Ill Kylian Mbappe out of second Real Madrid Club World Cup clash

Ill Real Madrid striker Kylian Mbappe did not travel to Charlotte for the team’s Club World Cup match against Pachuca, but could be back for the final group stage game, coach Xabi Alonso said on Saturday.

The French superstar was taken to hospital on Thursday for tests and treatment after suffering gastroenteritis, before later being released.

Kylian Mbappe is improving “bit by bit” a club source told AFP, but he did not fly with his team-mates for Sunday’s match against Mexican side Pachuca.

Real coach Xabi Alonso addressed the striker’s condition during his pre-match press conference.

“He’s doing better, he’s back from the hospital and is recovering. We’re optimistic about having him against Salzburg,” he said.

Madrid face Salzburg in the final game of Group H on Thursday in Philadelphia.

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Kylian Mbappe missed the opening game with the same illness as Madrid were held 1-1 by Al-Hilal in Xabi Alonso’s debut as coach.

Madrid B-team player Gonzalo Garcia, 21, started in Mbappe’s stead and opened the scoring for Real Madrid against their Saudi Arabian opponents.

Alonso indicated that Gonzalo would again deputise for the Frenchman.

“Gonzalo can do what he did the other day. He scored a goal and had three chances. Looking ahead, we’ll see what happens. Having players with that sense of smell is very important. He did very well,” he said.

Mbappe finished as the European Golden Shoe winner in his first season at Real Madrid with 31 goals in La Liga and 43 across all competitions, but Los Blancos finished the season without a major trophy.

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Inter Milan, Dortmund claim first wins at Club World Cup

Inter Milan came from behind to beat Urawa Red Diamonds and knock the Japanese side out of the Club World Cup on Saturday, while Borussia Dortmund held off Mamelodi Sundowns to win a seven-goal thriller.

Fluminense rallied in the second half to beat Ulsan 4-2 and knock out the South Korean side while Monterrey and River Plate ended goalless.

At Lumen Field in Seattle, Ryoma Watanabe got an early opening goal for Urawa Reds, who were backed by a noisy contingent of their supporters.

But captain Lautaro Martinez — who got Inter’s equaliser in their 1-1 draw with Monterrey of Mexico in their opening game — repeated the trick to level matters with a clever overhead kick 12 minutes from time.

Valentin Carboni was then the unlikely hero as he grabbed the winner two minutes into injury time.

The 20-year-old Argentine had not played a competitive game since early October after suffering a serious knee injury while on loan at Marseille.

Carboni had not made an appearance for Inter in over two years, but he was on to hand to sidefoot home when the ball fell to him in the area.

“Our opponents play with their hearts and to counter that as a team we need to play with more pride, be humble and know how to suffer,” Martinez told broadcaster DAZN.

The result left some Urawa fans in tears and Inter level on four points with River Plate with the two teams meeting next in Club World Cup.

River Plate were let down by their finishing in a scrappy, foul-ridden encounter with Mexico’s Monterrey, who sit on two points.

Esteban Andrada, Monterrey’s Argentine keeper, made a series of saves while River’s forwards were unable to put away the few chances that came their way.

Monterrey could still make it into the last 16 if they beat Urawa and River or Inter win their game.

Earlier Jobe Bellingham got his first goal for Dortmund as his new club overcame stifling heat in Cincinnati to beat Sundowns 4-3 and move to four points from two matches in Group F.

The South African champions had taken a surprise early lead through a fine solo goal from Lucas Ribeiro.

However, Sundowns goalkeeper Ronwen Williams handed Dortmund their equaliser on a plate, passing the ball straight to Felix Nmecha, who stroked home.

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Serhou Guirassy gave Dortmund the lead with his 35th goal since the beginning of the season.

English midfielder Bellingham, who this month followed older brother Jude’s footsteps in joining the German side from Sunderland, started for the first time for Dortmund and made it 3-1 just before the break.

