LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND – MAY 25: Trent Alexander-Arnold of Liverpool acknowledges the fans, as he makes … More
Liverpool FC has indirectly received some of the $1 billion prize pot available for clubs competing in this summer’s inaugural expanded FIFA Club World Cup.
Liverpool received a fee of around $11 million from Real Madrid for Trent Alexander-Arnold, who, were it not for the La Liga side’s participation in the Club World Cup, would have left to join on a free transfer at the end of June.
Real Madrid will likely receive at least $40 million for its participation in the Club World Cup, and could double that if it wins group stage matches and goes deep into the knockout stages.
FIFA President Gianni Infantino has said that the winner of the tournament will receive over $100 million.
“The distribution model of the FIFA Club World Cup reflects the pinnacle of club football and represents the biggest-ever prize money for a football tournament, comprising a seven-match group stage and playoff format with a potential payout of $125 million foreseen for the winners,” said Infantino.
Real Madrid clearly feels it is worth spending some of that money to get its new signing a month early.
Alexander-Arnold had been linked with such a move for some time, and after the 2025 winter transfer window closed at the end of January, it became increasingly evident he would leave for the Spanish capital this summer.
Contracts for soccer players in the European leagues generally run until the end of June, as most of the seasons in UEFA are played across a fall-to-spring schedule. This is the case in the English Premier League, meaning Alexander-Arnold’s Liverpool deal came to an end on June 30.
The issue for Real Madrid was that the Club World Cup begins earlier in June, so Alexander-Arnold would not be able to play for them in the group stage unless a fee was paid to Liverpool for his contract. Real Madrid’s first game is against Saudi Arabian club Al Hilal at the Hard Rock Stadium, Miami Gardens, on June 18, before games against Pachuca in Charlotte on the 22nd, and Red Bull Salzburg in Philadelphia on the 26th.
FIFA, with the agreement of the national associations involved in the tournament, implemented a special transfer window to open ahead of the Club World Cup.
This special window runs from June 1 to June 10 in order to allow participating clubs to sign players, especially for the tournament.
Real Madrid has taken advantage of this pre-tournament transfer window to sign Alexander-Arnold, but it has ended up costing them $11 million to get the deal done before the Englishman’s contract expired at the end of the month. However, it will easily be able to cover this fee using the money received for Club World Cup participation.
LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND – APRIL 27: Arne Slot, Manger of Liverpool, embraces Trent Alexander-Arnold of … More
It could be said that the team to has really taken advantage of this transfer window is Liverpool, who ended up with a not insignificant fee for a player it was about to lose for nothing.
Liverpool could be criticized for letting Alexander-Arnold’s contract run down in the first place, but as the saga unfolded, it became increasingly clear that the player’s intention was to see his contract out and allow Real Madrid to sign him on a free transfer.
Real Madrid could have waited until the knockout stages and signed Alexander-Arnold on a free transfer as originally planned, as its last 16 game will likely come on July 1 in Miami Gardens, but decided it wanted Alexander-Arnold for the entire tournament. Winning all three group stage matches alone will earn the club $6 million.
It also emerged, via reporting by the Athletic, that Real Madrid was open to paying $45 million to sign Alexander-Arnold in January, but Liverpool decided the player was of more value to them in the team as it looked to end the season strongly, and eventually did so, winning the Premier League.
Though it is not participating in it, the Club World Cup has worked out well for Liverpool. The club can now put that money towards the $40 million fee for Jeremie Frimpong, whose signing, perhaps not coincidentally, was officially confirmed on the same day as Alexander-Arnold’s departure.
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