The Champions Cup is here to stay, but FIFA must learn lessons from London teething trouble
Gold ticker tape rained down on Arsenal for the second time in eight months as captain Kim Little and vice-captain Leah Williamson lifted the inaugural FIFA Champions Cup gilded plate.
Following their Women’s Champions League triumph in May — continuing their record as the only English club to conquer Europe — they made history yet again on Sunday by beating Brazilian side Corinthians 3-2 in extra time and pocketing $2.3million (£1.7m) in prize money.
Little described the victory as a “different feeling” when asked how this intercontinental title compares to the Champions League. “It’s another trophy,” she told reporters after the win. “As players and a club, that is what we want to do.”
The Corinthians players were left disconsolate after losing a final with a real edge. “We wanted to give our fans their dream to be world champions,” head coach Lucas Piccinato said in her post-match press conference. “It was a magical moment for us. We will never forget playing the European champions in their own home.”
It is hard to assess what significance this new competition holds. Perhaps Arsenal season ticket holder Kevin Price put it best.
“It doesn’t compare to the Champions League trophy,” he told The Athletic outside the Emirates before kick-off. “A four-team competition, albeit champions of their respective continents, but you play two games and win a trophy. That’s not how most competitions work. Champions League — the best. This will be good for bragging rights. Best team in the world and all that.”
But the tournament was marred by last-minute organisational issues, a presenting partner with a conflict of interest and a winning side handed an overwhelming home advantage.
It was always going to be a challenge to attract fans to a midweek midday kick-off in Brentford, but FIFA had recruited hundreds of local school children in high-vis jackets to try to fill the 17,250-capacity Community Stadium for Wednesday’s first semi-final between Corinthians and Gotham FC.
As it was, the shrieking children met their match as the Corinthian supporters were the stars of the show, out-singing and outlasting the neutral crowd. England manager Sarina Wiegman watched on alongside FIFA’s chief football officer Jill Ellis.
Speaking to the media before the tournament, Ellis emphasised the importance of continuing to “elevate, grow and support the ecosystem” of women’s club football. FIFA sees the Champions Cup as a stepping stone towards the delayed 2028 Club World Cup, designed to grow global competitiveness and investment.
This intercontinental tournament can incentivise confederations to invest in the women’s game.
The winners’ cheque is the highest payout awarded in women’s club football, according to FIFA — although World Sevens Football (W7F), a new seven-a-side tournament introduced last year, awarded Bayern Munich $2.5m when they won in May. Arsenal’s players will receive a winning bonus, but the $2.3m they won represents 10 per cent of the women’s team’s overall revenue in the 2024-25 season, and is nearly six times what the Champions League winners earn ($398,000).
Such numbers are praiseworthy but could also distort competitive balance in domestic leagues. That is even more important in women’s football than in the men’s game, and the growing gaps between teams could threaten the long-term sustainability of women’s club football.
There had been a misguided assumption that the Champions Cup would culminate in a showdown between Arsenal and Gotham, the Women’s Super League (WSL) against the National Women’s Soccer League (NWSL), but Corinthians captain Gabi Zanotti upset that party.
If there were any questions about what this tournament meant to her, she made it clear. “I have dedicated my whole life to reach this point,” she said, describing her decisive semi-final goal as “the most important” of her career.
The 40-year-old said the introduction of such competitions “took too long to happen”, and it was important to develop women’s football globally.
Most players shared Arsenal’s Olivia Smith’s view that it was an “honour” and a “great opportunity” for their club to play in such a tournament. She welcomed the addition of more tournaments like the Champions Cup, and insisted that any chance to win a trophy is significant.
There have, however, been large wrinkles in the process.
First, the tournament was played in January. For Gotham and Corinthians, this is usually their off-season, whereas Arsenal and Moroccan side AS FAR are in the middle of their campaigns. There is no perfect solution that suits all parties, given different leagues play at different times of the year. But the 2027 and 2029 editions of the Champions Cup will also take place in January, as will the 2028 Club World Cup, although the hosts of all editions are yet to be decided.
Arsenal head coach Renee Slegers said the schedule “works for us” and they have a deep enough squad to compete on all fronts, whereas her Gotham counterpart, Juan Amoros, said it was “challenging”. The NWSL side brought their usual season preparation three to four weeks ahead of schedule, travelling from the United States to Spain on January 2. This time last year, they would have only been having their first-team meetings at this point.
“We hit the ground running right after New Year’s in a way that is significantly earlier than any other NWSL team has ever started historically, including us last year,” Gotham general manager Yael Averbuch West told The Athleticbefore their 1-0 semi-final defeat. “This is not pre-season for us, this is an extension of the end of last season.”
Gotham took this competition seriously. They wanted to win another trophy and put their brand as well as the NWSL on the map. From that aspect, their defeat, in Amoros’ words, was “a missed opportunity”. But he said the club does not look for excuses, rather solutions.
“The more you win in the world of football, the more games you play,” said Amoros. “That is the club we want to be, the one that plays all the games.”
The same scheduling issue applied to Corinthians. Zanotti described preparation for such a tournament as “very demanding”. Their last domestic game was in mid-December. “We’ve only had two weeks to get ready to come here,” she said. “It’s not ideal.”
Spare a thought for the WSL, too, which would have been particularly frustrated that attention was being taken away from its heavyweight clash between Manchester City and Chelsea, a hugely influential game in the title race.
Other teething issues centred on organisation.