Khuliso Mudau’s own goal made it 4-1 before the hour mark, but Sundowns salvaged some pride by reducing the deficit through Iqraam Rayners and Lebo Mothiba.

“I’m sweating like I’ve just come out of a sauna,” said Dortmund coach Niko Kovac when asked about the conditions in a game which started at midday local time.

“It was tough going for both teams, but the opposition are used to it. We certainly didn’t give our best performance, but that wasn’t possible today.”

Sundowns will still go into their final game in Group F with a chance of qualifying for the last 16.

“The boys made a wonderful performance… it was a hell of a match. I’m not happy but very proud,” said their Portuguese coach, Miguel Cardoso.

South Korea’s Ulsan gave Fluminense a real scare in their Group F clash at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey, leading 2-1 until the 66th minute before the Brazilians ran out 4-2 winners, eliminating the K-League champions in the process.

Colombian striker Jhon Arias put Fluminense ahead with a 27th minute free-kick but goals from Lee Jin-hyun and Um Won-sang gave Ulsan the advantage at the break.

Nonata levelled for the Brazilians in the 66th minute before Juan Freytes put Fluminense ahead in the 83rd minute, slotting home after a scramble in the box.

Keno added a fourth in stoppage time to leave Fluminense on top of the group, level on 4 points with Borussia Dortmund ahead of their final game against South Africa’s Mamelodi Sundowns in Miami on Wednesday.

A win or a draw for the Rio club in their final Club World Cup group game will ensure their passage into the last 16.

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Bayern Munich overcome battling Boca Juniors to reach Club World Cup last 16

Bayern Munich booked their place in the knockout stages of the Club World Cup with Harry Kane and Michael Olise on target in a hard-fought 2-1 win over Argentina’s Boca Juniors on Friday.

Kane’s strike gave the German champions the lead, only for Miguel Merentiel to equalise, but Olise popped up with a late winner.

After defeats for Paris Saint-Germain against Botofogo and Chelsea against Flamengo, Bayern bucked the trend of European teams falling to South American opponents with an accomplished victory in the Group C encounter.

Hard Rock Stadium was packed to the rafters with Boca fans who once again brought incredible passion and noise to the NFL stadium, home to the Miami Dolphins.

But Bayern set about quieting the 63,587 crowd with Joshua Kimmich and Leon Goretzka taking charge of midfield, and the movement of Bayern’s frontline stretching the Boca defence.

The German side thought they had the lead in the eighth minute when a corner from Olise passed untouched through a crowded six-yard box and into the net.

But the referee was called to the monitor for a VAR review, where he was able to clearly see that Serge Gnabry had blocked and tangled with Boca goalkeeper Agustin Marchesin, and the effort was ruled out.

Ten minutes later, however, Bayern had the breakthrough when Boca were unable to fully clear a ball into the box and Kane pounced with a clinical left-foot shot into the bottom corner.

Bayern smelled blood and pushed for a second — Olise found Gnabry on the right, and his low ball across goal was just inches away from the sliding Kingsley Coman.

Boca desperately needed to find a foothold in the game, and they came close when a thundering free-kick from Kevin Zenon was punched out by Manuel Neuer.

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Moments later, Zenon tested the Bayern keeper again with another fierce strike, which Neuer punched away.

But for all the signs of life from Boca, Bayern looked in control of the game, and Kane was close to making it 2-0 with a dangerous free-kick which dipped just too late and flashed over the bar.

Bayern Munich continued to look for a second after the interval, and the busy Olise should have done better from close range but couldn’t connect properly with an off-balance shot.

Boca never gave up harrying and grafting, though, and their reward came in the 66th minute.

On a turnover in midfield, Alan Velasco found Miguel Merentiel down the right, and he powered goalwards, skipping around Josip Stanisic before producing a brilliant, confident finish past the helpless Neuer.

