logo
Cash Rain – How Much Inter Milan Earned From 2025 FIFA Club World Cup

Cash Rain – How Much Inter Milan Earned From 2025 FIFA Club World Cup

Yahoo4 days ago
Cash Rain – How Much Inter Milan Earned From 2025 FIFA Club World Cup
Despite failing to make it out of the Round of 16, Inter Milan made substantial profit from their 2025 FIFA Club World Cup appearance.
Per FCInterNews, the Nerazzurri returned home with around €31.5 million in prize money, even though they didn't last for long.
Advertisement
Inter headed into the tournament keen to make amends for the Champions League heartbreak a month ago.
Indeed, coached by new boss Cristian Chivu, they had hoped to embark on a new winning cycle.
However, a shock loss to Fluminense in the first knockout round sent the Serie A runners-up packing.
Inter Milan Made €31.5m from 2025 FIFA Club World Cup
VERONA, ITALY – NOVEMBER 23: Giuseppe Marotta of FC Internazionale during the Serie A match between Verona and FC Internazionale at Stadio Marcantonio Bentegodi on November 23, 2024 in Verona, Italy. (Photo by)
Though things didn't go as planned, Inter returned from North America richer for around €31.5m.
Given Beppe Marotta's effort to overhaul the squad, that's a significant financial boost.
While the regret for missing out on the quarter-finals still haunts Chivu, Inter can use the funds to reinforce their ranks.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Entire team pays tribute to Diogo Jota with brilliant celebration
Entire team pays tribute to Diogo Jota with brilliant celebration

Yahoo

time25 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Entire team pays tribute to Diogo Jota with brilliant celebration

The tributes to Diogo Jota continue to roll in. Now an entire team has paid homage. The football world has done what it can to recognise Diogo Jota over the last few days. His tragic death has rocked absolutely everybody, even those with no real connection to him. Advertisement But it's become increasingly clear that few were as loved and respected as Jota. He appears to have been about as humble and down to earth as an elite footballer possibly can be. That, of course, makes this all look even more senseless. It's a genuine tragedy and one that will take even those with as small as a link as supporting his football team years to process. We may never really process it, in truth. It's all still so surreal and unbearably sad. Those playing at the moment, though, are looking to celebrate and pay tribute to Jota as best they can. We've seen it at the Club World Cup and now in MLS, too. Advertisement Nashville SC pay Diogo Jota tribute Nashville SC played out a dramatic win on Saturday. Down to 10 men against Philadelphia, they won a 101st-minute penalty. Up stepped Hany Mukhtar to convert and win the match. Even with all that emotion, though, Mukhtar composed himself after scoring to tell every teammate to drop to the ground and do Jota's video game celebration. That's become the trademark of Jota and something that certainly non-Liverpool fans remember him for. The most recognisable way to show some love to the man. Ousmane Dembélé did similar after scoring for Paris Saint-Germain at the FIFA Club World Cup and we imagine it's one that will be done a lot more over the next season. And with good reason - it's very Jota. Advertisement This was all wonderful to see, though. We'll continue to point out the tributes to Jota made across football because seeing him recognised over the world is honestly the only nice thing to come out of all of this. He deserves all the love.

Contenders or pretenders?
Contenders or pretenders?

Yahoo

time28 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Contenders or pretenders?

