Among Donald Trump’s gilded additions to the Oval Office, one ornament stands out: symbolising power plays in sport and geopolitics.
The outlandish, elaborate golden discs form football’s newest prize: the Club World Cup that will be handed out in New Jersey on 14 July, after 63 matches across 11 American cities.
The trophy has become part of presidential theatre, prominent for all the major announcements – from nuclear warnings to Iran to celebrating the trade deal with Britain.
It was hand-delivered to Mr Trump three months ago by Gianni Infantino, the FIFA president whose name is etched into it. Twice.
This whole competition – supersizing an old, little-regarded format from seven to 32 clubs – is very much Mr Infantino’s creation to reshape world football and extend FIFA’s reach into the club game.
For a trophy inspired by NASA missions into space – featuring astronomy and maps – it also signals how Mr Infantino has gained influence in Mr Trump’s orbit.
Becoming the commander-in-chief’s closest non-American associate has secured invites to political speeches as well as sporting trips.
The alliance – contentious given Mr Trump’s rhetoric and interventions on topics such as immigration and diversity – is defended as fast-tracking decision-making at the highest level.
This Club World Cup (CWC) is in many ways the test event for the more complex tournament next summer, as the World Cup is contested by 48 men’s national teams across the US, Canada, and Mexico.
“I think it is absolutely crucial for the success of a World Cup to have a close relationship with the president,” Mr Infantino said.
But the CWC begins against the backdrop of immigration raids and violent protests in Los Angeles amid concerns fans could be targeted or denied entry to FIFA events.
Image: The trophy has been prominent during many recent major news moments. Pic: AP
Saudi Arabia’s role
This was a tournament intended to launch in China in 2021 until the pandemic shook the world and interest in football waned in the country once heavily courted by FIFA.
It can appear that Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has bailed out Mr Infantino, bankrolling his pet project.
There was little interest from FIFA’s usual World Cup broadcasters – BBC and ITV in Britain – until loss-making streamer DAZN stepped in with a $1bn (£736m) deal, just around the time Saudi Arabia was handed the hosting of the 2034 World Cup.
That was followed by DAZN selling a 10% stake to SURJ, an investment firm owned by Saudi’s sovereign wealth fund, chaired by MBS.
And then, completing the circle, the Public Investment Fund signed up as a CWC sponsor less than two weeks before the tournament begins.
PIF also owns Al-Hilal, who qualified as Asian Champions League winners for the CWC in a group featuring Real Madrid.
Image: Gianni Infantino visited President Donald Trump in his last term in office in 2018. Pic: AP
A Super League?
Given Mr Infantino maintains the extravaganza features the 32 best teams in the world, what, for example, are RB Salzburg doing there?
While four of Europe’s slots went to recent Champions League winners, the other eight went to the best-performing teams ranked by European results in recent years.
And while Liverpool should have made the cut by that measure, FIFA imposed a cap on two teams per country unless they had all qualified as competition winners.
So FIFA only has Chelsea and Manchester City, although Lionel Messi’s Inter Miami were handed a place as national champions despite not actually winning the main American soccer title.
To some, this could seem to be the genesis of a Super League – the aborted European breakaway in 2021 – in a different guise.
Champions League organiser UEFA once tried to thwart the CWC, given it could diminish the status of its own competition, before caving-in to FIFA.
And while selling tickets and finding viewers will be challenging, it will be lucrative for the participants.
That Saudi $1bn (£736m) is all going back to clubs, with up to $125m (£92m) for the winners.
Workload concerns
Chelsea and City have already played 57 matches this season – now up to seven more are being bolted on.
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Infantino: ‘FIFA is a pioneer for women’s football’
And their players could have had up to 10 international matches over the last year, including two in the gap between the end of the domestic season and the CWC trip.
It is why – in plans first revealed by Sky News in 2023 – global players’ union FIFPRO has launched a legal challenge claiming FIFA has abused a dominant position to risk the health of players.
But the European Commission has not officially taken up the case to prevent this launch.
And, given that other FIFA events have already expanded – or are expanding – to 48 finalists, the Club World Cup could be here to stay – and even get even bigger.
There is also still the delayed women’s tournament, which is set to finally launch in 2028.
Two of the three Britons killed in the Lisbon funicular crash have been named.
Kayleigh Smith, 36, and William Nelson, 44, were a couple and died alongside 14 others in Wednesday’s incident.
