Leicester part company with manager Van Nistelrooy

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Ruud van Nistelrooy’s long-expected departure as Leicester City manager has been confirmed more than nine weeks after the Foxes were relegated from the Premier League.

The 48-year-old Dutchman oversaw 19 defeats and managed just five wins from his 27 matches in charge of the East Midlands club last season.

Leicester’s relegation was confirmed with five matches of the campaign remaining, but the former PSV Eindhoven boss saw out the season and held on to the job for another month after it concluded.

The protracted nature of Van Nistelrooy’s exit, which the Championship club says has been “mutually agreed”, was called “baffling” and summed up as “a mess” by former Foxes striker Matt Fryatt in early June.

Not only are the club now looking to regroup for their second season in the Championship in three years, they are also facing a potential points penalty for the upcoming season after being charged for allegedly breaching the English Football League’s financial rules.

In the statement confirming his departure, Van Nistelrooy said he wanted to “wish the club well” for the future.

“I would like to personally thank the Leicester City players, coaches, academy and all the staff I have worked with for their professionalism and dedication during my time at the club,” he told Leicester’s website.

Former Everton and Burnley boss Sean Dyche has been heavily linked to replace the Dutchman at the King Power Stadium ahead of their return to England’s second tier.

Leicester were 16th in the table and one point above the relegation places when Van Nistelrooy replaced Steve Cooper at the King Power Stadium.

Former Nottingham Forest boss Cooper was in charge for the first three months of the season – overseeing three wins and seven losses from 15 games in all competitions – after replacing Enzo Maresca, who left for Chelsea after winning the Championship title with the Foxes in 2023-24.

Two of the defeats that Cooper’s Foxes suffered came against a Manchester United team led by Van Nistelrooy as caretaker boss, the former Red Devils striker having stepped up from his former role as assistant manager at Old Trafford to temporarily replace compatriot Erik ten Hag.

Victory against West Ham in Van Nistelrooy’s first match in charge on 3 December gave him the ideal start, but three weeks later they were in the relegation zone.

And apart from a seven-day reprieve after beating Tottenham in late January, the Foxes spent the last five months of campaign in the bottom three where they eventually finished 13 points from safety in 18th spot.

The woeful end to the campaign was also one of record-setting proportions.

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  • Championship
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‘Wilder v Paul next? You wouldn’t flinch’

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Jake Paul and Deontay Wilder are two men separated by weight, experience and tradition, yet orbiting the same strange boxing universe.

‘The Problem Child’ Paul fights Julio Cesar Chavez Jr on Saturday in Arizona, while his fellow American Wilder returns against Tyrrell Herndon on Friday in Kansas.

And really, thank goodness they’re not fighting each other, because that’s exactly the kind of boxing world we live in now.

If someone called you tomorrow and said, “Wilder v Paul next,” you wouldn’t flinch.

Picture this: Wilder wipes out Herndon in a round in a vintage ‘Bronze Bomber’ display.

Just 24 hours later, Paul is behind on all cards and then stops Chavez Jr late on in a thriller.

By Sunday morning, the clips go viral, the messages start, and someone makes a call.

Wilder v Paul outdoors in America later this year? It’s not impossible. Stranger things have happened.

What information do we collect from this quiz?

Why Wilder will always get chances

Deontay Wilder walks way from an unconscious Robert HeleniusGetty Images

Wilder was dropped five times by Tyson Fury in their trilogy. He looked a shadow of himself against Joseph Parker. And against Zhilei Zhang, I was about four feet away and he honestly didn’t look like he knew where he was. His instincts were scrambled.

He’s lost four of his last five and yet we’re still not convinced he’s finished. Why? Because Wilder has a gift that defies logic.

He owns one of the most dangerous right hands in boxing history – a punch so destructive that it wipes out most sensible analysis. When you can end a fight in the blink of an eye, you get chances. You get forgiven. You get watched.

He faces the relatively unknown Herndon in Wichita – and no, I couldn’t point it out on a map either. Herndon was stopped in two rounds by Olympic silver medallist Richard Torrez Jr, a terrific heavyweight who’s flying under the radar.

If Wilder detonates early and finishes Herndon quicker than Torrez did, expect someone somewhere to shout: “He’s back!”

