Inter Milan strike late to progress with win over River Plate
Inter Milan scored twice in the last 18 minutes to beat River Plate 2-0 on Wednesday night and progress to the knockout stage of the Club World Cup as Group E winners and send the Argentines home.
Teenager Francesco Esposito broke the deadlock in the match played in the early hours of Thursday morning in South Africa, soon after River had been reduced to 10 men by the dismissal of Lucas Martinez Quarta with Alessandro Bastoni adding the second in stoppage time.
The 20-time Italian champions will face Brazilian club Fluminense in the last 16 in Charlotte on Monday with Monterrey, who beat Urawa Red Diamonds 4-0, going through in second place a point ahead of River.
An intense match turned nasty after Bastoni's goal with River's Gonzalo Montiel also sent off for two yellow cards during a series of melees which continued as the players left the field under a shower of missiles from the crowd.
'We have the job done. We qualify for the further stage of this competition. We are pleased with that,' said Inter coach Cristian Chivu.
'The game was very tough for us in the first half, River had a lot of aggression, a lot of intensity. In the second half, we controlled the game a little bit better and ... after the red card it was much easier for us.'
Martinez Quarta's exit for bringing down Henrikh Mkhitaryan as the last defender turned the match with the first Inter goal coming seven minutes later.
Esposito took a neat touch on Petar Sucic's pass to get onto his right foot before turning and lashing the ball into the net.
River were spent by the time Bastoni skipped through the tiring defence to add Inter's second with a low left-foot strike five minutes into stoppage time.
The packed ranks of River fans at Lumen Field ensured a rocking atmosphere from the start and they were treated to a full-blooded clash with plenty of endeavour but no goals until the last quarter.
River's best moves came through Real Madrid-bound Franco Mastantuono, but the 17-year-old midfielder only managed to get one of his handful of shots on target.
Esposito also had a couple of good chances to open the scoring and his skipper Lautaro Martinez was particularly profligate, hitting the post with the best of his host of openings.
River's Facundo Colidio headed the ball straight at Inter keeper Yann Sommer with a gilt-edged chance in the 64th minute but the forward was substituted in a tactical rejig a minute later after Martinez Quarta had been sent off.
In the concurrent match, Monterrey booked a spot in the knockout rounds a 4-0 thumping of Japan's Urawa Red Diamonds at the Rose Bowl to claim second place in Group E and set up a last 16 meeting with Borussia Dortmund.
Three goals in eight first-half minutes sent the Mexican side on their way to victory, with stunning long-range strikes from Nelson Deossa and Jesus Corona coming either side of German Berterame's cool finish.
Deossa put Monterrey in front on the half-hour mark with a swerving shot from 35 yards and Berterame doubled the advantage four minutes later.
Corona added the third with the pick of the goals from distance in the 38th minute before Berterame scored the fourth in second-half stoppage time.
