAQ: EA) announced generational talents Jude Bellingham and Jamal Musiala as the cover athletes for EA SPORTS FC™ 26 and EA SPORTS FC Mobile, while also revealing a first-look at EA SPORTS FC 26 gameplay, ahead of its worldwide launch on September 26, 2025. WATCH: EA SPORTS FC 26 REVEAL TRAILER Bellingham and Musiala join Zlatan Ibrahimović, who was unveiled as the cover star for EA SPORTS FC 26 Ultimate Edition earlier this week, to usher in a new chapter for EA SPORTS FC that's powered by FC community feedback. Bellingham returns to the cover of EA SPORTS FC, following his debut last year, and is joined by former youth teammate Musiala, who stars as the first FC Bayern Munich player to ever feature on a global EA SPORTS FC cover. "It's really nice to share this moment with Jamal, as a reflection of how far we've come. I remember our times rooming together in the England Youth team, we'd play the game all the time," said Real Madrid midfielder Jude Bellingham. "Where I'm from, everyone knows the game, everyone plays it and talks about it so much. I'm grateful to be given the opportunity to be on the cover again." "When I found out I'd be on the cover of FC, it was such a crazy feeling. I thought, how could I tell my little brother? He's a big fan of the game, so this will be a nice surprise for him," said Bayern Munich star Jamal Musiala. "It's something I always wanted growing up and it's such a big part of football culture. Who knows, maybe I can still beat Jude at FC." EA SPORTS FC 26 IS SHAPED BY YOUR FEEDBACK Play your way with new game-wide innovations and an overhauled gameplay experience, powered by feedback from the FC Community, including: Refined Gameplay Fundamentals: EA SPORTS FC 26 delivers a variety of game-wide changes, including improved dribbling responsiveness and fluidity, re-tuned run curves for more explosive player movement, all new reinforcement-learning-driven goalkeeper positioning, close-body volumetric animations, new, more versatile Playstyles and Player Roles, and much more. Authentic & Competitive Gameplay Presets: The new Competitive Gameplay preset—driven by refined fundamentals, added consistency, and enhanced responsiveness—is tailor-made for play in Football Ultimate Team™ and Clubs, while the Authentic Gameplay preset delivers the most true-to-football experience ever in Career. Experience Manager Career Like Never Before: Step into the exhilarating world of Manager Live, a new dimension added to the mode through a live hub bursting with ever-changing variable-length Challenges. Alongside Original Career and Live Start Points, Manager Live hosts regularly released scenarios throughout the new season curated around the real world of football, giving players the next thing to go after in their careers. Archetypes: A brand-new feature to FC 26, Archetypes has been inspired by the greats of the game, introducing new classes to Clubs and Player Career, bringing more individuality to players. Develop your abilities by upgrading attributes and unlocking Archetype Perks to give your player a distinct feel on the pitch. New Live Events and Tournament Modes: In FC 26, fans will be able to put their dream squads to the test in Football Ultimate Team with new Live Events and Tournament modes, as well as a refreshed Rivals and Champs experience. Unrivalled Authenticity: EA SPORTS is proud to bring unrivalled real-game authenticity in EA SPORTS FC 26 with over 20,000 athletes, across 750+ clubs & national teams, playing in more than 120 stadiums and 35+ leagues, powered by the support of more than 300 global football partners. "FC 26 reflects our ongoing commitment to building this game with and for our community," said John Shepherd, VP & GM, EA SPORTS FC. "We are players too, and that shared passion drives everything we do. This year brings an overhauled gameplay experience, new Tournaments and Live Events in FUT, all-new Archetype customization in Clubs, and a Career Mode that comes alive through evolving Challenges. We can't wait for players to feel the difference this September and help shape the future of FC." To further deepen its community-first approach, EA SPORTS has launched FC Feedback: a new initiative that empowers players to contribute directly to the evolution of EA SPORTS FC, building on a year of features in FC 26 informed by community input. This brings together multiple ways players can share input, including the Player Feedback Portal, community-led Design Councils, the FC Discord Server, Forums, and social media. In celebration of the cover reveal, fans who play EA SPORTS FC Mobile between July 17-31 will receive a special 102 OVR Jude Bellingham Player Item and 102 OVR Jamal Musiala Player Item✝. July 17 will also see Zlatan Ibrahimović make his return to FC Mobile as an ICON, letting players recruit him to their club, while also being able to relive key moments from his legendary career in ICON Chronicles. With the Rivals Update, EA SPORTS FC Mobile recently introduced gameplay improvements to Ground Passing and VS Attack informed by user feedback, resulting in a more authentic and consistent competitive experience. PRE-ORDER EA SPORTS FC 26 TODAY Pre-orders are now available for EA SPORTS FC 26, which will launch on PlayStation®5, PlayStation®4, Xbox Series X|S, Xbox One, PC, Amazon Luna, Nintendo Switch, and Nintendo Switch 2. EA SPORTS FC 26 will be available worldwide to play on September 26, 2025, with early access through the Ultimate Edition beginning September 19, 2025*. EA Play** members, the Club is Yours in EA SPORTS FC™ 26 with the EA Play 10-hour early access trial, starting September 19, 2025. Members also score member rewards including monthly Ultimate Team™ Draft Tokens and seasonal club rewards, as well as receive 10% off EA digital content including pre-orders, game downloads, FC Points, and DLC. For more information on EA Play please visit For more information on EA SPORTS FC 26, please visit and ensure you're following our global social channels for all the latest upcoming news and announcements for EA SPORTS FC. *Conditions and restrictions apply. Offers may not be available on all platforms and/or all territories. See for details.✝Conditions and restrictions apply. See for details.**Conditions, limitations and exclusions apply. See EA Play Terms for details. PRESS ASSETS ARE AVAILABLE AT About Electronic Arts Electronic Arts (NASDAQ: EA) is a global leader in digital interactive entertainment. The Company develops and delivers games, content and online services for Internet-connected consoles, mobile devices and personal computers. In fiscal year 2025, EA posted GAAP net revenue of approximately $7.5 billion. Headquartered in Redwood City, California, EA is recognized for a portfolio of critically acclaimed, high-quality brands such as EA SPORTS FC™, Battlefield™, Apex Legends™, The Sims™, EA SPORTS™ Madden NFL, EA SPORTS™ College Football, Need for Speed™, Dragon Age™, Titanfall™, Plants vs. Zombies™ and EA SPORTS F1®. More information about EA is available at EA, EA SPORTS, EA SPORTS FC, Battlefield, Need for Speed, Apex Legends, The Sims, Dragon Age, Titanfall, and Plants vs. Zombies are trademarks of Electronic Arts Inc. John Madden, NFL, and F1 are the property of their respective owners and used with permission. Category: EA Sports View source version on Contacts EA SPORTS FC NewsroomFCNewsroom@ Se produjo un error al recuperar la información Inicia sesión para acceder a tu portafolio Se produjo un error al recuperar la información Se produjo un error al recuperar la información Se produjo un error al recuperar la información Se produjo un error al recuperar la información