Real to face Guadalajara or Asian champs
Draw made amid uncertainty over Club World Cup future
European champions Real Madrid will face either Mexican side Guadalajara or the eventual Asian champions in this year’s Club World Cup semifinals following the draw made on Tuesday amid uncertainty over the future of the competition.
FIFA President Gianni Infantino has ambitious plans to expand the tournament from 2021 onwards, staging it every four years rather than annually and increasing the number of teams from seven to 24.
Those plans have yet to be approved by the FIFA Council and in the meantime, it is uncertain if the tournament – which this year will be staged in the United Arab Emirates in December – will continue its current form in 2019 and 2020.
Only four of this year’s participants were known on Tuesday with the Asian, African and South American club championships all at the quarterfinal stage.
Real, winners for the last two years, and the eventual South American champions received byes to the last four.
Oceania champions Team Wellington will meet Al Ain, champions of the host nation, in a preliminary match for the right to play the African champions in the second round.
The winners of that game will face South America’s Copa Libertadores champions.
Guadalajara, the champions of CONCACAF, were drawn against the Asian champions in the other of the two second-round ties with a match against Real Madrid as the prize.
The competition has been dominated by European teams since it was relaunched in its current form in 2005, reflecting the fact that the best South American and African players are based in Europe rather than their own continents.
Although it is often felt that European sides regard the cup as little more than an exotic mid-season diversion, it creates huge interest in South America where fans long for the chance for their team to appear on the world stage.
Former Argentina midfielder Esteban Cambiasso, who took part in the draw, said that South America could benefit after moving the Libertadores final from June to November.
“It means it will be the same team which won the Libertadores,” he told Reuters. “In the past, with a longer gap, and with a transfer window in the middle, players left and the team which played in the Club World Cup was not the same one which won the Libertadores.
“Now this has changed and, for the South Americans, this is better.”