The win, coupled with Inter's 2-0 victory over River, means Monterrey finish second and will take on Dortmund in Atlanta on Tuesday.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The South African
43 minutes ago
- The South African
Austrian Grand Prix: FINAL grid positions after ALL driver penalties
Lando Norris delivered a superb final flying lap in his McLaren on Saturday to end Max Verstappen's run of domination in qualifying at the Red Bull Ring by claiming pole position for the Austrian Grand Prix. The race is due to start at 15:00 (SA time). The 25-year-old Briton clocked an outstanding lap in one minute and 3.971 seconds to outpace nearest rival Charles Leclerc of Ferrari by 0.521 seconds, with McLaren team-mate and championship leader Oscar Piastri third. Norris, who is 22 points behind Piastri in the drivers' title race, erased any hangover from his collision with Piastri in Canada two weeks ago with a thrilling demonstration of his speed and talent. Verstappen had taken pole position at the Red Bull-owned circuit in the Styrian Alps for the last five F1 races before Norris succeeded and seized his first pole in Austria, his third of the season and 12th of his career. Team-mate Piastri was disappointed and frustrated. 'I had (Pierre) Gasly spin at the first corner so I didn't even open my second lap. Lando's been very quick all weekend so it would have been a tough challenge, but we had the pace to be on the front row. 'We can still have a good race from there and we are not here to come home third.' Leclerc's team-mate and seven-time champion Lewis Hamilton was an encouraging fourth ahead of Mercedes' George Russell, Liam Lawson of Racing Bulls, four-time champion Verstappen of Red Bull and Gabriel Bortoleto of Sauber. Italian rookie Kimi Antonelli was ninth in the second Mercedes and Gasly 10th. Front row Lando Norris (GBR/McLaren) Charles Leclerc (MON/Ferrari) 2nd row Oscar Piastri (AUS/McLaren) Lewis Hamilton (GBR/Ferrari) 3rd row George Russell (GBR/Mercedes) Liam Lawson (NZL/RB) 4th row Max Verstappen (NED/Red Bull) Gabriel Bortoleto (BRA/Sauber) 5th row Kimi Antonelli (ITA/Mercedes) Pierre Gasly (FRA/Alpine) 6th row Fernando Alonso (ESP/Aston Martin) Alex Albon (THA/Williams) 7th row Isack Hadjar (FRA/RB) Franco Colapinto (ARG/Alpine) 8th row Oliver Bearman (GBR/Haas) Lance Stroll (CAN/Aston Martin) 9th row Esteban Ocon (FRA/Haas) Yuki Tsunoda (JPN/Red Bull) 10th row Carlos Sainz (ESP/Williams) Nico Hulkenberg (GER/Sauber) Drivers Rank Driver Points 1 Oscar Piastri 198 2 Lando Norris 176 3 Max Verstappen 155 4 George Russell 136 5 Charles Leclerc 104 6 Lewis Hamilton 79 7 Kimi Antonelli 63 8 Alex Albon 42 9 Esteban Ocon 22 10 Isack Hadjar 21 11 Nico Hulkenberg 20 12 Lance Stroll 14 13 Carlos Sainz 13 14 Pierre Gasly 11 15 Yuki Tsunoda 10 16 Fernando Alonso 8 17 Oliver Bearman 6 18 Liam Lawson 4 19 Gabriel Bortoleto 0 20 Franco Colapinto 0 21 Jack Doohan 0 Rank Constructor Points 1 McLaren 374 2 Mercedes 199 3 Ferrari 183 4 Red Bull 162 5 Williams 55 6 Haas 28 7 Racing Bulls 28 8 Aston Martin 22 9 Sauber 20 10 Alpine 11 Let us know by leaving a comment below, or send a WhatsApp to 060 011 021 1 Subscribe to The South African website's newsletters and follow us on WhatsApp, Facebook, X and Bluesky for the latest news.