Two weeks ago, for the first time in her career, Breanna Stewart lost to the Seattle Storm, as her depleted New York Liberty, without three starters in Jonquel Jones (ankle), Sabrina Ionescu (neck) and Leonie Fiebich (EuroBasket), failed to muster enough against her former team. Since then, things have remained shaky for the defending champs. The game in Seattle was a second-straight loss, and they're 2-2 in their subsequent four games. Ionescu's absence was limited to one game, but she's mostly struggled to find her stroke since returning to the court. She finally turned in a Sab-level stat line in New York's Thursday win over the Los Angeles Sparks. The victory against LA also was Fiebich's first game back, while Jones is still sidelined. Advertisement All the while, Natasha Cloud's stellar start the season also stalled. In the month of June, she put up a single-digit scoring average as she shot 36.8 percent from the field and 24.2 percent from 3. (But as with Ionescu, the Sparks might have helped Cloud solve her struggles, as she scored a season-high 23 points.) Fill-in starters Nyara Sabally, Rebekah Gardner and Kennedy Burke have been serviceable, but not particularly impactful, low-usage options. That's left a large burden on Stewart, something she's assumed with her typically unfazed style. Even if she's still coming up empty from behind the arc, shooting under 21 percent from 3, she's finishing 50 percent of her overall shots, an indication of how automatic she's been on 2-pointers as she averages 20.5 points per game. Except for a slight dip in her rebounding, her numbers are in line with her career averages. That Stewart is still one of the best players in the world is a positive sign for the Liberty's repeat chances. The team's recent struggles easily can be explained away as absence-induced tumult. The eventual return of Jones, with whom the Liberty are undefeated when she plays at least 10 minutes, should get the team back on their championship course due to her status as the most complete—and completely unguardable—true center in the W. Presumably, both Ionescu and Cloud will shoot better, Fiebich will fully adjust to being back in the States and all will be well. Live, laugh, love, Liberty. Or, does such a presumption ignore real problems? Will the contender switch flip back on when the Liberty are at full-strength? Or, will we discover that their back-to-back prospects have dimmed? Advertisement The Storm's status as a title threat is certainly specious. At times, they look like a championship-caliber team, with a top-notch defense that turns into efficient, transition offense. Conversely, an absence of offensive firepower that is exacerbated by their low-volume 3-point shooting, along with a lack of reliable depth, raises questions about their ability to advance out of the first round of the playoffs for the first time in three seasons. There's no question, however, about the continued excellence of Nneka Ogwumike. Like Stewart for the Liberty, she remains a tide-raising superstar, one who is fresh off reaching No. 7 on the WNBA's all-time scoring list. One of her best games of the seasons came against New York, when she scored 26 points while shooting better than 70 percent from the field. On Sunday, Ogwumike's Storm meet Stewart's Liberty for a nationally-televised afternoon date in Brooklyn (1 p.m. ET, CBS). Quite possibly, it could prove to be a WNBA Finals preview. Or, it could produce an outcome that exposes the deficiencies of one of these championship hopefuls. Here's a key question for Sunday's other two WNBA games: Advertisement Can the Aces get some Vitamin D in CT? Can the Las Vegas Aces get back to .500? The Las Vegas Aces are in a dark place and in need of some sunlight. Or, maybe just an opportunity to light up the Connecticut Sun? A game against the two-win Sun should, at least temporarily, present an opportunity for A'ja Wilson's supporting cast to rediscover their games. Yes, it will be against Connecticut, but a 25-point game from Jewell Loyd, a points and assists double-double from Chelsea Gray, a efficient scoring afternoon from Jackie Young and some spark-plug moments from new addition NaLyssa Smith would be encouraging. So far this season, the Aces' only two wins of 20 or more points, a formerly routine occurrence for the the two-time champs, have come against the Sun. Can they make it three on Sunday (4 p.m. ET, League Pass)? Advertisement Can Angel (again) slow Phee? Napheesa Collier is guarded by Angel Reese during a preseason game. Is Angel Reese the Napheesa Collier stopper? Reese has successfully induced Collier, a queen of efficiency, into some of her most inefficient outings. Last season, the Minnesota Lynx were 3-0 against the Chicago Sky, but, in the two games in which Reese played, Phee shot under 40 percent from the field, including a 6-for-19 effort. Then, there was Unrivaled, where Reese's Rose, the eventual inaugural champs, upset Collier's then-undefeated Lunar Owls, holding Collier, who would be named Unrivaled MVP, to a season-low 16 points on 6-for-19 shooting, her poorest shooting performance of the season. In the third matchup between Rose and Owls, Collier again scored just 16 points and experienced her second-worst shooting night. Angel, of course, was Unrivaled's Defensive Player of the Year. Advertisement The now-WNBA sophomore has the length to bother the MVP favorite, in addition to the athleticism to contain Collier and her fancy footwork. And despite some spicy on-court moments, the two players have showered each other with support and respect, establishing the kind of organic, good-natured rivalry the WNBA should promote. With Reese's history of causing trouble for Collier, on top of the fact that the Lynx will be on a back-to-back, the Sky might have a chance of pulling off the upset (7 p.m. ET, League Pass). Game information Seattle Storm (11-7) vs. New York Liberty (12-5) When: Sunday, July 6 at 1 p.m. ET Where: Barclays Center in Brooklyn, NY How to watch: CBS Las Vegas Aces (8-9) vs. Connecticut Sun (2-15) When: Sunday, July 6 at 4 p.m. ET Where: Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, CT How to watch: WNBA League Pass Advertisement Chicago Sky (5-11) vs. Minnesota Lynx (16-2) When: Sunday, July 6 at 7 p.m. ET Where: Target Center in Minneapolis, MN How to watch: WNBA League Pass More from

Senegal brush DR Congo aside at Wafcon
Senegal brush DR Congo aside at Wafcon

Yahoo

time30 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Senegal brush DR Congo aside at Wafcon

Mama Diop helped Senegal reach the quarter-finals of the 2022 edition of Wafcon [Getty Images] Senegal produced a first-half demolition of DR Congo to register a comfortable 4-0 win and move top of Group A at the 2024 Women's Africa Cup of Nations (Wafcon) in Morocco. Played in searing heat in Mohammedia, the only early afternoon kick-off of the tournament was effectively over as a contest even before the first cooling break. Advertisement Forwards Mama Diop and Ngeunar Ndiaye both scored two goals before half-time as the powerful Lionesses of Teranga frontline ripped into a fragile and disorganised rearguard. The first three goals, all netted inside the opening 22 minutes, all came from simple long balls in behind the DR Congo defence. The West Africans cruised through a goalless second half in which their opponents were marginally more competitive, with both sides hitting the woodwork. Following the 2-2 draw between Morocco and Zambia in Saturday's opening fixture, Senegal have the chance to book a place in the quarter-finals against the Zambians back in Mohammedia on Wednesday (16:00 GMT). Advertisement On the same day DR Congo will hope to improve as they face the hosts in Rabat (19:00 GMT).

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store