It looked like South American clubs’ unbeaten record in the tournament was going to hold, but with six minutes remaining, Olise provided the decisive blow.

After a scramble on the edge of the box, Kane found the France international with a delicate lay-off, and Olise provided precision control with a superb side-foot finish into the corner.

Konrad Laimer thought he had wrapped up the win with a third moments later, but he was ruled offside.

It was the first loss for a South American side in the competition, and it leaves Boca with just one point before their final group game.

Bayern Munich have the maximum six points after crushing Auckland City 10-0 in their opening game, with Portugal’s Benfica in second place on four points.

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Flamengo come from behind to stun Chelsea at Club World Cup

Flamengo produced a brilliant second-half fightback to beat 10-man Chelsea 3-1 at the Club World Cup on Friday and close in on qualification for the knockout phase.

Pedro Neto had given Chelsea the lead in the first half but Flamengo, roared on by their frenzied supporters who made up the majority of the 54,019 crowd, did not deserve to be behind and produced a stunning fightback after the interval.

Bruno Henrique came off the bench in the 56th minute and equalised for the Brazilian giants just after the hour mark before setting up Danilo to make it 2-1.

Chelsea were stunned, and their hopes of pulling level again were effectively destroyed when substitute Nicolas Jackson was sent off in the 68th minute.

Wallace Yan, also on as a substitute, then sealed the victory for the Rio de Janeiro club, the Brazilian league leaders, when he made it 3-1 late on.

Flamengo have two wins from two at the Club World Cup, and their qualification for the last 16 from Group D was assured later when Esperance of Tunisia beat Los Angeles FC 1-0.

Chelsea were unable to repeat the victory obtained in their opening game against LAFC, but will be hopeful of securing a place in the knockout phase in their final group outing against Esperance.

The result follows Botafogo’s stunning success against European champions Paris Saint-Germain on Thursday, stretching the unbeaten start for South American clubs at the competition to nine matches.

Maresca made four changes to his line-up following the win over LAFC in Atlanta, with new signing Liam Delap coming in for his first start up front.

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Delap had an early effort tipped over, but it was Neto who gave Chelsea the lead in the 13th minute as he pounced on a slip by Wesley to run through and score a second goal in as many games at FIFA’s new competition.

Flamengo applied plenty of pressure in the first half without really looking like scoring, but it was a different story after the break.

They nearly drew level on 54 minutes when Gerson pounced on a mistake by Reece James and tried to pick his spot in the corner. His connection was poor, and the arriving Gonzalo Plata could not turn the ball in at the back post.

The 34-year-old Bruno Henrique, capped twice by Brazil earlier in his career, then came on as the pendulum swung further towards Flamengo.

Chelsea goalkeeper Robert Sanchez tipped over a shot by Plata just before the equaliser came on 62 minutes.

A Gerson cross was headed back across the goal by Plata, and Bruno Henrique was there to turn it in, sparking wild celebrations among the Brazilian fans clad in red and black at Lincoln Financial Field.

Three minutes later, Flamengo were ahead as a corner was headed down by Bruno Henrique, and former Real Madrid, Manchester City and Juventus defender Danilo converted.

Jackson then saw red for raking his studs into the shin of Ayrton Lucas, leaving Chelsea to finish the game a man short.

Enzo Fernandez was not far away from equalising, but then Flamengo wrapped up the win seven minutes from time as a Plata shot struck Wallace Yan and the ball fell kindly for the substitute to fire in.

READ: PSG stunned by Botafogo in Club World Cup upset

PSG stunned by Botafogo in Club World Cup upset

Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) suffered a shock 1-0 Club World Cup defeat against Brazilian side Botafogo on Thursday in a hardfought battle between the reigning champions of Europe and South America.

A first-half goal from Brazilian international Igor Jesus proved the difference as Botafogo all but sealed a place in the knockout rounds in front of a 53,699 crowd at the Pasadena Rose Bowl.

