List of world champion football clubs
This list includes the official (de jure) world champion football clubs recognized by FIFA. The official competitions that grant this title are the extinct Intercontinental Cup (1960–2004) and, in 2000 and since 2005, the FIFA Club World Cup.
Competitions
FIFA Club World Cup
The FIFA Club World Cup is an international men's association football competition organised by the Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA), the sport's global governing body. The tournament officially assigns the world title.[1] The competition was first contested in 2000 as the FIFA Club World Championship. It was not held between 2001 and 2004 due to a combination of factors, most importantly the collapse of FIFA's marketing partner International Sport and Leisure.[2] Since 2005, the competition has been held every year, and has been hosted by Brazil, Japan, the United Arab Emirates and Morocco. The FIFA Club World Cup's prestige is perceived quite differently in different parts of the football world; while it is widely regarded as the most distinguished club level trophy in South America,[3][4] it struggles to attract interest in most of Europe compared to the UEFA Champions League and commonly lacks recognition as a high-ranking contest.[5][6]
The first FIFA Club World Championship took place in Brazil in 2000. It ran in parallel with the Intercontinental Cup (also known as European/South American Cup), a competition organised jointly by the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) and the Confederación Sudamericana de Fútbol (CONMEBOL) first disputed in 1960 by the winners of the European Champions' Cup and the Copa Libertadores. In 2005, after the Intercontinental Cup's last edition, that competition was merged with the FIFA Club World Cup's first edition and renamed the "FIFA Club World Championship". In 2006, the tournament took its current name. As required by the regulations, a representative from FIFA present the winner of the World Cup with the FIFA Club World Cup trophy and with a FIFA World Champions certificate.[7]
The current format of the tournament involves seven teams competing for the title at venues within the host nation over a period of about two weeks; the winners of that year's AFC Champions League (Asia), CAF Champions League (Africa), CONCACAF Champions League (North America), Copa Libertadores (South America), OFC Champions League (Oceania) and UEFA Champions League (Europe), along with the host nation's national champions, participate in a straight knock-out tournament. The host nation's national champions dispute a play-off against the Oceania champions, from which the winner joins the champions of Asia, Africa and North America at the quarter-finals. The quarter-final winners go on to face the European and South American champions, who enter at the semi-final stage, for a place in the final. In Europe the tournament is almost ignored by the mass media, also because of its sporting level, considered inferior to the Intercontinental Cup,[8] indeed when the sides used to meet in a one-off game in Japan (and even before), this was still a fair fight. The opening up of the global market in football has changed the balance. These days the best South Americans (and the stars from all the other continents) are usually playing for the Europeans.[9][10]
Intercontinental Cup
The Intercontinental Cup, also known as European/South American Cup, was an official international football competition endorsed by the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) and the Confederación Sudamericana de Fútbol (CONMEBOL),[11][12][13] contested between representative clubs from these confederations, usually the winners of the European Champions' Cup (now known as the UEFA Champions League), and the South American Copa Libertadores. The competition was played by representatives clubs of most developed continents in the football world; has since been replaced by the FIFA Club World Cup. All editions were official UEFA and CONMEBOL competitions,[14][15] and indirectly also of FIFA.[16][17][18][19]
From its formation in 1960 to 1979, the competition was contested over a two legged tie, with a playoff if necessary until 1968, and penalty kicks later. During the 1970s, European participation in the Intercontinental Cup became a running question due to controversial events in the 1969 final,[20] and some European Champions Club' winner teams withdrew.[21] From 1980 until 2004, the competition was contested over a single match held in Japan and sponsored by multinational automaker Toyota, which offered a secondary trophy (that flanked the original), the Toyota Cup.[22]
Throughout the history of football, various attempts have been made to organize a tournament that identifies "the best club team in the world" – such as the Football World Championship, the Lipton Trophy, the Copa Rio, the Pequeña Copa del Mundo and the International Soccer League - due to FIFA's lack of interest or inability to organize club competitions,[23] – the Intercontinental Cup is considered by FIFA as the official predecessor[24][16] to the FIFA Club World Cup, which was held for the first time in 2000.[25]
All the winning teams were regarded by worldwide mass media and the football community, FIFA included (as News Center productions and not cataloged on the FIFA website as official entity documents),[26] as "world champions" de facto.[27][28][29][30] On 27 October 2017, the FIFA Council, while not promoting statistical unification between the Intercontinental Cup and the Club World Cup, in respect to the history of the two tournaments[31] (which merged in 2005),[32] has officialised (de jure) the title of the Intercontinental Cup, recognising all the winners as official club world champions,[33][34][35][36] with the same title of the FIFA Club World Cup winners, or "FIFA Club World Champions".[37][38][39][40][41][42][43]
FIFA recognises the Intercontinental Cup as the sole direct predecessor of the Club World Cup, and the champions of both aforementioned competitions are the only ones uncontroversially officially recognised as Club World Champions in the FIFA Club World Cup Statistical Kit, the official document of FIFA's club competition. For the recognition request for the 1951 competition, see Copa Rio (international tournament).
