Tour de France 2025 – your stage-by-stage guide and results

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The 112th edition of the Tour de France gets under way in Lille on Saturday with the three-week race ending on the Champs-Elysees in Paris on Sunday, 27 July.

The riders will tackle six mountain stages including trips to the Pyrenees and Alps during the gruelling 3,320km (2,063-mile) race.

There will also be two individual time trials, with the second featuring the steep climb up to the Altiport in Peyragudes.

BBC Sport looks at all 21 stages of La Grande Boucle analysing where it could be won and lost.

Saturday, 5 July – stage one: Lille Metropole – Lille Metropole, 184.9km

Jasper Philipsen celebrates winning stage one of the 2025 Tour de FranceReuters

Winner: Jasper Philipsen

Report: Philipsen wins stage one to claim first yellow jersey

Jasper Philipsen was the first rider to wear the yellow jersey this year – claiming the maillot jaune for the first time in his career.

A sprint finish was expected after a flat stage beginning and ending in Lille, and Alpecin-Deceuninck’s lead-out train delivered the 27-year-old in the perfect position to claim his 10th stage win.

Sunday, 6 July – stage two: Lauwin-Planque – Boulogne-sur-Mer, 209.1 km

Stage two profileASO

The second stage is also the longest in this year’s race covering 209.1km with the peloton making their way through the countryside of the Hauts-de-France region, heading towards the Strait of Dover.

Monday, 7 July – stage three: Valenciennes – Dunkirk, 178.3km

Stage three profileASO

This should be another good chance for the Tour’s fast men to shine.

Tuesday, 8 July – stage four: Amiens Metropole -Rouen, 174.2km

Stage four profileASO

Both Amiens and Rouen have been the preserve of sprinters in previous editions of the Tour but that will not be the case this time around.

Wednesday, 9 July – stage five: Caen – Caen, 33km

Stage five profileASO

The first of two individual time trials arrives on wide and completely flat roads of Caen.

Thursday 10 July – stage six: Bayeux – Vire Normandie, 201.5 km

Stage six profileASO

Six categorised climbs and more than 3,400m of vertical gain mean this is regarded as the most challenging flat stage in the Tour’s recent history.

Friday, 11 July – stage seven: Saint-Malo – Mur-de-Bretagne Guerledan, 197 km

Stage seven profileASO

The race passes through the home village of five-time winner Bernard Hinault during a relatively tame opening 175km of stage seven.

However, expect bedlam as the finishing line approaches with a closing circuit that mirrors the 2021 stage.

Saturday, 12 July – stage eight: Saint-Meen-le-Grand – Laval Espace Mayenne, 171.4 km

Stage eight profileASO

Sunday, 13 July – stage nine: Chinon – Chateauroux, 174.1km

Stage nine profileASO

When you think of Chateauroux one rider immediately springs to mind – Mark Cavendish.

The first of the Manx Missile’s record 35 stage wins arrived in the city in 2008 and he repeated that success on the Avenue de la Chatre in 2011 and 2021.

Monday, 14 July – stage 10: Ennezat – Le Mont-Dore Puy de Sancy, 165.3 km

Stage 10 profileASO

While the 4,400m of elevation gain across seven category-two climbs and a category-three ascent is likely to put the sprinters in trouble almost from the start, the general classification contenders are likely to keep their powder dry on a stage that looks made for the breakaway specialists.

There will likely be a strong posse of home riders trying to get in any group heading up the road with the objective of becoming the first French stage winner on Bastille Day since Warren Barguil in 2017.

Wednesday, 16 July – stage 11: Toulouse – Toulouse, 156.8km

Stage 11 profileASO

Thursday, 17 July – stage 12: Auch – Hautacam, 180.6km

Stage 12 profileASO

The first real big day in the mountains could see fireworks in the GC race.

The route up to the ski resort at Hautacam on the roads above Lourdes takes the peloton on the route where five-time champion Miguel Indurain tore the race (and his rivals) apart in 1994.

Friday, 18 July – stage 13: Loudenvielle – Peyragudes 10.9km

Stage 13 profileASO

An individual time trial takes the riders from the valley floor up to the runway of Altiport 007 in Peyragudes.

After a flat start, there will be over 8km uphill and no hiding place for the GC favourites in the race of truth.

