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The winner of the Club World Cup receives the FIFA Club World Cup trophy and a FIFA World Champions certificate. The new format, which will come into effect with the 2025 edition, features 32 teams competing for the title at venues within the host nation; 12 teams from Europe , 6 from South America , 4 from Asia , 4 from Africa , 4 from North ...
A third high-profile instance of a player switching international football nationalities is José Altafini, who played for Brazil in the 1958 FIFA World Cup and for Italy in the subsequent 1962 FIFA World Cup. [4] [5] Other 20th-century examples of players representing two or three separate countries are: Ernst Wilimowski – (Poland and ...
The Women's Club World Cup was expanded to 19 teams with qualification determined by the Women's Champions Cup, which would take place in the three years between World Cups. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] The two-year delay followed a lack of progress in announced plans for the inaugural tournament, which had yet to have a host, sponsors, or television ...
The 2025 FIFA Club World Cup is a 32-team tournament featuring top professional clubs from around the world, set to begin June 15, 2025, in the U.S. (Photo courtesy of FIFA)
The expanded Club World Cup will include 32 teams. Twelve will be European clubs, six South American, four from CONCACAF (North and Central America and the Caribbean), four from Africa, four from ...
FIFA and its presidents have long coveted a prime piece of club soccer content. The 2025 Club World Cup is FIFA’s most ambitious project, creating a month-long tournament in a mid-June to mid ...
The following is a list of clubs that have played in or qualified for the FIFA Club World Cup. Editions in bold indicate competitions won. Rows can be adjusted to national league, total number of participations by national league or club and years played. Auckland City have contested the FIFA Club World Cup twelve times, more than any other club.
Since its return from hiatus in 2005, the FIFA Club World Cup had been held annually in December and was limited to the winners of continental club competitions. [7] As early as late 2016, FIFA president Gianni Infantino suggested expanding the Club World Cup to 32 teams beginning in 2019 and rescheduling it to June/July to be more balanced and more attractive to broadcasters and sponsors. [8]