French champions PSG are widely regarded as one of the favourites for FIFA’s 32-team tournament after a dazzling season which culminated with a scintillating 5-0 demolition of Inter Milan in the Champions League final last month.

But their hopes of securing a victory which would have seen them become the first side to reach the last 16 were stymied by a resilient performance from their opponents from Rio de Janeiro.

“A lot of people wondered, but we showed how strong Botafogo is,” goalscorer Jesus said after the win. “It was a difficult game, and we had to defend well, and we did our job and scored a goal.

“We’re really happy — we knew how important this game was. One team was the champion of the Champions League, the other team was the champion of South America,” added Jesus.

Earlier this year, Jesus was strongly linked to a move to Nottingham Forest in the English Premier League, but he chose to remain with the Brazilians to participate in the Club World Cup.

“I think I made the right choice to stay in Botafogo,” Jesus quipped.

PSG coach Luis Enrique said his team had expected a tough battle.

“We knew it was going to be a very difficult match — they defended very well,” the Spaniard said.

“This Club World Cup is very intense and difficult, and all the teams are highly motivated, especially when they’re playing against us.”

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The PSG manager, though, was adamant that the European champions still had plenty of time to resurrect their campaign.

“If there’s a team that can turn it around, it’s our team,” he said. “We’ve got to analyse this and there are things we can improve. But I think our performance was good.”

PSG picked up where they had left off in Sunday’s 4-0 Group B rout of Atletico Madrid, with Khvicha Kvaratskhelia testing Botafogo goalkeeper John with an early curling effort after just two minutes.

But that early effort was as close as PSG came to scoring in a scrappy first half punctuated by a series of niggling fouls that prevented the European champions from settling into their passing game.

Botafogo’s midfield trio of Marlon Freitas, Gregore and Allan worked tirelessly to close down Vitinha, denying the skilful PSG playmaker time and space to launch attacks despite dominating possession.

Instead, it was Botafogo who took the lead with a goal against the run of play on 36 minutes.

Jefferson Savarino’s perfectly weighted through ball split the PSG defence and sent Jesus racing through on goal.

The Botafogo striker did brilliantly to wrongfoot the covering Willian Pacho before sweeping a shot that took a slight deflection past PSG goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma on its way into the net.

PSG continued to dominate possession through the second half, and spent long periods camped in the final third.

But Botafogo’s defence held firm and the result leaves the Brazilians firmly on course for the last 16, with a final group game against Atletico Madrid to come in Pasadena on Monday.

READ: Mohamed Salah among nominees for PFA Player of the Year award

Mohamed Salah among nominees for PFA Player of the Year award

Liverpool forward Mohamed Salah was among six players nominated for the Professional Footballers’ Association (PFA) Men’s Player of the Year award on Friday.

The 33-year-old played a key role in Liverpool’s Premier League title triumph last season with 29 goals and 18 assists.

The Egypt star was voted Footballer of the Year by the Football Writers’ Association, securing almost 90 percent of the votes, marking the biggest winning margin this century, and is the firm favourite to land the PFA prize.

Mohamed Salah is joined on the shortlist by Liverpool team-mate Alexis Mac Allister, Arsenal’s Declan Rice, Cole Palmer of Chelsea, Newcastle striker Alexander Isak and Manchester United midfielder Bruno Fernandes.

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Palmer, who won the PFA Young Player of the Year award for 2023-24, was a surprise choice for the list given his struggles for Chelsea last season.

Rice starred in midfield for Arsenal, hitting a career-high nine goals while adding 10 assists in 52 appearances in all competitions.

Sweden striker Isak scored 23 goals for Newcastle as they qualified for the Champions League and ended a 56-year trophy drought by winning the League Cup.

Fernandes was one of United’s few bright spots in the club’s worst top-flight campaign since 1973-74, with eight league goals and 10 assists.

This year’s awards ceremony will be held in Manchester on August 19.

