
Boos and applause for Trump at FIFA Club World Cup final
14 Jul 2025 08:59am
US President Donald Trump walks to the podium for the award ceremony for the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 Champions, following the final football match between England's Chelsea and France's Paris Saint-Germain at the MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey on July 13, 2025. (Photo by Brendan SMIALOWSKI / AFP)
EAST RUTHERFORD - Donald Trump experienced the rough side of football on Sunday as he was briefly booed at the final of the FIFA Club World Cup.
The US president was applauded as he arrived for the match between Paris Saint-Germain and Chelsea at the MetLife stadium in New Jersey, just outside New York City. US President Donald Trump waves next to FIFA President Gianni Infantino during the award ceremony for the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 Champions, following the final football match between England's Chelsea and France's Paris Saint-Germain at the MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey on July 13, 2025. (Photo by ANGELA WEISS / AFP)
But when a jumbotron screen briefly showed Trump saluting to the US national anthem, there was some booing in the giant stadium, before the camera quickly cut away.
Trump, 79, had earlier taken his seat in a suite alongside First Lady Melania Trump and FIFA president Gianni Infantino.
The Republican's appearance at the game also came on the first anniversary of the assassination attempt that he survived at an election rally in Pennsylvania.
Trump has made no secret of his desire to use this year's club championship and next year's 2026 World Cup as symbols of the "Golden Age of America" during his second term in the White House.
Next year's World Cup, the final of which will be held at the same stadium, will coincide with the 250th anniversary of America's independence.
Trump has even set up a White House task force to ensure next year's championship -- hosted jointly with Canada and Mexico -- goes smoothly.
'He loves it'
Another factor in his appearance at the match is that Trump has fostered a close relationship with Infantino, who has been a frequent visitor to the White House.
Trump has kept the Club World Cup trophy next to his desk in the Oval Office since the FIFA president dropped by in March.
Infantino, who is no stranger to dealing with hard-nosed world leaders including Russia's Vladimir Putin ahead of the 2018 World Cup, thanked Trump for his support on Saturday.
He said Trump had "embraced immediately the importance of the FIFA Club World Cup, and of course of the World Cup next year."
Infantino also joked that Trump "certainly loves as well the trophy" -- whose gold-plated curves match the gilded makeover that the president has given the Oval Office.
But Trump's fondness of football, or soccer as he would say, is also personal.
The president's 19-year-old son Barron is a fan, as Infantino pointed out in a press conference at FIFA's new office in Trump Tower in New York on Saturday.
Asked if Trump liked the game, Infantino replied: "Well I think he does. In his first term as president of the United States, there was a soccer goal in the garden of the White House.
"He then explained to me that his son loved football, and that he loved the game. And of course when you are a parent, you love what your children love, so I think that he loves it."
As a boarding school student at the New York Military Academy, Trump himself also reportedly played the game for a season.
'Go home'
But in typical form, Trump has also mixed political controversy with his football fandom.
Hosting Italian side Juventus in the Oval Office in June, he delivered a diatribe on transgender people in sports before asking the players: "Could a woman make your team, fellas?"
Most of the players looked bemused before Juventus general manager Damien Comolli replied: "We have a very good women's team."
"He's being very diplomatic," said Trump.
Trump's hardline immigration crackdown -- part of his "America First" policy -- has meanwhile sparked fears that football fans will be discouraged from coming to the United States for the 2026 World Cup.
In May, Vice President JD Vance said that fans would be "welcome to come... but when the time is up, they will have to go home." - AFP
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