The South African
an hour ago
- The South African
Club World Cup: Lionel Messi's Inter Miami dream of shocking PSG
Javier Mascherano insists his Inter Miami side can shock European champions Paris Saint-Germain in the Club World Cup last 16 on Sunday, despite admitting they are levels below the French giants. Kick-off is at 18:00 (SA time). With Argentine great Lionel Messi leading the charge, Miami surprised in the group stage as they progressed but facing newly-crowned Champions League winners PSG in Atlanta is a 'huge challenge' in the coach's eyes. 'We will try to be up to the standard, we will try to do things in the best way we can, and why can't be dream of being able to shock them?' Mascherano told a news conference on Saturday. 'My message (to the players) is that this is not over yet, there is a game to be played. We know we are taking on an opponent of unique power, one of the best in the world, but this is football. 'Tomorrow, why not try to play the best game possible, a near-perfect game for us, and have the chance of competing and some chance of going through.' Despite PSG being heavy favourites, Mascherano said his side cannot be written off before a ball is kicked at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium. 'We are not naive, we know that the feeling around the game is we are the weaker team, that's clear,' continued Mascherano. 'That doesn't mean they can kill us in advance. We will fight, that's what it's about. I think the beautiful thing about the game tomorrow is that we have earned the right to play it.' The coach said he was glad 38-year-old playmaker Messi played for Inter Miami now, rather than PSG. 'Everything around Leo generates a lot of interest, we Argentines know that after the World Cup (win in 2022) and all of that,' said Mascherano. 'The most important thing is that Leo is well and that Leo plays for us. I think that helps keep us calmer than anything. And after that, it's a game of football.' Mascherano was also looking forward to meeting PSG boss Luis Enrique, who coached him, as well as Inter Miami players Messi, Sergio Busquets, Luis Suarez and Jordi Alba at Barcelona, all of them winning the treble together in 2015. 'Luis is one of the best coaches I've had in my career, I have a good personal relationship with him,' said Mascherano. 'He was one of those who convinced me to stay at Barca back in that era… he's a great coach who has shown it with Barcelona, now in Paris, and also in the Spanish national team… 'It's also good to test yourself against this type of coach, this type of team, it's a challenge.' Inter Miami earned a surprise win against Portuguese side Porto on their way to qualifying second from Group A behind Palmeiras. Federico Redondo, son of former Real Madrid midfielder Fernando Redondo, accepted his team will have to defend well to stand any chance of securing a result against the French champions. 'The reality is they are the best team in the world, and when you have a team of that level, they dominate you and oblige you to defend more,' said the 22-year-old Argentine. Redondo said his father had not given him any special advice for the clash against Champions League winners PSG. '(He said) what he always does, that I should enjoy it, and that we keep doing what we've been doing, that we've had three great games,' added Redondo. Let us know by leaving a comment below, or send a WhatsApp to 060 011 021 1 Subscribe to The South African website's newsletters and follow us on WhatsApp, Facebook, X and Bluesky for the latest news.

IOL News
an hour ago
- IOL News
Jurgen Klopp slams FIFA Club World Cup as football's worst idea
Klopp no fan of Club World Cup Former Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp has criticised the ongoing FIFA Club World Cup. Photo: AFP Image: AFP Former Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp has labelled the ongoing FIFA Club World Cup in the United States 'football's worst idea.' The revamped Club World Cup, featuring 32 teams from around the world, kicked off in Miami on June 14 and will conclude on July 13 at the MetLife Stadium in New Jersey. For some teams, it will drastically reduce the amount of rest time between seasons. According to reports, FIFPro recommends that all professional footballers be given a mandatory eight-week break between seasons, with four weeks of that being a complete rest period and four weeks dedicated to retraining. Due to the Club World Cup, clubs like Chelsea might have to reduce their players' time off to just three weeks. And in South Africa, while players from Orlando Pirates and Kaizer Chiefs have resumed pre-season training, Mamelodi Sundowns have just started their off-season break, and are at risk of falling behind in preparing for the next campaign. Get your news on the go, click here to join the IOL News WhatsApp channel. Video Player is loading. Play Video Play Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration -:- Loaded : 0% Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. Advertisement Next Stay Close ✕ Ad loading In an interview with German newspaper Welt am Sonntag, the former Liverpool boss made his feelings known about the tournament. "It's all about the game and not the surrounding events – and that's why the Club World Cup is the worst idea ever implemented in football in this regard," Klopp said. "People who have never had or do not have anything to do with day-to-day business anymore are coming up with something… There is insane money for participating, but it's also not for every club. "Last year it was the Copa [America] and the European Championship, this year it's the Club World Cup, and next year the World Cup. That means no real recovery for the players involved, neither physically nor mentally." He continued: "I have serious fears that players will suffer injuries they've never had before next season. If not next season, then it will happen at the World Cup or afterwards. "We constantly expect the players to go into every game as if it is their last. We tell them that 70 or 75 times a year. But it can't go on like this. "We have to make sure they have breaks, because if they don't get them, they won't be able to deliver top performances – and if they can't achieve that anymore, the entire product loses value." AFP