Saturday, 19 July – stage 14: Pau – Luchon-Superbagneres, 182.6 km

Stage 14 profileASO

A classic and mouth-watering mountain stage in the Pyrenees arrives at the end of week two.

Nearly 5,000m of elevation gain is packed into climbs up the mighty hors-categorie Tourmalet followed by the Col d’Aspin and Col de Peyresourde.

On a day when the GC riders will be need to be at their very best, the strongest climbers will have their focus on the fight for the King of the Mountains jersey and hope to contest the stage on the pull up to the ski resort of Luchon-Superbagneres.

Sunday, 20 July – stage 15: Muret – Carcassonne 169.3km

Stage 15 profileASO

A transitional stage arrives as the race heads from the Pyrenees towards the Alps, which looks suited to the strongman sprinters who can cope with some climbing.

Tuesday, 22 July – stage 16: Montpellier – Mont Ventoux, 171.5km

Stage 16 profileASO

Stage 16 is a flat route until one of the most legendary mountains in Tour history comes into view at the end with the potential to turn the race on its head.

With no categorised climbs all day before Mont Ventoux, and the intermediate sprint featuring 112km into the stage, it would be no surprise if the peloton remains largely intact until then.

Wednesday, 23 July – stage 17: Bollene – Valence, 160.4km

Stage 17 profileASO

With two big Alpine tests still to come the GC teams will probably play second fiddle to the sprint teams when it comes to trying to rein in any breakaways.

Thursday, 24 July – stage 18: Vif – Courchevel Col de la Loze, 171.5km

Stage 18 profileASO

This year’s queen stage comes with more than 5,500m of elevation across 171.5km of racing and three legendary climbs which makes it arguably the toughest run of the entire Tour.

All three ascents fall under the hors categorie, with the Col du Glandon, a 21.7km drag with with sections at double digits just for starters.

Friday, 25 July – stage 19: Albertville – La Plagne, 129.9km

Stage 19 profileASO

The last real mountain stage represents the final opportunity for those high in the GC standings to make a play for the yellow jersey.

The route from Albertville to La Plagne covers almost 130km, and includes five leg-sapping ascents.

Plenty of points will be up for grabs again in the race for the the polka-dot jersey points available but this is really a last-chance saloon in terms of the overall race.

Saturday, 26 July, – stage 20: Nantua – Pontarlier, 184.2km

Stage 20 profileASO

The penultimate stage sees the race snake over the hills of the Jura towards Pontarlier.

Sunday, 27 July, – stage 21: Mantes-la-Ville – Paris Champs-Elysees, 132.3km

Stage 21 profileASO

The Tour returns to it’s traditional Paris finish after relocating to Nice last year due to the Olympics.

However, it does so with a twist, given the cobbled climb up to the Sacre-Cœur Basilica features three times in a throwback to the road race in the 2024 Paris Games.

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Talking points as Ireland begin two-Test tour

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With 16 players and head coach Andy Farrell on British and Irish Lions duty, Ireland’s squad for this month’s two Tests against Georgia and Portugal was always going to be almost unrecognisable.

Fresh faces ready to step up

Jack Aungier, Shayne Bolton and Ben Murphy in Ireland trainingInpho

Even before his playing career came to an end almost 10 years ago, Paul O’Connell felt like an Irish head coach in waiting. The absence of Farrell for this trip gives him his first opportunity to lead the side he represented on 108 occasions.

Such is the youthful nature of his summer squad, centre Stuart McCloskey is the only player on the trip who played with or against the Munster legend.

Ireland arrived in Georgia on Wednesday with 13 uncapped players in their number after Ulster prop Scott Wilson was added to the squad just before departure.

Wing Tommy O’Brien and second row Darragh Murray will make their debuts against Georgia, while the uncapped Michael Milne, Jack Aungier, Tom Ahern and Ben Murphy are all on the bench.

Farrell has previously spoken cautiously about the idea of simply handing out international caps although this tour has a different feel with interim attack coach Mike Prendergast saying last week it “would be the intention” to have all of the tourists get game-time across the two Tests.

Auditions open to replace squad stalwarts

Ryan BairdInpho

The 2025 Six Nations brought the curtain down on the long and distinguished Test careers of Peter O’Mahony, Conor Murray and Cian Healy.

The trio have been a mainstay of the international panel for over a decade and earned a combined 376 caps in green. Indeed, nobody in history played more for Ireland than Healy.