And then he’ll want the big names again. He’ll talk about a Parker or Zhang rematch, or maybe even that long-awaited super-fight with Anthony Joshua.

Of course, there’s also Dave Allen. The fact Wilder’s even being linked with Doncaster’s Allen – and no disrespect to Dave, who we all love – shows just how far Wilder’s stock has fallen.

Paul – committed, self-publicist master & elite matchmaker

Jake Paul stares at Julio Cesar Chavez Jr during a face-offGetty Images

I get asked about Paul all the time – “Buncey, what do you make of him?”

I tell them that Paul is one of boxing’s best-promoted and best-matched fighters. He’s the sport’s greatest modern self-publicist.

He’s had just 12 fights but operates with the publicity machine of a 30-year veteran. That’s the reality.

This next one – against Mexican Chavez – is another masterstroke. Win, and Paul can truthfully say he’s beaten a former world champion. Never mind that Chavez has been unmotivated and underwhelming for years.

This is elite matchmaking, the kind Mickey Duff or Frank Warren would have admired in the 1980s. Find a guy with a belt in the past, a name the public still knows and has just enough miles on the clock. Time it right, get the win, build the brand.

In fact, smart matchmaking has always been Paul’s strategy. Even the Mike Tyson fight was cold, calculated business. It may have counted to both their records but it was just a glorious payday for Tyson, who didn’t really let his hands go and nor did Paul either. There was a degree of benevolence in that ring.

Paul upsets the purists when he fights UFC guys and then starts calling out the likes of Saul ‘Canelo’ Alvarez or Joshua. His mouth is his crime, not his commitment to boxing. I’ve seen him in the gym – Paul trains like a world champion.

He’s raw, his footwork clunky, his technique mechanical, but his commitment is real. He trains like he’s going 15 rounds at Madison Square Garden.

As for Chavez, this could be redemption. If a motivated, fit Chavez – the kind we haven’t seen in years – shows up, he could give Paul a real fight.

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Folau carry ‘doesn’t half put a smile on my face’ – North’s iconic Lions moment

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Twelve years is a long time, not just for sports.

In the wintertime sunshine of June 2025, George North is practicing yoga on the north bank of the Brisbane River in the shadow of Story Bridge.

The former Wales winger claims that it is “probably the most Australian thing I’ve ever done.”

The sedate scene is far removed from the pulsing energy of the year-old North Irish Lions folklore.

No, not the equally jaw-droppingly brilliant 60-meter solo try from the first Test.

The second Test is taking place in Melbourne in the 60th minute. With nowhere to go, North has just received a through-the-legs pass from Brian O’Driscoll and is faced by his opposing number, Israel Folau, a winger with a 6′ 4″ and 17-stone stature.

North decides to pump his legs and use the Australia winger, who is now upside down on North’s back, as an improvised human battering ram, with the ball in hand. The hallucinations were thrown like skittles.

North recalls it in this manner, which is “a little silly, to be honest.” He continues, “Not my best thought.”

The Lions’ 137-year history is now defined by eminently legendary moments. The list goes on and on, starting with JPR or Jeremy Guscott’s drop-goals, Robert Jones arguing with Nick Farr-Jones, Sir Ian McGeechan and Jim Telfer’s team talk, Matt Dawson’s dummy, O’Driscoll’s knife-through-butter try, and more.

The Lions lost by one point in the second Test, which North almost forgot happened in. It defined Australia’s 2013 2-1 series victory.

One thing North reveals to him when he interacts with Lions fans, as he did during his recent 10-day working vacation in Australia.

He claims that it’s most likely the Izzy Folau carry. Then it moves on to the drama and excitement that the Test series brought. Going to the decider [in 2013] was incredibly special both as a player and as a fan.

I never imagined I would be able to play for the Lions, and I never imagined I would be able to do so. I never imagined I would be able to do so, let alone travel twice to support your country.

George North celebrates scoring the opening try as the Lions win the first Test 23-21 in 2013. Israel Folau looks dejected in the backgroundImages courtesy of Getty
Israel Folau somehow stops George North from scoring a try in the first TestImages courtesy of Getty

Lions history is “so special and unique.”

After that tour, North’s life “got busy,” despite already winning the Six Nations.

