Players union threatens to take FIFA to court over Club World Cup calendar concerns

FIFPro and an association of soccer leagues are both deeply unhappy with FIFA

FIFPro, the union for professional soccer players worldwide, and the 45-member World Leagues Association have served notice to FIFA, demanding alterations to what they assert is an overstuffed calendar.

In a joint letter viewed by the BBC and AP, FIFA was criticized for “unilateral decisions that benefit its own competitions and commercial interests,” which include adding and expanding competitions. The 2025 Club World Cup — an event currently set to be held in the U.S. in June and July 2025 — was specifically cited as an event needing to change.

The letter calls the current global calendar “beyond saturation,” adding that “players are being pushed beyond their limits, with significant injury risks and impacts on their welfare.”

Previously, the Club World Cup had involved only seven teams: the winning team from the top club tournament in each of the world’s six confederations, plus one entrant from the host nation of that year’s tournament. FIFPro blasted the Club World Cup expansion when it was announced, and has apparently not gotten a satisfactory response from FIFA.

The 2025 edition, however, has been massively expanded, with 32 places. Illustrating the letter’s point, a report from The Athletic said that the event would take place during the 2025 Concacaf Gold Cup, also being held in the United States.

Additionally, FIFA plans to resurrect the old Intercontinental Cup this year, which will feature a structure along very similar lines as the old Club World Cup. The letter urged FIFA to reconsider, or even abandon, plans to hold that event.

Competition calendar congestion growing

The letter comes as competitions grow or expand in seemingly every direction.

All three of UEFA’s men’s club competitions will expand next season, while the Asian Football Confederation’s rebrand of its top competition (which will be called the AFC Champions League Elite from 2024-25) will feature fewer teams, but requires each participant to play more games. Going along with those plans, the AFC is also adding a Europa League-esque competition called the AFC Champions League 2.

Concacaf has expanded the Concacaf Champions Cup starting with this year’s edition, while in the U.S. there remains a simmering conflict between MLS and U.S. Soccer over whether the top-flight league’s clubs should have to play in the U.S. Open Cup.

FIFPro and the World Leagues Association also demanded a chance to reconsider the calendar for when internationals must be released from their clubs during windows for national team play.

The AP quoted the letter as explicitly including the threat of “legal action against FIFA” should the governing body ignore requests to address the issues.

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FIFA awards United States first expanded Club World Cup in 2025

Every major tournament seems to be on its way to the U.S.

FIFA has awarded the first ever expanded 32-team Club World Cup to the United States, with the tournament set to take place in 2025.

The governing body announced their decision on Friday, saying that the FIFA Council was unanimous in its vote.

“The FIFA Club World Cup 2025 will be the pinnacle of elite professional men’s club football, and with the required infrastructure in place together with a massive local interest, the United States is the ideal host to kick off this new, global tournament,” said FIFA president Gianni Infantino in a news release.

“With some of the world’s top clubs already qualified, fans from every continent will be bringing their passion and energy to the United States in two years’ time for this significant milestone in our mission to make football truly global.”

The U.S. is now set to host an incredible streak of major soccer events: the 2024 Copa America, the 2025 Club World Cup and the 2026 men’s World Cup are confirmed, along with the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles.

Should FIFA select a joint USA-Mexico bid to host the 2027 Women’s World Cup, that would mark five straight summers with a marquee event in the United States.

FIFA said that the 2025 Club World Cup will serve as something of a dry run for the 48-team World Cup the following summer.

Awarding the 2025 event to the U.S. “would allow FIFA to maximize synergies with the delivery of the FIFA World Cup 2026, to the benefit of both tournaments and the development of football in the North American region,” the release said.

In December, Infantino announced that FIFA was moving forward with an expanded 32-team format for the Club World Cup, which has existed for several years with just seven teams participating.

Infantino said the tournament would be held in the summer and that the “best teams in the world” would be invited to participate.

There has been a backlash against the expanded tournament, however, with complaints about unnecessary competition with the UEFA Champions League, as well as adding more fixtures into an already crowded schedule.

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