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FIFA Club World Cup

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
FIFA Club World Cup
Founded2000;24 years ago(2000)
RegionInternational (FIFA)
Number of teams7 (from 6 confederations)
Current championsSpainReal Madrid
(5th title)
Most successful club(s)SpainReal Madrid
(5 titles)
WebsiteOfficial website
2023 FIFA Club World Cup

The FIFA Club World Cupis a competition in the sport of Clubfootball.TheFédération Internationale de Football Association(FIFA) organizes the World Cup every one year. The tournament officially assigns the world title.[1][2][3]It is normally contested between the Champions of each continent, and the champion of the host country.Real Madridis the most successful team in the tournament, with 5 titles.

List of champions and statistics

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See also:Clubs of football world champions

Year Winner Final
score
Runner-up
2000 BrazilCorinthians 0–0
(4–3)p
BrazilVasco da Gama
2005 BrazilSão Paulo 1–0 EnglandLiverpool
2006 BrazilInternacional 1–0 SpainBarcelona
2007 ItalyAC Milán 4–2 ArgentinaBoca Juniors
2008 EnglandManchester United 1–0 EcuadorLDU Quito
2009 SpainBarcelona 2–1aet ArgentinaEstudiantes
2010 ItalyInternazionale 3–0 Democratic Republic of the CongoTP Mazembe
2011 SpainBarcelona 4–0 BrazilSantos
2012 BrazilCorinthians 1–0 EnglandChelsea
2013 GermanyBayern Munich 2–0 MoroccoRaja Casablanca
2014 SpainReal Madrid 2–0 ArgentinaSan Lorenzo
2015 SpainBarcelona 3–0 ArgentinaRiver Plate
2016 SpainRealMadrid 4-2 JapanKashima
2017 SpainRealMadrid 1-0 BrazilGrêmio

Results by country

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Team Champions Runners-up
Brazil 4 3
Spain 6 1
Italy 2 0
England 1 2
Germany 1 0
Argentina 0 4
Morocco 0 1
Democratic Republic of the CongoDR Congo 0 1
Ecuador 0 1

Results by continent

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Team Champions Runners-up
Europe 10 3
South America 4 8
Africa 0 2
Asia 0 1

Pre Fifa Club World Cup Competition

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  • Intercontinental Cup(1960-2004); in 2017 FIFA officially recognized all of them as official[4]club world champions (de jure) with the same status to the FIFA Club World Cup winners or world champions FIFA.[5][6][7]In synthesis FIFA has two types of world champions, those deriving from the Intercontinental Cup and those deriving from the Club World Cup, the two competitions confer the same title.[8][9]
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References

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  1. "FIFA Club World Championship TOYOTA Cup 2005"(PDF).FIFA Report 2005.Zurich:Fédération Internationale de Football Association: 5, 19. December 2005. Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 2017-08-08.Retrieved2018-01-31.
  2. "FIFA Club World Cup 2017"(PDF).FIFA Report 2017.Zurich:Fédération Internationale de Football Association: 15, 40, 41, 42. December 2017. Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 2017-12-30.Retrieved2018-01-31.
  3. "FIFA Club World Cup 2017"(PDF).FIFA Regulation CWC 2017 Page 37.Zurich:Fédération Internationale de Football Association. December 2017. Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 2017-12-15.Retrieved2018-01-31.
  4. "Official (pluralofficials), from the Latinofficiālis.1. The official word is also used to refer to what is recognized or derives from an authority. cfr.dictionary."Official, definition".{{cite journal}}:Cite journal requires|journal=(help)2. Approved by the government or someone in power. cfr.dictionary.cambridge.org."official".{{cite journal}}:Cite journal requires|journal=(help)It is synonymous with legal, legitimate, approved. cfr.thesaurus."Synonyms for official".{{cite journal}}:Cite journal requires|journal=(help)
  5. “While it does not promote the statistical unification of tournaments, that is, has not absorbed to the Intercontinental Cup (merged with FIFA Club World Cup in 2005), the title was conferred by an official document from the world federation so it is legally a FIFA world title" cfr."FIFA Club World Cup Qatar 2019™"(PDF).p. 12.cfr.
  6. FIFA Council approves key organisational elements of the FIFA World CupArchived2017-10-27 at theWayback Machine- Recognition of all European and South American teams that won the Intercontinental Cup – played between 1960 and 2004 – as club world champions./ fifa
  7. "FIFA Club World Cup 2017"(PDF).FIFA Report 2017.Zurich:Fédération Internationale de Football Association: 15, 40, 41, 42. December 2017. Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 2017-12-30.Retrieved2018-01-31.
  8. “While it does not promote the statistical unification of tournaments, that is, has not absorbed to the Intercontinental Cup, FIFA is the only organization with worldwide jurisdiction over continental confederations and, then, the only one that can confer a title on that level, indeed the title was assigned by FIFA and therefore, the title awarded by the same world federation to the winners of the Intercontinental Cup is legally a FIFA world title. cfr."FIFA Statutes, April 2016 edition"(PDF).p. 19.cfr.
  9. "FIFA Club World Cup 2017"(PDF).FIFA Report 2017.Zurich:Fédération Internationale de Football Association: 15, 40, 41, 42. December 2017. Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 2017-12-30.Retrieved2018-01-31.

Other websites

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