He continues, “I’d just joined Northampton, so 2013 put me in a different bracket when I came home, and it was amazing to be recognized for what you do.”

What does he think of the British and Irish Lions, then? Is it that his 2013 or 2017 tour, which ended in injury before the start of his Test matches, was better?

“I consider the lions’ history. When you’re in that environment, you can’t help but feel and carry it, which is something he claims is incredible because it’s so special and unique.

“I was fighting hard every day and at my best,” I said, “because of the honor you have and the responsibility you have for that jersey.”

“It was probably the best rugby I’ve ever played,” I said in a personal statement. For me, it was undoubtedly a fantastic experience on the field, with the players I met, with the activities we engaged in, and with the opportunity to travel to such a wonderful country as Australia.

North, who won 121 caps for Wales, is still a 33-year-old fan and currently plays for Provence in the French second division. Does he miss it?

Like most ex-players, he reveals, “Do you know what, when I was]in Australia] I was going’maybe I can still go?”

I absolutely loved my tour, and I’m proud of what I did and did, but it’s time for these boys to start moving forward.

Does he have a 2025 forecast?

I was considering this,” I said. I’m going to go for Australia to win the first game, Lions to win the second, and then the third game to lose to Lions to win 2-1.

That is what, in my opinion, happened in 1989 to Australia.

related subjects

  • Rugby Union of Wales
  • Irish Lions and British &
  • Rugby Union

The British teenage trio creating Wimbledon history

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Wimbledon 2025

Venue: All England Club, June 30 – 13 .

Three British players will enter the women’s singles draw for the first time in Wimbledon history, aged 17 and under.

After demonstrating their potential over the past few years, Mika Stojsavljevic, Hannah Klugman, and Mimi Xu were given main-draw wildcard prizes.

Stojsavljevic, 16, has advanced most significantly since winning the US Open girls’ title last year.

Klugman, 16, made history by reaching the French Open girls’ final last month as the first Briton in almost 50 years.

The 17-year-old Xu has already defeated two top-100 opponents on the grass this year, ranking just outside the top 300.

The trio are now focusing on their Wimbledon senior debuts after getting their GCSE and A-Level exams finished.

“We’ve known for a long time that this is a good three-ball on the girls’ side,” Iain Bates, the LTA’s head of women’s tennis, told BBB Sport.

“All three players have different paths to the top of the game. However, their progress indicates that they are a formidable force right now.

16-year-old Mika Stojsavljevic

Mika Stojsavljevic lifts the girls' singles trophy at the British national junior championshipsGetty Images

6’8″ tall Stojsavljevic, who was born in west London to a Polish and Serb father, is a big server and clean ball-striker with a similar style to Maria Sharapova’s from a young age.

With her US Open victory, she won the only British woman to ever win a Slam title, and she is the youngest woman to do so since Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova from Russia in 2006.

The English teenager has since won the British national title, defeating Klugman in the final, and advanced to the ranks of Queen’s and Nottingham’s professional circuit.

Stojsavljevic’s talent has been nurtured while she is pursuing her GCSEs at LTA’s National Academy in Loughborough.

Hannah Klugman, 16-year-old, London

Lilli Tagger and Hannah Klugman lift their French Open trophiesGetty Images

Klugman, who turned 16 in February, has been hailed as a promising prospect for a while.

The Englishman emulated Coco Gauff, Chris Evert, and Caroline Wozniacki when she won the prestigious Orange Bowl junior championships in Florida in 2023.

Klugman chose to remain at home in Wimbledon rather than enroll in the LTA’s academy than Stojsavljevic and Xu.

She practices at the National Tennis Centre alongside Reed’s School’s Ben Haran, who is a former assistant to Jack Draper and Tim Henman.

Her two-months of clay preparation, including time spent at Rafael Nadal’s academy, helped her reach the Roland Garros final, but her solidity and touch on the net work well on the grass.

Swansea Mimi Xu – 17

Mimi Xu celebrates winning a point at the Nottingham OpenGetty Images

Xu is the trio’s senior member with the most experience, and he is already ranked 302nd worldwide.

The Welsh teenager joined national coach Katie O’Brien and Nigel Sears, who coached Emma Raducanu during her Wimbledon fourth-round run in 2021.

