FIFA Club World Cup, Trump
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The tournament delivered spectacle and a clear warning: hosting the world's biggest sporting event next summer will take more than world-class stadiums.
President Donald Trump marked the one-year anniversary of a failed assassination attempt on his life with family and close advisers at the FIFA Club World Cup final.
The Australian singer took the stage Sunday (July 13) at MetLife Stadium with Coldplay for the show featuring Tems, J Balvin & Doja Cat.
Donald Trump experienced the agony and the ecstasy of football on Sunday as he was booed at the final of the FIFA Club World Cup -- even as he joined in some high-spirited celebrations with champions Chelsea.
Chelsea jumps out to 3-0 first-half lead and cruises past PSG in Club World Cup final, claiming tournament’s expanded edition before 81,188 at MetLife Stadium.
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The President's attendance of the FIFA Club World Cup final is the latest in a string of high-profile sports-related trips in his second term.
FIFA claims consensus over rest periods but global players union criticise ‘authoritarian’ decisions
On Sunday, FIFPro’s president Sergio Marchi referred to his FIFA counterpart Gianni Infantino as “The man who thinks he is God”, saying that football’s world governing body’s decision-making process had become “unilateral” and “authoritarian”.
Chelsea delivered a shocking 3-0 win over Paris Saint-Germain in the FIFA Club World Cup final on Sunday in East Rutherford, New Jersey.
Chelsea will face Paris Saint-Germain in this 2025 FIFA Club World Cup Final matchup on Sunday at MetLife Stadium.
FIFA says players' representatives and the sport's governing body have reached a consensus on the need for a period of rest of 72 hours between matches, and agreed that players should enjoy a minimum of 21 days of holidays at the end of each season.
Global players' union Fifpro is not invited to a "key" meeting that Fifa president Gianni Infantino held on player welfare and where a minimum three-week off-season break was agreed, BBC Sport has been told.
FifPro, the world’s main player union, has branded Gianni Infantino as “the man who thinks he’s god” in a tirade against the Fifa president and the Club World Cup.