logo
PSG vs Inter Miami predictions: Club World Cup tips and odds

PSG vs Inter Miami predictions: Club World Cup tips and odds

Telegrapha day ago

Our tipster has three selections for Sunday's Club World Cup round-of-16 tie between PSG and Inter Miami at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, Georgia (kick-off, 5pm BST). We think the Parisian club will brush aside Inter Miami with ease.
PSG vs Inter Miami tips
PSG -2 handicap @ 11/8 with Sky Bet
Inter Miami 12+ fouls committed @ 5/4 with Sky Bet
Khvicha Kvaratskhelia to score @ 1/1 with Sky Bet
Odds courtesy of Sky Bet. Correct at the time of publication and subject to change.
Already signed up to Sky Bet? Take a look at some more free bets from the best betting sites, reviewed by our experts.
PSG to get into their stride
PSG have looked sluggish in their last two outings, suffering a shock 1–0 defeat against Botafogo before edging past Seattle Sounders 2-0. But punters should expect them to comfortably secure their place in the quarter-finals, setting up a potential clash with German champions Bayern Munich.
To say that Inter Miami have trouble keeping clean sheets is an understatement, with just one in their last 13 matches. They have only conceded three goals in three games at the Club World Cup, but have allowed 18 shots on target in that time in arguably the weakest group at the tournament.
The French treble-winners desperately need to show some of the fire they displayed in thrashing Atletico Madrid 4-0 – and this is their chance. They have let in just one goal in their last five games, while they found the net at least three times in five successive games prior to the Botafogo defeat.
It looks set up to be an incredibly one-sided affair in Atlanta, so take PSG to lay down a marker and win by three or more goals.
Miami may rack up foul count
Despite having no less than 50 per cent of the ball in all of their group stage matches, Inter Miami still managed to commit an average of 10 fouls per game. That figure will surely rise against a more dominant PSG side.
The Parisians have had possession for 75.67 per cent of their fixtures so far. With 31C heat and severe humidity forecast, chasing the ball – and possibly the game – could lead to frustration for Miami, especially their combative midfield duo of Sergio Busquets and Federico Redondo.
Botafogo committed 15 fouls when they upset the odds against PSG. That set the template for inferior teams to beat Luis Enrique's all-conquering team and Inter Miami are more than likely to have to follow suit to stand any chance of progressing to the next round.
Kvaratskhelia to maintain hot streak
Khvicha Kvaratskhelia has been in superb form recently, contributing four goals and two assists in his last five games. He played a major part in PSG's domestic and European success following his January move from Napoli, and he can have a starring role again on Sunday.
The Georgia winger opened the scoring in the victory over Seattle Sounders and his direct style can cause plenty of problems. He had at least one shot on target in all three group games, so he has clearly got his eye in too.
We've already covered how open Inter Miami's defence has been, so Kvaratskhelia is a great bet to find the back of the net at even money.
PSG vs Inter Miami odds
All odds courtesy of Sky Bet. Correct at the time of publication and subject to change.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Less death, more social media: Formula One films decades apart reveal a changed world
Less death, more social media: Formula One films decades apart reveal a changed world

The Guardian

time34 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Less death, more social media: Formula One films decades apart reveal a changed world