Ms Smith graduated from the Arden School of Theatre in Manchester, where Mr Nelson ran the master’s degree in directing.
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3:53
Lisbon crash: What happened?
The identity of the third British victim has not yet been confirmed.
MADS theatre in Macclesfield, Cheshire, said Ms Smith was a “valued member of our society” who will be “greatly missed”.
It said she was an award-winning director and actress, who had also done multiple crew and front-of-house roles.
Five Portuguese citizens died when the packed carriage plummeted out of control – four of them workers at a charity on the hill – but most victims were foreigners.
Police said the other fatalities were two Canadians, two South Koreans, one American, one French citizen, one Swiss and one Ukrainian.
All but one were declared dead at the scene – and 21 others in the packed carriage were injured.
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‘We felt no brakes anymore’
The yellow carriages of the Gloria funicular are a big draw for tourists, as well as a proud symbol of the Portuguese capital.
The journey is just 265m (870ft) up a steep hill and takes three minutes, with two carriages travelling in opposite directions on a linked cable.
Witnesses reported seeing one of the carriages hurtle down the hill before derailing and crashing 30m from the bottom.
The aftermath shows it crumpled and twisted against the side of a building.
People who were in the bottom carriage said they were a few metres into the climb when it started going backwards.
When they saw the other car speeding towards them, many jumped through the windows to escape.
Image: The crash happened around 6pm on Wednesday. Pic: Reuters
Prime Minister Luis Montenegro called the crash “one of the biggest tragedies of our recent past” and authorities are under intense pressure to quickly identifying the cause.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has said any foreign troops operating as part of a peacekeeping force in Ukraine would be considered a “legitimate target” by Moscow.
It comes a day after French President Emmanuel Macron said 26 of Ukraine’s allies had formally committed to deploying troops “by land, sea or air” to help guarantee Kyiv’s security the day after any ceasefire or peace is achieved.
Mr Macron stressed any troops would be deployed to prevent “any new major aggression” and not at the frontline, adding the force does “not have the will or the objective of waging war against Russia”.
Mr Putin quickly poured cold water on the proposals when speaking at an economic forum in Russia’s eastern Vladivostok region on Friday.
Directly responding to Mr Macron’s comments, he said: “If any troops appear there, especially now, during military operations, we proceed from the fact that these will be legitimate targets for their destruction.
“And if decisions are reached that lead to peace, to long-term peace, then I simply do not see any sense in their presence on the territory of Ukraine, full stop.”
Russia has long argued that one of its reasons for going to war in Ukraine was to prevent NATO from admitting Kyiv as a member and placing its forces in Ukraine.
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Speaking today, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said it was important that security guarantees “start working now, during the war, and not only after it ends”.
On Thursday, NATO chief Mark Rutte said Russia had no veto on Western troops being deployed to Ukraine: “Why are we interested in what Russia thinks about troops in Ukraine? It’s a sovereign country. It’s not for them to decide.”
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2:46
Our Moscow correspondent Ivor Bennett reveals the that three things Vladimir Putin’s warning to foreign peacekeeping troops in Ukraine reveals.
‘Please come to Moscow’
Mr Putin also addressed the chances of a direct meeting between himself and Mr Zelesnkyy aimed at ending the war.
Such a proposal looked positive after the Russian met Donald Trump in Alaska last month, but Mr Putin said on Friday he did not see much point in such a meeting because “it will be practically impossible to reach an agreement with the Ukrainian side on key issues”.
However, he reiterated an offer he made earlier this week to host Mr Zelenskyy for talks in Moscow, which Ukraine’s defence minister previously declared as “knowingly unacceptable”.
“I said: ‘I’m ready, please, come, we will definitely provide working conditions and security, a 100% guarantee’,” Mr Putin said.
Image: Russian President Vladimir Putin visits an interactive exhibition in Vladivostok. Pic: Sputnik/Reuters
“But if they tell us: ‘we want to meet with you, but you have to go somewhere else for this meeting’, it seems to me that these are simply excessive requests on us.”
Speaking at a news conference in Paris on Thursday, Mr Zelenskyy said US mediators informed him about Mr Putin’s invitation.
“Our American partners told us that Putin invited me to Moscow, and I believe that if you want to avoid a meeting, you should invite me to Moscow,” he said.
However, he said the fact that the issue of organising a meeting arose was “not bad”.