She also gained a boost from being invited to the British team’s BJK Cup practice match in November.

Alycia Parks, the world number 52, shocked American top seed Xu on her way to the Birmingham quarter-finals earlier this month, giving her career-best win.

Do they have a plan to play Grand Slam tennis?

For all three players, making their senior Grand Slam debut at Wimbledon is a significant achievement.

Following a discussion between the LTA and the All England Club about which players merit wildcards, they were given spots.

The trio will also receive at least £66, 000 in prize money to reinvest in their careers in addition to the valuable experience.

You would think that all of them are prepared for the opportunity to play if you looked at their profiles separately, “said Bates.”

I hope and anticipate that they will hold more Wimbledons, as I told them all.

“The first one is about competing against some of the world’s best,” they said.

I believe this is the ideal opportunity and moment for them.

Laura Robson lifts the Wimbledon girls' trophy in 2008 and Heather Watson holds the US Open girls' trophy in 2009Getty Images

Teenager players are limited to the number of tournaments they can register for and what level before turning 16; this includes.

Up to 12 tournaments can be entered into by players who are 16 under the rules. That grows once more when they reach the age of 17.

Bates added that “success in junior tennis is undoubtedly a strong indicator of long-term potential,” but it is not a guarantee.

Working through each stage of the professional tour, getting the support and encouragement they can, is what this group of three is really trying to do.

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‘I love my fans, but also dread meeting them’ – life as an autistic elite footballer

Wales’ Euro 2025 squad includes goalkeeper Safia Middleton-Patel. She is sparky, thoughtful, and has an infectious laugh. She also has autism.

Overstimulation has sent her to bed, exhausted, for a week. She may lose months of energy from misunderstood social interactions. She will drive miles past a petrol station to find one with a self-pay pump. And she doesn’t have any connection to her disorder, despite what the experts claim tomatoes are vegetables. Of which more later.

The 20-year-old Manchester United goalkeeper is a very promising footballer, winning the game’s player of the match after a string of excellent saves helped Wales draw 1-1 in Sweden in April.

That was in the Nations League – and now she is heading to Switzerland for July’s European Championship, with Wales drawn in Group D alongside England, France and the Netherlands after qualifying for a major tournament for the first time.

If chosen, she can anticipate being in the middle of the action as goalkeeper for the tournament’s lowest-ranked team. In that case, Middleton-Patel will turn to her proven, and possibly novel, method of interpretation.

“I kind of visualise the next pass as like the perfect Lego brick I’m missing in my set”, she explains.

“I’m looking for it and finding the right people.”

” People probably don’t think about Lego when they’re playing football, but I’m looking for that brick to be ready. You can always use a different color pass if the move changes, just like you can with a different color pass.

Among the many aspects of Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) – which can include difficulties with social interaction, sensory issues, and the need for routine and structure – hyperfocus is the characteristic many neurodivergent sportspeople single out as playing a large role in their careers.

Middleton-Patel claims that when I’m playing, I’m hyperfocused. When I am on the training ground or playing a game I don’t hear anything – it’s just the ball and myself.

“I probably hear my own heartbeat more frequently than anything else.”

That laser-like focus, and the quietening of the mind, is a welcome change for Middleton-Patel, who admits she can find occasions most people would find normal to be overwhelming – both when she is around the game, or in life in general.

“Oooh, if I’m sitting on a bench, in the crowd, or watching football on the TV, I’m doing that.” I hear all the fans, I hear all the cheers, I hear all the clapping”, she says.

Why are you drinking so loudly if someone is sat next to me while I’m drinking? Can you stop? ‘” She acknowledges the humor in the situation and adds with a smile.

“Sometimes I will sit on the bench and I’ll have my hands over my ears and I get dirty looks from the fans because they are like, ‘ are you a child? ‘

No, I’m attempting to concentrate.

When Manchester United put out clackers for fans at an FA Cup game, she found the noise the crowd made unbearable, leading to her stimming – finger drumming is a big one for her – to try to prevent herself becoming overwhelmed.

I’m sat there with my hands on my ears, rocking, because I couldn’t control my emotions, and by the end of it, I needed to take some time for myself, she says.