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Gennaro Gattuso convinced Italy can reach FIFA World Cup 2026

Gennaro Gattuso said Thursday he is convinced Italy can qualify for the FIFA World Cup 2026 as he begins his reign as Azzurri coach following the dismissal of Luciano Spalletti.

Italy are at risk of missing out on a third consecutive FIFA World Cup after a troubled start to their qualifying campaign, which has left them nine points behind Group I leaders Norway and cost Spalletti his job.

Asked whether he had more hope or conviction that Italy could reach next year’s finals in the USA, Canada and Mexico, Gattuso said: “conviction”.

“I believe that we have good players available to us. We have four or five who are among the top 10 in the world in their position,” added Gattuso.

“We have a good team, but I do mean team, I’m not thinking about individuals. I’m convinced that the team has quality, and I’m convinced that we can achieve our goal.”

Gattuso has a tough job on his hands with only the top spot in the group giving automatic qualification to the World Cup, even with Italy having played two fewer games than Norway.

As well as the significant points gap, Italy have a goal difference which is 12 goals worse than Norway, who hammered Italy 3-0 earlier in June.

That leaves Italy with the play-offs, from which they failed to reach the last two tournaments, as their only realistic shot at qualification.

“We need to bring back the enthusiasm and not think negatively. My goal is to make sure that the players that come to (Italy’s training centre) Coverciano do so with great enthusiasm, and to create a family,” said Gattuso.

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“After formations, technique and tactics, the priority is to recreate that mentality that in the past has made us stand out.”

Gennaro Gattuso, a World Cup winner in 2006, was not the Italian Football Federation’s first choice to replace Spalletti.

Claudio Ranieri eventually turned down an appeal to come out of retirement, for a second time, to save his country’s footballing fortunes.

But Italy icon Gianluigi Buffon, now head of the national team delegation, said he believes Gattuso is capable of defying those who doubt his capabilities after an up-and-down coaching career.

Gattuso, 47, was recently sacked by Hadjuk Split but has also managed AC Milan and Napoli, winning the Italian Cup with the latter club five years ago.

“I had a long playing career and every time I faced one of Rino’s teams with Juventus, they gave us a hard time, you had the idea that his teams had a precise identity, and that there was a lot of work and thought behind them,” said Buffon.

“It’s very simple, when you’re on the pitch, you can tell straight away if behind the other team, there is a good coach or not. And every time I faced his Milan or Napoli team, I could tell that was the case.”

Gattuso will be in the dugout for the first time in September when Italy host Estonia in Bergamo before travelling to Hungary to take on Israel.

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Club World Cup: Real Madrid held by Al-Hilal in Xabi Alonso’s debut

Federico Valverde missed a stoppage-time penalty as Real Madrid were held to a 1-1 draw by Saudi Arabia’s Al-Hilal in the Club World Cup on Wednesday.

A large contingent of Real fans in a crowd of 62,415 at the Hard Rock Stadium were left frustrated after new manager Xabi Alonso’s first game in charge ended with the points shared.

For the Saudi club, with Italian Simone Inzaghi also making his debut on the bench, it was an impressive performance where they caused Real’s defence plenty of problems before securing a hugely encouraging surprise result.

Al-Hilal started off in effervescent fashion and went close in the 19th minute when Salem Aldawsari volleyed back into the box and Marcos Leonardo’s effort flew just wide.

Renan Lodi had the ball in the net for the Saudi side, but the effort was ruled out for offside from another dangerous break. Aldawsari showed his pace but dragged his shot just wide.

Real Madrid gradually gained more control over the game, and Rodrygo went close in the 31st minute when he cut in from the right and his left-foot effort zipped just over the bar.

But Real’s quality was starting to shine through, and they grabbed the lead in the 34th minute.

Gonzalo, starting in place of the absent Kylian Mbappe, started the break from deep, and a clever exchange of passes concluded with Rodrygo drilling a low ball into the box where Gonzalo, who had continued his run, provided a delicate finish.

