FIFA’s celebration of its expanded Club World Cup has been sharply condemned by the president of global players’ union Fifpro, who described the tournament as “nothing more than a fiction” and accused the governing body of prioritizing profits over player welfare.
In a blistering statement, Fifpro president Sergio Marchi criticized FIFA and its president Gianni Infantino, likening the spectacle surrounding the tournament to the grandiose distractions orchestrated by Roman emperor Nero.
Marchi’s comments came in response to Infantino’s recent claim that the Club World Cup, which concluded over the weekend, is now “the most successful club competition in the world.” The tournament has drawn criticism from unions and stakeholders over its growing footprint in an already congested football calendar.
“The Club World Cup may have generated enthusiasm among fans and featured some of the world’s top players,” Marchi acknowledged, “but it hides a dangerous disconnect from the everyday reality faced by the vast majority of footballers across the globe.”
“What was presented as a global celebration of football,” he added, “was nothing more than a fiction created by FIFA, promoted by its president, without dialogue, sensitivity, or respect for those who sustain the game with their daily efforts.”
In a particularly cutting comparison, Marchi likened FIFA’s handling of the tournament to Nero’s infamous “bread and circuses”—lavish displays of entertainment that masked deeper societal issues. “A grandiloquent staging reminiscent of Nero’s Rome: entertainment for the masses while behind the scenes, inequality, insecurity, and a lack of protection for the true protagonists of the game deepen,” he said.
Tensions between FIFA and Fifpro have been simmering for some time. Last year, the union filed a legal complaint against FIFA over the expanded Club World Cup, alleging it breached European competition law by further burdening the global match calendar. FIFA has strongly denied those claims.
Fueling the ongoing rift, BBC Sport has learned that Fifpro was not invited to a key meeting on player welfare convened by Infantino on the eve of the Club World Cup final, despite other unions being in attendance.
Marchi’s latest remarks underscore growing unrest among players and their representatives over what they see as a lack of meaningful engagement from FIFA on player health and workload.
As the global football calendar continues to expand, the divide between governing bodies and the players who drive the game appears more pronounced than ever.
Source: BBC