You missed the match. Or worse, you woke up, saw the score by mistake, and now the whole replay feels slightly ruined. Still worth watching though. Some games are better after the chaos has cooled down a bit.

Start With DAZN First

For the recent FIFA Club World Cup, DAZN is the first place I’d check for replays. It has live and on-demand coverage in many regions, including India, and that matters because replays usually sit in the same place where the live match was streamed. Open the FIFA Club World Cup section, search by club name, and look for “full match” or “on-demand.” Simple enough, once you stop looking in random places.

The annoying part is that availability can change by country. So if your friend in London sees a replay and you don’t, they’re not smarter than you. They’re just in a different rights zone. Football streaming loves making normal people feel like detectives.

Full Match or Highlights?

Don’t confuse highlights with replays. Highlights are for when you want the goals and the loud bits. A full replay is the whole thing, including the slow first 20 minutes where both teams pretend they’re studying each other.

• Full match replay, if you actually want the game and not just the scoreboard

• Extended highlights are fine for group games you only half care about, no shame there

• Short clips feel quick, but they also remove the mood of the match

FIFA’s Own Platforms Are Worth Checking

FIFA has its own archive and FIFA+ content, and some older Club World Cup matches show up there, especially classic finals. You may not always get every recent replay right away, but for older matches, it’s a good rabbit hole. The kind where you search for one final and somehow end up watching a keeper from 2013 having the night of his life.

YouTube is also useful, but be picky. FIFA’s official YouTube channel has posted iconic full matches from past Club World Cups. That’s the cleanest option because you’re not dealing with weird cropped uploads, fake titles, or commentary that disappears after six minutes.

The Search Terms Matter

Type the club name with “FIFA Club World Cup full match.” Add the year. That usually works better than searching “replay” because many platforms label the video as “full match” instead. Small thing. Saves irritation.

Raj once kept reopening the same five tabs every morning after missing a late match. Then he searched “Chelsea FIFA Club World Cup full match DAZN” instead of just “Chelsea replay.” Found it in one go, while eating cold poha straight from the fridge.

TV Apps May Keep Replays Too

If the tournament was shown by a local broadcaster in your country, check that broadcaster’s app. This is especially true when the replay is not freely available elsewhere. In some places, the TV partner keeps matches inside its own streaming app for a limited time, then they vanish or move behind a login.

And yes, this is irritating. I’m fully on the side of fans here. A global club tournament should not require you to remember which app had which round last Tuesday night. Put it all in one place and let people watch football like normal humans.

• Look inside the sports section, not just the search bar, because some apps hide replays badly

• If there’s a “catch-up” tab, that’s often where yesterday’s match is sitting

• Login first. Some apps don’t even show the replay shelf until you’re signed in

Be Careful With Random Replay Sites

You’ll find plenty of websites promising full FIFA Club World Cup replays. Most are not worth the headache. Pop-ups. Bad video. Wrong match. Sometimes the file says final and opens as a seven-minute highlight reel with stadium noise that sounds like it came through a washing machine.

Stick to official sources first. DAZN. FIFA. FIFA’s YouTube channel. Local broadcaster apps. That order works well if you want fewer dead ends and less nonsense.

If You Only Want The Best Bits

For goals, big saves, and red-card drama, official highlights are usually enough. They feel quicker. You stop noticing what’s missing, unless it was one of those matches where the story was in the pressure rather than the goal count. Then watch the full replay. Some games need the waiting.