It was a classic counter-attacking goal, but it did nothing to dampen the enthusiasm of the Saudi side, who continued to press forward with energy.

Four minutes before the break, they drew level when Raul Asencio was ruled to have pulled down Marcos Leonardo, and Portugal international Ruben Neves calmly tucked away the penalty.

The dangerous Aldawsari, who scored the winner for Saudi Arabia in their upset win over Argentina at the World Cup in Qatar, threatened again just before the break.

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But Real Madrid came out strongly after the interval with Arda Guler introduced at the break rattling the bar with a volley from a Vinicius Jr. cross.

Moments later, Gonzalo brought a fine save out of Yassine Bounou with a firm header from a Vinicius cross and then Valverde flashed a shot wide from 25 yards out.

Having survived that storm from Real, Al-Hilal began to creep back into the game and ask some questions again of the Real defence, with Marcos Leonardo failing to make the most of two good opportunities.

But with three minutes of normal time remaining, Real were handed the chance to take all three points when Mohammed Al Qahtani was ruled to have put his hand in the face of Fran Garcia as he tried to hold off the challenge of the Real left-back.

But Valverde’s shot was saved by the diving Bounou to give the Saudi team a point after a hugely creditable performance.

“It was a good match for my team. They played very well. We played an excellent, organised team game. Together, we stood up to Real Madrid, which I think is one of the three strongest teams in the world. I am very satisfied,” said Inzaghi.

“In short, I couldn’t have asked for more. I was confident. I said yesterday that I had seen the team working well, but a performance like this, also thinking about what is to come, makes me very happy as a coach,” he added.

Alonso was pleased with the way his team had reacted after a poor opening 45 minutes.

“In the first half, we were lacking a lot of things, with and without the ball. I think we lost the ball too quickly, we didn’t have much balance, and these are things we had talked about, and it took us a little longer to get right,” he said.

“I liked the reaction at half-time, we were able to give the game another meaning, another rhythm, have more people giving it a good pause, good control of the game.

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Club World Cup: Sergio Ramos strikes as Monterrey hold Inter Milan for stalemate

The 39-year-old Spanish great Sergio Ramos scored as Monterrey held Inter Milan 1-1 in a hard-fought FIFA Club World Cup Group E opener in Pasadena on Tuesday.

Argentine striker Lautaro Martinez scored a well-worked equaliser to cancel out Ramos’s opener for the Mexican side in front of 40,311 fans at the Rose Bowl.

Inter, playing their first game since being thrashed 5-0 by Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) in the Champions League final, were left ruing their failure to turn their dominance of possession and territory into goals.

But the draw was a boost for Ramos and Monterrey, who face Argentina’s River Plate in their next game in the Club World Cup on Saturday.

“When you don’t get all three points, you’re never entirely happy,” Ramos, the former Spain and Real Madrid defender, said.

“But one point is better than no point.

“They were a tough opponent and have just played in the final of the Champions League. We were a little bit nervous, but in the second half we stayed organised and kept the ball better.

“Now we need to think about the next game.”

Inter coach Cristian Chivu said his team had struggled to break down a Monterrey team that sat deep for long periods.

“We played well in the first half even though we went behind,” Chivu said. “We could have attacked better in the second half. It’s not easy to play against a very low block.”

Chivu, in his first match in charge after the departure of Simone Inzaghi, denied the Champions League finalists had underestimated the Mexicans.

“We respect every team we play, and we knew what kind of team they were; we tried to do our best,” he said.

“Sometimes you get the best out of it, sometimes you don’t. We created a lot of chances. Football’s not won on paper.”

The Italians were in complete control almost from the kick-off, Benjamin Pavard the first to threaten with an eighth-minute shot that flew over the bar.

Matteo Darmian should have done better in the 22nd minute, but shot over after clever work down the left from Nicolo Barella.