Their retirements, which in the case of Murray is solely from the international game, offer up opportunities for others to crack what has been a relatively settled matchday squad.

Leinster’s Jack Boyle had already been putting pressure on Healy after the 23-year-old made his debut against Wales in the Six Nations, and will be in pole position, but Munster’s Michael Milne and Paddy McCarthy, who is the younger brother of British and Irish Lions lock Joe McCarthy, will also be keen to grab their opportunities to impress.

Coupled with the form of Jamison Gibson-Park, Munster’s Craig Casey, who missed the Six Nations through injury, had already largely edged ahead of Murray for both province and the Test side.

The 26-year-old will step up to captain Ireland for the first time on this tour but will be backed up by the uncapped pair of Ben Murphy and Nathan Doak, with the former named on the bench against Georgia.

With usual skipper Caelan Doris injured, and Jack Conan and Josh van der Flier away with the Lions, plenty of back rows figure to be handed the chance to stake a claim to step up in O’Mahony’s absence.

Latest chapter of Crowley and Prendergast debate

Sam Prendergast and Jack Crowley after facing ArgentinaInpho

From the moment Leinster’s Sam Prendegast was named to start against Australia in November, the 22-year-old has been at the centre of the fiercest debate in Irish rugby.

When Johnny Sexton retired after the 2023 World Cup, it was Munster’s Jack Crowley who was given first crack at establishing himself as the former world player of the year’s long-term successor.

Crowley largely impressed as Ireland won the Six Nations Grand Slam in 2024 but, by the end of the calendar year, had appeared to cede the jersey to the young challenger.

Leinster’s Prendergast started the first four games of the 2025 Six Nations, although the more experienced player got the nod for the concluding game against Italy in Rome.

Ireland have not had such a back and forth for their fly-half berth since Sexton began to challenge Ronan O’Gara almost 15 years ago and every selection is scrutinised by the public, a situation only heightened by provincial rivalries.

Chance for Stockdale to reignite his Test career

Jacob Stockdale scores a try against New Zealand at the Aviva Stadium in 2018Inpho

With Ireland having drawn from largely the same pool for the past number of years for their matchday squads, it is natural that plenty of attention will be devoted to those with little or no international experience on this trip.

There are a few others, though, who are looking to offer a reminder of what they can do at this level. Chief among them, the squad’s most capped player – Jacob Stockdale.

It was during a Lions tour, when the invitational side was in New Zealand eight years ago, that Ulster wing Stockdale made a try-scoring international debut against the United States.

His first 18 months as an international included setting a record for tries in a single Six Nations campaign, since bettered by France’s Louis Bielle-Biarrey only this year, and an unforgettable score to clinch Ireland’s first win on home soil against the All Blacks.

Injuries, some questions over his defence, and the qualification on residency of Leinster’s James Lowe, have ensured the 29-year-old has been a more peripheral figure in recent times, making only three international appearances in the past four years.

Scrum test awaits in Tbilisi

Jack Boyle celebrates Leinster's URC victoryInpho

Healy is not the only experienced front row campaigner to be absent this summer.

With the 37-year-old retired, and Andrew Porter, Dan Sheehan, Ronan Kelleher, Tadhg Furlong and Finlay Bealham all with the Lions, Ireland will be without their first and second-choice units from recent seasons.

As a result, Saturday’s Test against a muscular Georgian side will provide a thorough examination of Ireland’s depth in a position recently considered so stretched that performance director David Humphreys placed a temporary ban on imported front row signings.

The emergence of Leinster trio Boyle, Gus McCarthy and Tom Clarkson during the 2024-25 season has eased those fears somewhat and it is those three who start together on Saturday.

Against a Georgian side historically renowned for their scrummaging prowess, and coached by former England hooker Richard Cockerill, the inexperienced visiting group will face a serious test of their mettle.

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Pajor’s journey to world’s most prolific striker

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As the second-lowest ranked team at Euro 2025, not many people would give Poland much of a hope at this summer’s tournament.

But that would not take into account their star striker, Ewa Pajor.

After a record-breaking debut season with Barcelona, the 28-year-old goes into the competition as the most prolific striker in the world.

It has not been a straightforward journey for the Pole, who has overcome a career-threatening eye disease on the way, and while she has been rewarded with trophies at club level, it is her achievements with the national team which mean the most.