” I love the fans and I want to speak to the fans, but I need to get inside and that’s where it’s hard because you’ll get some messages online being like, ‘ my daughter was there for you and you didn’t say hi’.

“I’m really sorry, but I’m going to have to go inside and just sit in a quiet room for two minutes because my mental health is important to me.” Otherwise the rest of the week will be sabotaged because of that”.

She claims that finding a balance is essential.

“I love my fans, but I also dread meeting them because of ‘ the front ‘ I fear I have to put on, because if I give them one weird look or one dirty look when my face is so straight and it’s unintentional, they take it the wrong way”, she adds.

You want to say, “I’m really sorry, but there are too many thoughts going on,” you ask. I wasn’t looking and staring at you blankly and not being excited because you’re wasting my time. I’m so excited to meet you, but I’m also nervous about this interaction.

And while she firmly believes people should not be ashamed of openly stimming, it can still make her feel self-conscious when people notice, only increasing her discomfort.

When I’m rocking in the stadium and the fans are present [and one might be gazing at you], it makes you feel so self-conscious because I’m like, “Please straighten up on the chair, breathe in properly, am I looking in the right place”? OK, do I look the part? ‘

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These issues with social interaction have affected her relationships with coaches at previous clubs.

She goes on to say, “I actually got into a lot of trouble because of it.”

” When you’re having catch-ups with the coaches and sitting there and I’m not looking them in the eye and I’m looking at the chair next to me and they go, ‘ what are you looking at? Do you have a look there? Look at me’.

Because you don’t have the, you know, “what are they thinking? “, you can’t help but be more focused when I’m staring at something that doesn’t move and doesn’t have any feelings. in your head.

People say, “That’s rude,” but they go. But I’m trying to put more focus in and I’m trying to actually be better. “

Middleton-Patel claims she has had her first “totalement shut down” as a result of becoming overwhelmed at school in year nine before being diagnosed as autistic at age 18 and always felt different.

Things came to a head in February 2023. She made her Championship debut at Coventry while she was out on loan, and she made her Wales debut three days later.

” I had about a week of media after, and then I hit a brick wall, “she says”. I was unable to do anything. I couldn’t speak to my mum. I spent the majority of the day in bed, but I couldn’t eat or do anything, and I was like, “You need to seek help.”

When Middleton-Patel becomes overwhelmed the experience is both mental and physical”, like someone has just put a weighted blanket on me but not in a nice way – it’s like I get trapped and I can’t leave it”.

She continues, “Then I’m tired.” Constantly. My emotions are unmatched. I can’t control my temperature regulation – I get too hot or I’m too cold.

I have so many thoughts that I can’t seem to express myself. And when someone goes ‘ you OK? ‘ and I don’t know, and when they say, “Come on, you know how you feel,” I can’t explain it because I can’t get a thought to go through my head, and I believe it’s difficult for people to comprehend.

Middleton-Patel feels “very fortunate” she was diagnosed with the help of Manchester United, and she says the club continue to be a major support.

They are “absolutely understanding.” And if they don’t understand, they will always pull me for a chat. They won’t ever have a chance to ask, “Why I’ve said this, why I’ve said it that way.” They want to understand me more than anyone else”, she says.

By opening up about her neurodivergence, she hopes that people and organizations will understand more about what it’s like to be autistic. She believes that some people aren’t trying to be difficult because of how different their worldviews are.

“People always go ‘ you don’t look autistic’. But has autism ever looked at?” she says.

“This is me, this is how my brain functions, and this is who I will be,” my brain yells.

” I know what it’s like to be dropped from a club because they say you’re too argumentative and you’re too difficult and we can’t handle you. I’m not trying to be difficult.

What others saw as her being difficult was actually her trying to understand in detail what was required.

They simply thought, “Well, we’ve told you, why don’t you understand like everyone else? ” Because I’m not everyone else. My brain differs from that of everyone else.

The brains of autistic people are wired differently to those of the majority of people, and while the disorder is called a spectrum to illustrate the different characteristics and severity among individuals, Middleton-Patel prefers a different way of describing it as she finds that too limiting.

Because I’m like, “Well, where do things go on it,” I enjoy the color wheel concept and the visualization. You know, it’s just one straight line’, “she says.

