Inter Miami and the Seattle Sounders will face big-time teams in next year’s Club World Cup
Manchester City-Juventus and Bayern Munich-Boca Juniors are other big group matchups in the 32-team tournament, which will have games in Philadelphia and 10 other cities. The schedule isn't set yet.
MIAMI — Lionel Messi and Inter Miami now know their path for next year’s Club World Cup.
The host team — invited by FIFA to compete despite criticism from many in the soccer world — will play the tournament’s first match on June 15 against Egyptian club Al Ahly, as part of a group that will also feature Palmeiras and Porto.
Other opening matches include Paris Saint-Germain vs. Atletico Madrid and Brazilian club Botafogo playing at Major League Soccer’s Seattle Sounders in Group B; Monterrey against Inter Milan in Group E; and Real Madrid facing the Saudi club Al-Hilal — potentially a showdown pitting superstars Kylian Mbappé for Real Madrid and Neymar for Al-Hilal if the Brazilian great remains with that club.
“Any time that you have certain things where soccer is big and you bring it to the U.S., it’s going to be a great atmosphere and entertaining,” said baseball great Ken Griffey Jr., part of the Sounders' ownership group.
His club will get the chance to play one of the world’s storied teams in PSG during group play.
“I’m going to leave that one alone,” Griffey said, smiling.
The draw was held Thursday in Miami, with the 32 teams finally finding out their first three opponents in the newly expanded event.
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The tournament will be held in the U.S. from June 15 to July 13, using 12 stadiums in 11 different cities including Philadelphia’s Lincoln Financial Field. The schedule isn’t set yet, with FIFA saying it will be set “in due course, considering a range of factors including sporting and player-centric criteria, local and traveling fans and global broadcast considerations.”
The final will be at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J., the same stadium that will host to the 2026 World Cup final.
Among the powerhouse clubs in the field: Manchester City, Real Madrid, Bayern Munich, PSG, Chelsea, Borussia Dortmund and Inter Milan. There’s also the four highest-ranked teams from South America: Flamengo, Palmeiras, River Plate, and Fluminense.
And Messi’s team, as a representative of the host nation, gets the distinction of playing the first match. It’ll happen at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Fla.
“It’s about inclusivity, it’s about bringing clubs from all over the world, the 32 best clubs and best players from all over the world together,” FIFA President Gianni Infantino said.
Some would argue it’s not the 32 “best” clubs. Inter Miami’s selection was widely panned by critics, the volume of that only rising after the team that won the Supporters' Shield as the best MLS team in the regular season — with a record-setting point total — lost in Round 1 of the MLS Cup playoffs.
“There’s no controversy,” Inter Miami managing owner Jorge Mas said.
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MLS got two teams: Seattle and Inter Miami. The Sounders qualified for the field, and Inter Miami was placed into it as the host nation’s representative.
The club competition uses the traditional 32-team format used by the World Cup from 1998 to 2022. Eight round-robin groups of four teams each were drawn Thursday, with the top two from each group advancing to a knockout bracket of 16.
Europe got 12 spots, and South America six to lead the field, while Africa, Asia, and North America got four — with Inter Miami essentially a fifth from North America since it has host status. Oceania got one spot.
“There is no rule that said the MLS Cup winner needs to be in the Club World Cup,” MLS commissioner Don Garber said. “I have no interest in anything other than what I think is going to be best for the showcase, best for our league. I am supportive of the decision that FIFA made, and I’m excited to put Miami and Seattle in a global media deal and be shown around the world.”
Mas said Inter Miami getting the privilege of playing the opening match of the tournament at home is “a testament to our community, the soccer culture that’s here.”
“Who would have told us five years ago, with no club, that we’d be here today at a draw with the best teams in the world,” Mas said. “That’s what we aspire to. That’s what we dream of.”
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The groups
Group A: Palmeiras (Brazil), Porto (Portugal), Al Ahly (Egypt), Inter Miami
Group B: Paris Saint-Germain (France), Atlético Madrid (Spain), Botafogo (Brazil), Seattle Sounders
Group C: Bayern Munich (Germany), Auckland City (New Zealand), Boca Juniors (Argentina), Benfica (Portugal)
Group D: Flamengo (Brazil), Espérance Tunis (Tunisia), Chelsea (England), León (Mexico)
Group E: River Plate (Argentina), Urawa Red Diamonds (Japan), Monterrey (Mexico), Inter Milan (Italy)
Group F: Fluminense (Brazil), Borussia Dortmund (Germany), Ulsan HD (South Korea), Mamelodi Sundowns (South Africa)
Group G: Manchester City (England), Wydad (Morocco), Al Ain (United Arab Emirates), Juventus Italy)
Group H: Real Madrid (Spain), Al-Hilal (Saudi Arabia), Pachuca (Mexico), Red Bull Salzburg (Austria)
Inquirer staff writer Jonathan Tannenwald contributed to this report.