Real, who won previously in 2014 and then three
successive tournaments from 2016 to 2018, are on course for a
showdown with Flamengo of Brazil in the final but both must play
a semi-final match first before they can set up an intriguing
decider in Rabat on Feb. 11.
European clubs have won the last nine editions of the event,
dominating since 2012 when Brazil’s Corinthians beat Chelsea in
the final in Japan in a rare South American success.
Last year’s Champions League and Copa Libertadores winners only
join once the tournament reaches the final four stage but it
begins on Wednesday when Egypt’s Al Ahly, who qualify as one of
two African representatives, meet Auckland City in Tangier in an
opening playoff tie.
The Oceania champions from New Zealand compete for a record 10th
time in the tournament against the equally experienced Cairo
giants, who are at their eighth Club World Cup.
That winner advances to a quarter-final clash on Saturday
against Seattle Sounders. The U.S. club won last year's CONCACAF
Champions League but had a miserable Major League Soccer
campaign.
African champions Wydad Casablanca can expect passionate home
support for their game the same day against Asian counterparts
Al Hilal from Saudi Arabia. Wydad’s squad includes three players
from the Morocco team that reached the World Cup semi-final in
Qatar in December.
Flamengo will only play their first game in the semi-final on
Feb. 7 and Real Madrid one day later.
The tournament will be used to experiment further tweaks to the
Video Assistant Referee system as referees will, for the first
time, explain the reasons for VAR decisions to the crowd at the
stadium and the television audience.
During the trial, referees will relay their decisions via a
microphone connected to the public address system, though their
conversation with video officials will remain private.
The tournament in Morocco is among the last with the current
format as FIFA have announced they will host an expanded Club
World Cup with 32 teams in mid-2025.
(Writing by Mark Gleeson in Cape Town; Editing by Christian
Radnedge)
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