Results by year
Intercontinental Cup era
Match was won after extra time | |
Match was won via a penalty shoot-out | |
‡ | Play-off match where teams were tied on points (1 win and 1 defeat each) |
# | European runner-up contested in place of European champion |
Notes
- After the events of the 1969 Intercontinental Cup, many European Cup Champions refused to play in the Intercontinental Cup.[88]
- #1 1970–71 European Cup finalists Panathinaikos replaced the champions Ajax who declined to participate.[55]
- #2 1972–73 European Cup finalists Juventus replaced the champions Ajax who declined to contest the meeting in South America, officially for financial reasons.[89][57]
- #3 1973–74 European Cup finalists Atlético Madrid replaced the champions Bayern Munich who declined to participate.[58]
- #4 1976–77 European Cup finalists Borussia Mönchengladbach replaced the champions Liverpool who declined to participate.[61]
- #5 1978–79 European Cup finalists Malmö FF replaced the champions Nottingham Forest who declined to participate.[62]
- #6 1992–93 Champions League finalists Milan replaced the champions Marseille who were suspended due to a match fixing and bribery scandal.[76]
Club World Cup era
Match was won after extra time | |||
Match was won via a penalty shoot-out |
Winners
By club
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, albeit different, confer the same title, that of FIFA[130] club world champions[131]) so in accordance to what is officially communicated by FIFA, the total count of official[132][16][133][130] world titles is as follows:[134][135][136][137][138][139][131]
For information, the Rio Cup 1951 and 1952 (won respectivelt by Palmeiras and Fluminense) is worthy of particular mention: however was simply recognized (after various controversial resolutions) as the first world-class tournament and not as assigning the official world title, a prestigious recognition but that does not allow Palmeiras to appear on this list.[140][141]
- Key
IC | Intercontinental Cup (defunct) |
FCWC | FIFA Club World Cup |
All-time runners-up without title
- Key
IC | Intercontinental Cup (defunct) |
FCWC | FIFA Club World Cup |
Club | IC | FCWC | Total |
---|---|---|---|
Benfica | 1961, 1962 | ||
Cruzeiro | 1976, 1997 | ||
Vasco da Gama | 1998, 2000 (FCWC) | ||
Celtic | 1967 | ||
Panathinaikos | 1971 | ||
Borussia Mönchengladbach | 1977 | ||
Malmö FF | 1979 | ||
Nottingham Forest | 1980 | ||
Aston Villa | 1982 | ||
Hamburger SV | 1983 | ||
Argentinos Juniors | 1985 | ||
Steaua București | 1986 | ||
PSV Eindhoven | 1988 | ||
Atlético Nacional | 1989 | ||
Colo-Colo | 1992 | ||
Palmeiras | 1999 | ||
Once Caldas | 2004 | ||
LDU Quito | — | 1 | 2008 |
TP Mazembe | — | 1 | 2010 |
Chelsea | — | 1 | 2012 |
Raja Casablanca | — | 1 | 2013 |
San Lorenzo | — | 1 | 2014 |
Kashima Antlers | — | 1 | 2016 |
Al-Ain | — | 1 | 2018 |
See also
Notes
- Score was 0–0 after 120 minutes. Corinthians won 4–3 on penalties.[90]
- Extra time was played in the third-place match. Necaxa won 4–3 on penalties.[91]
- No extra time was played in the third-place match. Urawa Red Diamonds won 4–2 on penalties.[99]
- Score was 1–1 after 90 minutes.[104]
- No extra time was played in the third-place match. Pohang Steelers won 4–3 on penalties.[105]
- No extra time was played in the third-place match. Al Sadd won 5–3 on penalties.[110]
- No extra time was played in the third-place match. Auckland City won 4–2 on penalties.[117]
- Score was 2–2 after 90 minutes.[122]
- No extra time was played in the third-place match. Atlético Nacional won 4–3 on penalties.[123]
- Score was 0–0 after 90 minutes.
- No extra time was played in the third-place match. Monterrey won 4–3 on penalties.
- The records of clubs from currently non-existing associations such as Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia, East Germany and Yugoslavia are attributed to those federations, since the corresponding titles were won when the clubs were affiliated to those associations.
References
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