'Let's try to get the season off to a good start, shall we? Drive the car. Don't try to stand it on its bloody ear.' Have you watched the movie? It's about a rule-breaking American Formula One driver, the kind who blows past blue flags and crashes into his own teammate. You must have heard of it. They shot it in real race cars, across some of the most prestigious circuits in the world. It even had contemporary world championship drivers making notable cameos on the track. If you've never watched 1966's Grand Prix, now is the time to do it. This summer's blockbuster slot may belong to F1; and its director, Joseph Kosinski, may have gone to extraordinary lengths to capture the visceral speed of the fastest class in motor sport. But John Frankenheimer got there first. The close parallels between the two films have gone largely unremarked in the reviews. Six decades ago, when the glamour of the sport was peaking, Frankenheimer set out to capture its thrill, daring and inescapable danger. He fixed cameras to the chassis of Formula Two cars – the same substitute Kosinski has used – that hared round Brands Hatch, Spa, Monaco. Like Kosinski, he spliced real race footage into his own. His American lead, James Garner, did his own driving, just like Brad Pitt. There are even occasional shots in Kosinski's film that seem to pay tribute, intentional or not, to its predecessor – the moment that recalls Frankenheimer's stylistic use of split-screen, or when Pitt jogs around the old Monza banking. F1 the Movie, to be clear, is a billion-dollar industry giving itself a full valet – shampooed squeaky clean and buffed to an impossible sheen. But it's also the kind of sports-washing I'm prepared to indulge for the sake of the pure adrenaline thrill. After watching Top Gun: Maverick at the cinema, I walked straight back in for the next screening and sat in the front row so I could pretend to be in the cockpit. At the Imax this week I was practically climbing into the screen. I was definitely the only woman my age leaning into the turns, and wishing they would stop cutting back to Pitt's face so that I got more track time. For a bit of perspective, I had gone with my father, a man with a decades-long following of motor sport and a habit of nitpicking at movie details. Ten minutes into F1's opening track sequence he leaned over, and I braced for a critique of the pit crew's refuelling technique. 'We can go home now,' he whispered. 'It's good enough already.' A movie that can impress my father with its motor racing action deserves all the hype it gets. But neither he nor I had anticipated just how much it would remind us of Grand Prix – or how well that 59-year-old work would stand up in comparison. The Silverstone marching band, paraded past the clubhouse by a moustachioed sergeant-major, has given way to night-race fireworks in Las Vegas, and the ruinous cost of running an F1 team has jumped from a few hundred thousand to £100m. The stomach-buzz as the asphalt whizzes beneath you remains the same. Putting the two stories side by side does, however, show you interesting ways the sport has changed. Grand Prix's opening lingers, fetishistically, over images of working pistons and twisting wrenches. Such lowly mechanical details are almost entirely absent in F1, where the team headquarters looks like a space station and every element of the engineering process is rendered in gleaming sci-fi. There's also a lot less death. Frankenheimer's crashes are genuinely shocking – not because the stunts are realistic (and they are) but because of the bluntness of their outcome. Drivers are catapulted from their seats to fall on whatever part of the landscape they meet first. Spectators aren't safe either. The fact that horrifying incidents are a part of the public's fascination with Formula One is a recurring theme. F1 still plays on the life-or-death stakes, but does it in a very different way, as you'd expect from a film licensed by the governing body as a big-screen advert for the sport. It's also pretty keen that everyone you meet on screen shows motor racing in a good light. Team principals are loving family men! Drivers' managers are cuddly BFFs! People cycle eco-consciously to work! Everyone is so empathic and good at giving advice! It was the latter that had me balking at the chutzpah. There's a point where our hero tells the rookie to stop thinking about his social media. The hype, the fan engagement – 'it's all just noise,' he says. This in a movie that was produced, at phenomenal cost, as a method of growing hype and fan engagement. The film's only baddy, meanwhile, is a corporate investor, who we know must be a bad 'un because he spends his time schmoozing The Money in hospitality. Here's a game for you when you're watching F1: try to go two minutes without seeing or hearing the name of a brand that's paid to be there. I left the auditorium still blinking the name of accountancy software. By contrast, Frankenheimer's film seems bracingly honest. In Grand Prix, the drivers may have moments of self-reflection but they're also uncompromisingly selfish in their pursuit. The philosophical Frenchman Jean-Pierre Sarti suggests they live in denial: 'To do something very dangerous requires a certain absence of imagination.' 'Why do we do it? Why not tennis, or golf?' It's the question at the centre of every motor-racing film. In Le Mans, Steve McQueen answered by stripping out everything but the sound and feel of the track. F1's hero describes the feeling when he's 'flying' (not for nothing does he arrive walking down the tarmac, carrying a duffel like a certain fighter pilot). Perhaps that's what makes motor racing ripe for big-screen treatment – it's the most literally escapist form of sport there is. If F1 gives it the glossy treatment, Grand Prix sees beneath the sheen.