The introduction of the 2026 edition and its dates were only confirmed in March 2025. Since then, confirmations of venues, broadcasting and commercial partnerships have been very last-minute. A new competition needs a much longer runway to get it off the ground. Ellis acknowledged this.
Six weeks before the competition started, fans did not know where the games would be held. FIFA announced Brentford as host of the semi-finals and Arsenal for the third-place play-off and final as late as December 12. The attendance for the final was 25,031 fans, 7,210 for the third-placed match and 6,177 and 8,066 for the semi-finals.
The Price family’s main motivation to go was their unwavering support for Arsenal, but Kevin criticised the tournament’s marketing when asked why the crowd may not be as big as the game deserves. “I don’t think it’s been as well publicised,” he said. “It was sprung on everyone about six weeks ago. I don’t think anybody realised how important it was.”
Upon the announcement that the tournament would take place, FIFA said the semi-finals and final would be held at a neutral venue. North America was considered but FIFA decided upon Europe, a decision Ellis acknowledges was made late.
“We know Arsenal is such a pillar in terms of driving the game,” she told members of the media. “Dropping it in a neutral site just doesn’t make sense for where the women’s game is.”
A FIFA statement said: “Key factors such as visibility, player experience, climate, accessibility for global fans and teams, media infrastructure, and commercial potential were thoroughly evaluated.”
But the selection of the Emirates for the final gave Arsenal a significant advantage, not only playing at home but also avoiding the logistical challenges from travelling.
“It is what it is,” said Piccinato, who wants future editions to be held at a neutral venue. The Corinthians head coach also said his club had complained to FIFA after two Arsenal youth players were pictured watching Corinthians train at their base, which they shared with Arsenal’s academy. Slegers described the incident as “innocent” and “unfortunate”.
At one point, there were question marks over whether one of the semi-finals would take place. Morocco’s FAR were due to arrive in London on Saturday but they were delayed until Monday evening because of “administrative issues”, according to their press officer.
“We didn’t have the time to acclimatise and adapt, but we’re doing the best we can,” manager Mohamed Amine Alioua said, even if goalkeeper Hind Hasnaoui added, in all sincerity, that their preparation was “perfect” for Wednesday’s 6-0 semi-final defeat against Arsenal. Corinthians also had their own visa issues as Dayana Rodríguez, Gisela Robledo and Paola Garcia arrived on Tuesday, a week later than the rest of their team-mates.
A broadcast partner was not announced until two weeks before the final stage, when Sky and FIFA agreed to air the games in the UK and Ireland. CBS Sports in the U.S. picked up the final and third-placed game, announcing its coverage on Wednesday.
CazeTV, FIFA’s broadcast partner in Brazil, received around one million concurrent views of the final on its live stream. By comparison, it had a similar number for Brazil’s group-stage game against Panama in the 2023 World Cup.
VISA was announced as the global sponsor two days before the semi-finals while Kynisca, Michele Kang’s multi-club ownership organisation, was controversially named the presenting partner of the inaugural competition less than a week before the start date. That led to suggestions of a conflict of interest, as Kang owns WSL side London City Lionesses, NWSL outfit Washington Spirit and eight-time Champions League winners OL Lyonnes.
Even if those teams did not compete in this year’s edition, they could compete in future tournaments and at the 2028 Club World Cup. A financial link between an owner and a global tournament organised by the sport’s governing body is deeply problematic, and any seed of doubt that there is a perception of bias — however small — has now been irreversibly planted.
It was an unusual arrangement given people cannot buy a product but instead, the partnership indirectly boosts Kang’s own clubs’ brands and at the final, earned her a seat at the high table alongside FIFA president Gianni Infantino, FIFA’s chief of global football development Arsene Wenger and Ellis.
FIFA said it is “delighted” with the partnership and is “comfortable”, adding the arrangement was only for the 2026 edition, with Kynisca-associated clubs involved. “Kynisca’s support of this tournament reflects their wider commitment to transforming women’s football through unprecedented investment, while also advancing elite women’s club football,” it added via a statement.
Others will argue Kang has contributed more money to the women’s game than any other individual, and that her investment and ambition are needed. If Kang’s mission is to advance women’s football, as she has repeatedly stated, funding an event that could trigger more investment seems logical.
Considering how late the partnership was announced, had Kang not stepped in, the tournament may have been left without a presenting partner altogether. But while Kang’s intentions may be well-meaning, FIFA might have opened Pandora’s box.
The sport’s world governing body has invested significantly, paying for teams’ business-class flights, transport, accommodation, food, beverages and on-the-ground support. Amoros praised the tournament’s organisation as “fantastic”, adding that Gotham had everything they needed.
Proper investment in marketing the product is essential, however. FIFA ramped up paid marketing in the week leading up to the tournament and called upon former England international Jill Scott and Arsenal legend Ian Wright to encourage fans to buy tickets.
The tournament’s tagline, “a new era of women’s football”, did little to capture fans’ attention, nor did it add any sense of jeopardy. Just because something is happening does not mean people will turn up. The UK women’s football audience is not mature enough yet and FIFA leaned heavily on Arsenal’s fanbase. But it would also be understandable if Arsenal were cautious in how they advertised the final — they are also trying to push a pivotal home game in their league campaign against Manchester City on Sunday.
“It stimulates growth when you create competitions,” added Ellis. “We’ve got to start somewhere. Let’s be patient. We’re committed to growing this every year.”
Arsenal played the hand they were dealt — and won — but FIFA must learn from its mistakes.
This article originally appeared in The Athletic.
Arsenal, Gotham FC, NWSL, Sports Business, Women's Soccer
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