“Representing your country and leading it to its first major tournament is something you carry in your heart forever,” Pajor told BBC Sport.

Despite being drawn in a daunting group which contains eight-time Euros winners Germany, 2021 Olympic silver medallists Sweden and 2017 Euros runners-up Denmark, Pajor says Poland can make their mark.

‘She was a Galactico’

She grew up on a farm outside Uniejow, a spa town of fewer than 2,000 people in central Poland.

If she wasn’t helping with the cows, she played football with her brothers – she was one of five siblings – as well as the local boys, outscoring them as if she were her idol Cristiano Ronaldo.

After she was spotted playing with local team Orleta Wielenin – she was the only girl playing – Pajor’s primary school PE teacher started to take her to tournaments in the town of Konin as her parents could not take time off from the farm.

Soon Pajor joined the youth system of women’s club Medyk Konin and she and older sister Paulina moved into a dormitory an hour from home.

Homesickness hit Pajor hard, but her parents had brought up a tough child.

“My ambition comes from my parents,” she told DAZN. “From a young age I saw how hard-working and ambitious they are. They instilled that in me, as well as never giving up. “

It was at Medyk that Pajor first met Nina Patalon, now Poland’s head coach, who at the time was coaching in the club’s youth set-up.

Patalon – the first woman in Poland to receive a Uefa Pro Diploma – has coached thousands of girls and women over the years, but she still remembers the moment she first saw a 10-year-old Pajor.

“Ewa came to one of my sessions with girls two years older than her, this tiny girl with a ball almost bigger than her,” Patalon told BBC Sport.

“At first, I thought she was way too small for the group. But then she started playing, and we were all stunned.

“Her speed, coordination, the way she moved with the ball – it was simply extraordinary. The older girls couldn’t handle her.

Turning pro

Ewa PajorGetty Images

Pajor made her senior debut for Medyk – coached by Patalon – at 15 years and 133 days, scoring twice as she become the youngest player to appear in Poland’s top flight.

She went on to score 64 goals in 60 league games for the club before joining German giants Wolfsburg in 2015.

Moving to a club that was a fixture in the Champions League, and playing in a physical domestic league, was a huge step up for Pajor – she told DAZN that she was “very thin with no muscles” at the time.

It was in 2017 in Germany that Pajor was diagnosed with keratoconus, a degenerative eye disease that can cause blurriness and stop the eye from focusing properly.

The issue threatened her career, but two surgeries and adaptive contact lenses allowed her to continue her development.

After making modest contributions to Wolfsburg’s Frauen-Bundesliga title wins in 2016-17 and 2017-18, Pajor scored 24 goals in 19 games in 2018-19 as her side won a third successive title.

Pajor followed that up with 17 goals in 16 games as Wolfsburg again won the title in 2019-20, before injury disrupted the following two campaigns.

Nine goals in the 2022-23 Women’s Champions League took Wolfsburg to the final, during which she scored the opener.

Yet for the fourth time in her career Pajor was on the losing side as Wolfsburg surrendered a 2-0 lead to lose 3-2 to Barcelona in Eindhoven.

Breaking records in Barcelona

Ewa PajorGetty Images

The quality and standards at Barcelona are such that it often takes new signings months to find their feet, but that was no issue for Pajor.

Not only did Pajor win the Pichichi Trophy as the top scorer in Liga F last season, but at the time of writing she is the top-scoring player – female or male – in the world in 2025 with 29 goals.

Though Barcelona lost to Arsenal in the Champions League final – bringing her tally of defeats in Europe’s premier club tournament’s showpiece to five – she undoubtedly improved a team that was already close to perfection.

“Barca and Pajor have improved each other. Her arrival gave Barca a number nine, a killer,” Spanish football journalist Julia Gimenez Funes told BBC Sport.

“After Asisat Oshoala’s departure last year, Salma Paralluelo filled that position and did very well even though it wasn’t her natural position.

“However, Barca needed a pure centre-forward like Pajor who could take advantage of passes from Patri Guijarro, Alexia Putellas and Aitana Bonmati. “

Speaking before the Champions League final in May, Barca boss Pere Romeu said that “having Ewa Pajor in the box gives us more presence than we had before”.

Barcelona have not only taught Pajor a new way to play football – she drops deeper and gets more involved in build-up play than she did at Wolfsburg – but other aspects of the game as well.

“What surprised me most was the focus on team culture and details,” Pajor told BBC Sport.