Brooks Koepka suffers meltdown and smashes tee marker into fans before withdrawing from LIV Dallas claiming ‘illness'
Brooks Koepka suffers meltdown and smashes tee marker into fans before withdrawing from LIV Dallas claiming ‘illness'

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

Brooks Koepka suffers meltdown and smashes tee marker into fans before withdrawing from LIV Dallas claiming ‘illness'

BROOKS KOEPKA smashed a tee marker towards fans in a shocking meltdown. The five-time major winner lost his temper at the LIV Golf Dallas event yesterday. 4 4 4 4 Koepka got off to a nightmare start at the Maridoe Golf Club with triple bogeys on the fifth and seventh holes. He was seven over par by the time he got to the ninth and his frustrations then boiled over. A wild tee shot veered to the left and Koepka angrily smashed his club into the ground. He then turned to a tee marker and smacked it off the course. It went flying close to where fans were standing - but fortunately nobody was hurt. Many are demanding action is taken, with one saying: "He should be fined and suspended." Another added: "Unacceptable behaviour. Anyone doing this needs stiff penalties." A third wrote: "These pros need to stop with the club throws, ground pounds and course destruction." Koepka's struggles continued and he eventually pulled out on the 14th hole due to an illness. Luis Carrera has replaced him in the Smash GC team. Koepka could decide to return to the action this weekend, though he is out the individual event and would only be representing the team. The 35-year-old American is in woeful form after failing to make the cut at the Masters and PGA Championship this year. He has not finished in the top ten in the last nine majors.

Jeremy Doku confident Manchester City are seeing a ‘better version' of himself
Jeremy Doku confident Manchester City are seeing a ‘better version' of himself

Glasgow Times

timean hour ago

  • Glasgow Times

Jeremy Doku confident Manchester City are seeing a ‘better version' of himself

The Belgium winger produced an electric display, which included scoring the opening goal, as Manchester City thrashed Italian giants Juventus 5-2 in the Club World Cup on Thursday. The 23-year-old looked sharp and exciting in a team which appears to have been rejuvenated by the arrivals of new faces. Nobody at City is getting carried away by one performance, but the side did look more like Guardiola's all-conquering outfit of recent years than the one that laboured through most of the 2024-25 campaign. Doku said: 'Obviously it was a good game, we won and we were together from the start to the end and we scored some nice goals. We finished top of the group and we are happy. 'I don't know (if we are back to our best). We just look game by game and this was a good game and we looked a bit more like how we were before, and we will try to produce in every game like this and in every performance. 'I feel free and enjoying my football, of course. I can still improve on certain aspects but when I play free and with the right mind, with the trust of the coach obviously, then you see a better version of me and now you are seeing a glimpse of it.' Asked further why he feels so free on the pitch, Doku said: 'I think it's more to do with my faith, I'm more occupied with my faith and I just give all the glory to my Lord and our saviour Jesus Christ.' City's victory over Juve at Orlando's Camping World Stadium ensured they avoided Real Madrid in the last 16 and they will now return to the same venue to face Al Hilal of Saudi Arabia on Monday (2am Tuesday BST). Pep Guardiola is trying revitalise his team after a disappointing past season (Phelan Ebenhack/AP) Manager Guardiola is treating the tournament as the start of the 2025-26 season in order to make a clean break from the disappointments of last term. The approach so far seems to have been vindicated with new signings Rayan Cherki, Rayan Ait-Nouri and Tijjani Reijnders making positive first impressions. 'Obviously there are a lot of games but we are here now, it's a nice tournament and we are just trying to win,' said Doku. Another positive has been the return of key midfielder Rodri, who made his first start since September against Juve. Doku said: 'Having him back in the team, you can see the difference and see how important he is. 'After such a long period of injury, in the first game back starting against a big club, he showed his qualities and he had a lot of impact.'

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