However, the color wheel considers everything that you have ever known, from social interactions to anxiety to tactile sensations.

“So I think for me it’s easier to visualise on days where I’m struggling because in my head I’ll go, ‘ today socially is through the roof’. When you say you know you’re struggling that way, I’d be like, “Well, I don’t know,” instead.

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Middleton-Patel, who is a goalkeeper, has green fingers, which are her favorites, and tomato plants.

However, she can only eat small cherry tomatoes because she finds the big ones, with their slimy, jelly-like interior, repulsive – something plenty of neurodivergent people will agree with. When hers are fully mature, she enjoys giving them to family and workmates.

Asked where she stands on the debate about them being a fruit or a vegetable, she has no doubt, having researched the matter”. Oh my goodness! “she says, with the excitement of a true tomato enthusiast.

“I get both of the veg, but where I put it in my garden, in my small home allotment, is with the vegetable.” I think it’s a veg, but scientists might say otherwise. “

The breadth and breadth of sensory issues that may be a part of neurodivergence are one aspect that is still unappreciated.

Middleton-Patel struggles with sunlight – she is not alone in finding grey skies are, somehow, even brighter and more painful than clear blue, sunny ones – to the extent she often has to wear sunglasses in the gym because the windows are so big.

Additionally, cutlery is available that is the size of “normal” forks, which she claims gives the impression that people are eating with a garden spade.

” I have my own set of forks in our lunch room, “she says”. I use them because they are officially “children’s cutlery.” I use them at home too. The appearance of a, if you want to say “normal,” fork makes me very angry because I have tactile and weight issues. I can’t explain the feeling but I want to throw it out of the window. “

There is one tight-knit band she is particularly close to, her fellow “Legolah Club” teammates Jess Simpson, Leah Galton, and Rachel Williams, despite her emphasis on how supportive both her team-mates and the club are.

” We all bounce off each other, but they also know when I just need a hand on the leg to be like: ‘ Calm down. You can breathe. You’re fine. You’re safe here, she declares.

” I don’t know how they do it, but when I can’t get my words out, they know what I’m trying to say. They will address me, which is significant for me because sometimes I’ll be sat in a meeting and remain silent.

“People are looking at me and I’ll stare at the floor, and they’ll be there: ‘ She’s trying to say this. We just had a discussion about it, blah, blah, blah, blah. And they’re just perfect. They comprehend my situation. They don’t want me to fake anything, they just want me to be me. It’s really that easy.

If only life itself were that simple, for activities many people undertake with barely a second thought – shopping for example – can lead to her taking fairly unusual measures.

She already finds it difficult to find items to wear because of her issues with texture, but the entire process is very stressful, and she now does almost all of her online shopping as a result.

“One thing I think people don’t consider is the anxiety side”, she says.

“Can I help you when clothes shop assistants approach me?” Er, no. Do you intend to assist? Am I meant to say yes? No, I’m fine. But then I say it so bluntly they’re like ‘ Okaaay… ‘ And I’m like ‘ oh no, I didn’t mean it like that’.

When I go to a “pay at pump” station for gasoline, I find this funny, and I wish I could get past it. I will drive an extra 15 minutes just to avoid going into a till one because of the fear of that conversation and not knowing what they’re going to say.

Because I know what I’m looking for, Lego is the only place I can visit. I can actually make conversation because they love Lego as much as I love Lego, but that’s literally the only store”.

related subjects

  • Wales Women’s Football Team
  • Football

Extreme heat, poor pitches & plenty of goals – Club World Cup reaches halfway

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With two weeks of knockout matches still in play, FIFA’s expanded Club World Cup in the United States is now in its final group stage.

The competition, which has grown from seven to 32 teams, has been criticized for having matches that are played in extreme temperatures and frequently with low attendance.

The Club World Cup, which will feature 48 nations and take place in 16 cities across Canada, the US, and Mexico, is viewed as a purely financial tool by critics who claim that it is only intended to boost FIFA’s finances. Football’s governing body also claims that the event is necessary to prepare for the upcoming five-week World Cup, which will take place in 16 cities across the country, including Mexico and Canada.