“It’s not just talent – it’s discipline, humility, and the will to improve constantly.

‘Representing a generation’

Ewa PajorGetty Images

As Poland’s all-time leading goal scorer with – at the time of writing – 68 goals in 101 appearances, it was fitting Pajor scored the most significant goal in the history of Polish women’s football.

Hanging on to a 1-0 aggregate lead against Austria in the second leg of their Euro 2025 qualification play-off in Vienna, Pajor smashed home from close range in the fourth minute of stoppage time to secure victory.

Pajor broke down in tears at the final whistle, Poland’s place at a major tournament for the very first time secured on her 28th birthday.

“It was one of the most emotional moments of my life,” Pajor told BBC Sport.

“Knowing we had made history – it’s hard to describe. I’ve won titles at club level, but this was different.

“It’s not just about me – it’s about the team, the journey, and every little girl watching who now knows this is possible. “

Though Poland lost all of their Euros qualifiers – they earned a place in the play-offs by winning their group in the 2023-24 Uefa Women’s Nations League – Pajor is bullish on their chances.

“We’ve grown so much as a group, and I believe in the work we’ve done,” she said.

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Tomiyasu to end injury-plagued spell at Arsenal

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Takehiro Tomiyasu and his team have agreed to terminate their contract, but the defender is leaving.

After only playing six minutes of football last year, the Japan international is recovering from knee surgery.

Tomiyasu will have to wait another five months as he continues to recover from an operation he had in February.

The 26-year-old had surgery on his knee in 2023 after missing the start of last season with a previous knee injury.

His current contract was set to expire at the end of the current season, but according to information from BBC Sport, Arsenal and Tomiyasu have reached a settlement to end it.

Tomiyasu, who left Bologna for Arsenal in 2021, made 79 appearances.

This summer, Arsenal have already begun looking at defensive reinforcements, with Cristin Mosquera as a target.

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Why are Brazilian teams doing so well at Club World Cup?

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Brazilian football expert Tim Vickery says, “This Club World Cup is a dream come true for Brazil fans.”

Everyone is talking about it, according to everyone at every bus stop and water cooler. It’s full-on”.

Brazil is swooning over Brazil while Britain sleeps, with some games starting at 02:00 BST for the newly expanded tournament in the United States.

No wonder, then.

Millions of football fans have watched the fortunes of Sao Paulo-based teams Palmeiras, Flamengo, and Botafogo, as well as the Rio-based teams’ fortunes on television.

And they have had a tournament.

On Friday, Fluminense will face Al-Hilal in the quarter-finals, while Palmeiras will face Chelsea for a spot in the final two.

Fans are still enthralled by the four Brazilian teams’ impressive accomplishments in moving from their groups to the last-16 stage.

The majority of the games for the 2026 World Cup will be held in the United States, too. Mexico and Canada host together.

What will a Brazilian team’s victory in the Club World Cup have to do with their chances of winning it six times?

This club-level success, in all fairness, was not necessarily anticipated.

Brazilian sports journalist Renata Mendonca, who covered the progress of all four Brazilian teams, said, “I didn’t expect that, most people in Brazil didn’t expect that.”

Palmeiras forward Jose Manuel Lopez (centre) celebrates scoring his team's second goal during the Club World Cup match against Al-AhlyImages courtesy of Getty

What makes Brazilian teams successful?

Both Argentina’s Boca Juniors and River Plate teams have already been eliminated, as have Manchester City, Inter Milan, Atletico Madrid, and Porto.

Brazil’s Flamengo and Botafogo both suffered defeats in the final sixteen, but the remaining two sides are still hopeful.

According to Vickery, “This tournament is a priority in the way an Olympic athlete will complete his training and programming at a certain point.”

“For Palmeiras, who really wants to win,” of course. They have set themselves the highest standards for this, and they are doing so right now.

Could the climate that the Brazilian teams are accustomed to have helped them gain advantage?

Since the start of the tournament, both Chelsea boss Enzo Maresca and Pep Guardiola have both mentioned the extreme heat.

Chelsea trained under the 37C before beating ES Tunis 3-3 in Philadelphia as a group.

Maresca claimed last week that the weather makes it nearly impossible to train or attend a session, while Guardiola stated before last Thursday’s match against Juventus that his players must be prepared to “suffer” in the challenging heat of Orlando.