Yet despite the early onslaught, Inter were rocked in the 25th minute when Monterrey scored from one of their few forays into the Italians’ half.

Midfielder Oliver Torres swung a corner in from the right, and Ramos — who had lost Francesco Acerbi on the edge of the six-yard box — steered his header into the bottom corner.

Inter were soon back on the offensive and only a point-blank save by Monterrey goalkeeper Esteban Andrada from Sebastiano Esposito prevented an equaliser.

Martinez also went close after 36 minutes, and Inter had a strong penalty appeal when Pavard’s header struck Ramos on the arm inside the area.

VAR found in favor of Ramos and Monterrey escaped.

Three minutes later, Inter drew level with a wonderfully worked free-kick routine.

Albanian international Kristjan Asllani shaped to shoot from 25 yards out but instead flighted a delicate chip behind the Monterrey defence.

Brazilian international Carlos Augusto timed his run to perfection and squared into the path of Martinez, who tapped in for 1-1.

Monterrey almost regained the lead against the run of play on 64 minutes, Sergio Canales unleashing a low shot that cannoned off the post.

Inter had a Martinez goal ruled out for offside moments later as the Italians continued to threaten.

But it was Monterrey who came closest to grabbing a winner in stoppage time when Colombian midfielder Nelson Deossa got behind the Inter defence but could only shoot into the side netting.

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Kylian Mbappe ‘doubtful’ for Real Madrid’s Club World Cup opener

Real Madrid could be without striker Kylian Mbappe for their Club World Cup opener against Saudi Pro League side Al Hilal after the Frenchman missed training due to illness.

New head coach Xabi Alonso will make his debut on the Real bench for the Group H match at Hard Rock Stadium and could be without several regulars.

Defender Antonio Rudiger and the versatile Eduardo Camavinga are also likely to miss out against the Saudi team.

“Kylian Mbappe was feeling a little better this morning, but not enough. It’s very hot and it was better that he didn’t train. But we will wait until the last moment. Tomorrow morning we will decide,” said Alonso.

“Rudiger made a brutal effort this season, and I don’t know if he will be called up tomorrow, but he is progressing well and will be the first to return. Camavinga is also improving quickly, but he needs time,” he added.

Al Hilal will also have a new coach on the bench with Italian Simone Inzaghi having joined after leading Inter Milan to the Champions League final.

Alonso said the change of coach means that it is difficult to know what to expect from Wednesday’s opponents.

“We have to prepare for the game in the best possible way. They will be a tough opponent, without a doubt. But it’s time to focus on ourselves. They haven’t made their debut with Inzaghi yet, so we don’t know how they will play.

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“We have to have hunger to win, to compete, to want to play well. We have to mix a lot of things, but that self-love, that feeling of team, that defending the badge… The team already has it, but we have to work on it. We must be a team,” he said.

Alonso was asked about the right-back position where Dani Carvajal faces competition from new arrival Trent Alexander-Arnold, who has joined from Liverpool.

“It is a privilege to have such top players. Trent is more flexible in positions, but Carva has a lot of personality and competitiveness. The initial impact of Trent has been very good.”

Alonso was quizzed for his opinions on several players and, unsurprisingly, was upbeat about his squad, suggesting that England’s Jude Bellingham may be more effective in a central midfield role than in the more advanced position he has sometimes operated in.

“Jude has the ability to cover a lot of the pitch. He has the soul of a midfielder, he likes to participate, but he has the great quality to arrive. The important thing is the starting point. Finding him in the right places is going to help us because he has impressive qualities,” he said.

Alonso will get a brief spell to enjoy working with Croatian midfielder Luka Modric before the 39-year-old leaves the club.

“It’s easy with him. We always had a great relationship, friends and now coach-player. I like his relationship with the younger ones; he is a very good influence. We want to enjoy him in these weeks. He’s a player of the era, being able to squeeze him a little more will be a luxury,” he said.

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