There have been a lot of sharp contrasts in this. From incredibly one-sided thrashings, like Bayern Munich’s 10-0 defeat of Auckland City, to thrilling matches with 4-4 and 4-3 scorelines, Bayern Munich set a new record for the tournament.

Weather that is “impossible” and threats from thunderstorms

Bayern Munich's Sacha Boey dousing his face in waterImages courtesy of Getty

There have been significant concerns about the players’ workload since the announcement of the tournament expansion, especially given that the World Cup is scheduled for in a year.

Real Madrid has now played 65 games since the start of the main European seasons in August, with the final game set for them to come after 62 games for Inter Milan, 61 for Paris St-Germain, and 61 for both Chelsea and Manchester City, respectively.

The temperatures in which the matches are being held have only made things worse. In Charlotte, North Carolina, during the game between Bayern Munich and Benfica, temperatures reached 36C, and Chelsea manager Enzo Maresca claimed it was “impossible” to hold regular training sessions despite a “code red” severe heat warning in Philadelphia.

Players have been attempting to cool themselves down by hurling to the shade, frequently while sporting ice-cold towels or spraying water bottles over their heads.

Because of the threat of thunderstorms, five games in American stadiums are delayed by an additional 10 miles because of the lack of lightning.

Fantastic environments or largely empty arenas

Paris St-Germain v Atletico MadridImages courtesy of Getty

18 of the 48 group games had crowds of more than 40 000, and they all had fantastic atmospheres.

At the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, where Paris St-Germain defeated Atletico Madrid 4-0, was the highest attendance so far, with 80, 619 people.

Top ten Club World Cup attendances

However, many games did not sell as well, with nearly 50 000 seats unoccupied for Chelsea’s opening game against Los Angeles FC in Atlanta.

Eight of the ten matches with the lowest attendances occurred between Monday and Friday, and six of those games started between midday and 3 p.m. local time. Fifa is trying to balance the local demand for tickets, tournament prices, and match scheduling to meet the lucrative television markets in Europe and Asia.

Worst 10 teams in the World Cup’s ten teams were there

Mamelodi SundownsImages courtesy of Getty

Poor quality pitches that have been heavily criticised include “ball bounces like a rabbit” and “ball bounces like a rabbit.”

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Luis Enrique, the manager of PSG, has spoken out against the playing surfaces, arguing that FIFA needs to “bear in mind” the quality of both match and training pitches if it wants the Club World Cup to be “the most high-level competition in the world.”

After his team defeated the Seattle Sounders 2-0, the 55-year-old said, “I wouldn’t imagine an NBA court full of holes.”

The state of the field of play is what really matters to me. The ball bounces almost like an ant rabbit would sway.

After his team defeated Pachuca 3-1, Real Madrid’s Jude Bellingham also found fault with the pitch.

Teams have taken it very seriously?

Liam Delap scores for ChelseaImages courtesy of Getty

Simply put, take it very seriously. Given that there is a prize pot worth $ 775 million, which will be divided between the 32 teams, with the winners receiving up to $ 97 million, that is understandable.

For each round they complete, clubs will receive a specific score. They receive an additional £5.8 million for reaching the last 16, another $ 10.1 million for making the quarter-finals, $ 16.2 million for making the semi-finals, $ 32, $ 32, $ 32, $ 30 million for winning the entire thing, and a draw of $ 800, 000 for winning the group stage.

Has Europe a chance to rule Europe?

Lionel Messi for Inter MiamiImages courtesy of Getty

Football data experts Opta reported that all 11 of Europe’s teams were the most likely to win the trophy before the competition even started.

However, three of the continent’s 12 teams left after finishing third in their respective groups, with Porto, Atletico Madrid, and Red Bull Salzburg.

Six South American teams were present, but both Argentina and Brazil were eliminated, and all four of them managed to survive, with Palmeiras and Botafogo tying up in the last-16.

Inter Miami and Mexico’s Monterrey are the only remaining Asian teams in the world, while Saudi Arabian outfit Al Hilal, who face Manchester City in the first knockout round, are the only other two of the five teams still in play.

All four African teams were unable to advance out of their groups, just like Oceania’s only representative Auckland City, despite their memorable 1-1 draw with Argentina’s Boca Juniors.

Last 16 games (all BST)

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