Due to the soaring temperatures in the United States, competitions across the board have started using water breaks during matches.

Not all players, however, have had a difficult game.

Vitinho, a two-year player for Botafogo at Burnley, described the high temperatures as “we’re used to it.”

Another factor to take into account is the fact that all four Brazilian teams have abandoned their domestic competitions from March until December.

Teams from Europe entered the Club World Cup after spending long seasons, despite their freshness and sharpness.

15 days after PSG defeated Inter Milan 55-0 in the Champions League final in Munich, PSG’s first game against Atletico Madrid was on June 15 in Pasadena.

Vickery continues, “The Flamengo president recently said to a mate that we’re flying in the middle of the season.”

Is the end of the season in the eyes of the European clubs? Is it the start of the season? The European clubs haven’t been planning as well as they should right now.

Vickery thinks there should be another topic of discussion about Brazilian clubs’ success.

He claims that “there is more money in Brazilian football” than before. Over the past few seasons, the standard has increased. The influx of foreign coaches is one cause.

“Of the four Brazilian clubs here, only two have Portuguese coaches: Renato Paiva and Palmeiras, respectively.

Brazilian football has a lot of Portuguese and Argentine coaches, and it has given them more ideas. Even Filipe Luis, the Brazilian coach at Flamengo, and his backup team are all Spanish.

There is a new idea openness that wasn’t present a few years ago.

Mendonca continues, “South American teams have a great opportunity to win this competition.” They are physically very well-prepared for this season, which is in full swing.

They now have better conditions to retain their talented players and even re-establish some of them. For instance, Flamengo signed Jorginho after leaving Arsenal, while Juventus signed Danilo and Alex Sandro.

For this competition, they have also retained Igor Jesus, according to Botafogo. He will then travel to Nottingham Forest.

Flamengo's Bruno Henrique celebrates scoring against Chelsea at the Club World CupEPA

Does this indicate a World Cup is in store?

At the Club World Cup, hundreds of thousands of fans have traveled from Brazil to cheer on their respective clubs.

Their presence has been a tournament highlight thus far, with lively atmospheres at each of their games.

Vickery believes that the club’s performances will have no impact on how Carlo Ancelotti’s side performs next year despite the fact that Brazil have already qualified for the 2026 World Cup.

The strength of national teams like Colombia and Uruguay are what the performances of Brazilian clubs highlight, he adds.

“Many of their best players are not Brazilians,” according to Palmeiras, Botafogo, Flamengo, and Fluminense.

Brazilian football now treats the rest of South America in the same manner as European football treats Brazil. Two of Colombia’s midfielders, Jhon Arias of Fluminense and Richard Rios of Palmeiras, are available.

The goals for Botafogo against PSG were scored by Paraguay’s Gustavo Gomez, a center-back, and Palmeiras’ Jefferson Savarino, a Venezuelan.

Fluminense player Keno celebrates his goal during the Club World Cup match against Ulsan HD Images courtesy of Getty

Who are the remaining Brazilian teams?

Fluminense: After winning the Copa Libertadores for the first time in 2023, Fluminense has had a rollercoaster few years.

After that, they almost lost their place in Brazil’s top flight last year, just to avoid the humiliation of competing in the Club World Cup and second-tier competition.

Palmeiras: One of South America’s most well-known clubs, they haven’t lost any of their 111-year history to success.

They have won 57 medals, including three Copa Libertadores, the equivalent of the Champions League in South America. Most recently, they won Brazil in 2023.

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‘Asia’s first super club’ – are Al-Hilal paving way for more Saudi success?

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Saudi Arabian football played a significant role on Tuesday.

Fans awoke early to see Al-Hilal’s 4-3 victory over Manchester City in the competition’s final eight, while newly promoted Neom SC kicked off what is expected to be a busy summer transfer window by signing former Arsenal forward Alexandre Lacazette.

The Saudi Pro League (SPL) has evolved significantly since Cristiano Ronaldo’s signing for Al-Nassr in December 2022, as shown by Ronaldo’s Riyadh rival Hilal.

The Blues made their US debut with draws against Red Bull Salzburg and Real Madrid, and they advanced from the group stage with a victory over Pachuca of Mexico.

After winning the Club World Cup for the first time against European opposition, Hilal are confident ahead of Friday’s quarter-final encounter with Fluminense on Friday at 20:00 BST.