Drone strikes continue
While talks to end the war continue at a diplomatic level, more heavy drone strikes were recorded across Ukraine.
Kyiv’s air force said Moscow attacked Ukraine overnight with 157 strike and decoy drones, as well as seven missiles of various types.
Air defences shot down or jammed 121 of the drones, it said, but 35 drones and seven missiles still struck 10 locations.
Image: Russian drone attack damages houses in Dnipro. Pic: Reuters
Image: Russian drone attack damages houses in Dnipro. Pic: Reuters
Elsewhere, Russian troops destroyed 92 Ukrainian drones overnight, according to its defence ministry.
Local social media channels in the city of Ryazan, approximately 200 kilometres (125 miles) southeast of Moscow, reported that the city’s Rosneft oil refinery had been targeted. Ryazan’s regional governor said that drone debris had fallen on an “industrial enterprise” but did not give further details.
Ukraine has stepped up attacks on Russian oil infrastructure that it says fuels Moscow’s war effort in recent months.
Military analyst Professor Michael Clarke said Ukraine’s campaign on Russia’s oil refineries has been a successful one so far, but doubts it will hurt Moscow’s war machine too much.
“Will that directly affect the war? Probably not. Because the Russian military runs on diesel,” he said.
“It filters through to the war in the sense that it inconveniences and bothers the Russians and reminds the Russian population that this war has a cost to them as well.”
Hamas has released a video showing two Israeli hostages, one of whom says he is being held in Gaza City, where the IDF has launched a major offensive.
Guy Gilboa-Dalal and Alon Ohel were kidnapped during the October 2023 massacre and are two of 48 captives still believed to be held by Hamas, with 20 thought to still be alive.
Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has ordered his military to occupy the whole of Gaza, with troops and armour currently assaulting Gaza City, where around a million people lived before the war broke out.
On Friday, the IDF bombed a high-rise building in the city’s west that – without providing evidence – it said was being used by Hamas. The military claimed that civilians were warned beforehand.
Pictures from Gaza City show Palestinians running for safety as the building collapses.
Image: Guy Gilboa-Dalal (right) and Alon Ohel. Pics: Bring Them Home Now
Hostages appear in video released by Hamas
The video was edited and featured an exhausted-looking Mr Gilboa-Dalal speaking for around three-and-a-half minutes.
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He appears in a car for some of the video and says that he is being held in Gaza City along with other hostages.
He says that he is afraid of being killed by Israel’s latest assault.
The video is dated 28 August. Sky News could not independently determine the date of recording.
Image: Palestinians inspect the site of an Israeli strike on a tent, outside al Shifa Hospital, in Gaza City. Pic: Reuters
Mr Gilboa-Dalal appears to be in the backseat of a car that is being driven around. At one point, he identifies a passing building as one belonging to the Red Cross.
Hamas has refused to allow the Red Cross to see the hostages.
At one point, Mr Ohel, 24, is also seen.
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Israeli strike hits Gaza displacement camp
Family mark ‘sign of life’
In a statement, Mr Gilboa-Dalal’s family said: “We have received a sign of life from our Guy after six months since the previous video in which he was seen with Evyatar David watching their friends being released.
“Guy, Alon, and other hostages were transferred to Gaza, and we are deeply concerned for their lives. They must be brought home.”
But talks between Israel and Hamas via mediators – aimed at stopping the fighting and freeing the hostages – collapsed in July.
After the release of the video, Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid urged Israeli negotiators to resume talks on a deal to free the hostages.
Image: Smoke rises as a building hit by an Israeli air strike collapses in Gaza City. Pic: Reuters
Strike on high-rise building
The release of the hostage video comes as the Israeli military continues its attack on Gaza City, where residents say it bombed a high-rise tower on Friday.
The building’s management said it was being used for displaced people and denied it had been used for anything other than civilian purposes.
Footage of the strike showed the building collapsing and sending thick clouds of smoke billowing over nearby tent camps.
Father-of-two Ismail, from the city’s Sheikh Radwan neighbourhood, told Reuters that his family feared they would not be able to return if they fled.
“We pray for a ceasefire,” he said.
More than 64,000 Palestinians have been killed in the Gaza Strip since the war began, Gaza health authorities say.
The war was sparked by Hamas’ attack on Israel, when militants killed 1,200 people and took around 250 hostages.