FIFA Club World Cup

association football tournament for clubs

The FIFA Club World Cup is a competition in the sport of Club football. The Fédération 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 Madrid is the most successful team in the tournament, with 5 titles.

FIFA Club World Cup
Founded2000; 24 years ago (2000)
RegionInternational (FIFA)
Number of teams7 (from 6 confederations)
Current championsSpain Real Madrid
(5th title)
Most successful club(s)Spain Real Madrid
(5 titles)
WebsiteOfficial website
2023 FIFA Club World Cup

List of champions and statistics

See also: Clubs of football world champions

YearWinnerFinal
score
Runner-up
2000 Corinthians0–0
(4–3)p
Vasco da Gama
2005 São Paulo1–0 Liverpool
2006 Internacional1–0 Barcelona
2007 AC Milán4–2 Boca Juniors
2008 Manchester United1–0 LDU Quito
2009 Barcelona2–1aet Estudiantes
2010 Internazionale3–0 TP Mazembe
2011 Barcelona4–0 Santos
2012 Corinthians1–0 Chelsea
2013 Bayern Munich2–0 Raja Casablanca
2014 Real Madrid2–0 San Lorenzo
2015 Barcelona3–0 River Plate
2016 Real Madrid4-2 Kashima
2017 Real Madrid1-0 Grêmio

Results by country

TeamChampionsRunners-up
 Brazil43
 Spain61
 Italy20
 England12
 Germany10
 Argentina04
 Morocco01
DR Congo01
 Ecuador01

Results by continent

TeamChampionsRunners-up
Europe103
South America48
Africa02
Asia01

Pre Fifa Club World Cup Competition

  • 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]

Related pages

References

Other websites