The four-time Asian champions are ready to join the global elite, regardless of what happens to the Brazilians.

Al-Hilal have just become Asia’s first super club, according to Professor of Afro-Eurasian sport Simon Chadwick of the Emlyon Business School in Paris.

However, Chadwick claims that this is not entirely dependent on spending after Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF), which owns Newcastle United as well, purchased Hilal in 2023.

In those two years, they have added a mix of former stars like Brazilian forward Marcos Leonardo from Benfica, Chelsea’s Joao Cancelo and Kalidou Koulibaly from Manchester City and Chelsea, and former stars like Malcom, Ruben Neves, Aleksandar Mitrovic, Sergej Milinkovic-Savic, and Renan Lodi.

Neymar left for Santos after being acquired by Paris St-Germain. In addition, Simone Inzaghi took over as manager of Inter shortly after PSG’s Champions League defeat to the Milan side.

Al-Hilal has a loyal, loyal following for a long time and has achieved a lot of success, Chadwick continued.

“Al-Hilal has been elevated to a new level by the stability and discipline that PIF ownership has brought, in addition to the revenues the club is now producing.”

Ronaldo has stated on numerous occasions that he believes the SPL to be one of the top five leagues in the world, including last week by extending his Al-Nassr deal by two years.

Tarik El-Taib, a former Al-Hilal midfielder, agrees.

The ex-Libya international said, “When we look at the league, we talk about Joao Cancelo, Riyad Mahrez, Cristiano Ronaldo, and Karim Benzema.”

The foreign players in the Saudi League are at a higher level if you look at the Spanish league, with the exception of Real Madrid, Barcelona, and Atletico Madrid.

a busy summer?

SPL clubs spent about $ 700 million on players like Sadio Mane, Neymar, Roberto Firmino, and Neymar during the summer of 2023.

More arrived a year later. Among them were Steven Bergwijn, Cancelo, Moussa Diaby, and Ivan Toney.

Al-Nassr spent about £65 million on Jhon Duran of Aston Villa during the biggest signing of January, which also reflected a growing interest in signing younger players.

Before the new year’s debut in August, more deals are anticipated.

Al-Hilal has been linked to Liverpool’s Victor Osimhen, Son Heung-min of Tottenham, and Darwin Nunez of Napoli as a replacement for Neymar, whose injured 18 months in Riyadh ended in January with his return to Brazil.

Luis Diaz, the English champions’ other South American striker, is reportedly a target for Al-Nassr.

There is some money. Six of the top 18 teams are among the richest in the world, out of 18 of them.

Al-Ittihad and Al-Ahli, two of Al-Hilal’s biggest rivals, were acquired by the PIF in 2023 in addition to Al-Hilal.

In May, Ahli won the Asian Champions League for the first time, but they finished fifth at home, one place below newly promoted Al-Qadsiah, fueled by Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and Mexican striker Julian Quinones, who scored 37 goals in the process.

Cristiano RonaldoReuters

Stars for fictional cities

Neom SC recently received promotion in April, making them even better. The club are moving 130 miles west to the Red Sea coast from their current home of Tabuk early in the next ten years because they are a city that is still in development.

Neom have begun preparing for their first top-tier season with Lacazette, who was also supported by PIF.

The 2034 World Cup will be played in Neom, and there are rumors that Saudi Arabia will apply to host the 2033 club competition.

However, it’s possible that national team success will take some time to catch up.

Saudi Arabia must now move on to the play-off route after having previously represented the country at two World Cups. They are not one of the six Asian nations who qualified directly for the 2026 edition.

The Green Falcons finished third overall behind Japan and Australia, largely because they had only seven goals in ten games scored by unrecognized strikers.

Roberto Mancini complained last September about the lack of opportunities given to domestic stars because most clubs are filling their attacking positions with foreign talent and few Saudi players are moving overseas.

The Italian remarked, “Saudi Arabia’s international players must play for their clubs as core players.” In regional matches, I have 20 players on the bench.

Herve Renard, his immediate-program’s successor, has made similar remarks.

Firas Al-Buraikan’s situation serves as an example. The striker scored 17 goals in the 2023-2024 season, but Al-Ahli signed England international Toney from Brentford in August, and the only goal that came back was three.

that Al-Hilal, who is currently in the running for the title, is not concerned about it.

However, Chadwick claims that the real prize has already been won.

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