The old Intercontinental Cup was simple in a very blunt way. Europe’s best club played South America’s best club, and everyone else watched from the side. That was the deal for years. Big game. Big names. Small world.

The FIFA Club World Cup changed that idea. It said, fine, if we’re calling someone the world champion, maybe the world should actually be in the room.

The Biggest Change Was Who Got Invited

The Intercontinental Cup came from a football world where Europe and South America basically owned the conversation. Real Madrid. Milan. Boca Juniors. São Paulo. Those kinds of nights had weight because the two strongest club regions were meeting head-on.

But it still left out too much.

African champions didn’t get the same stage. Asian champions didn’t either. North American clubs were treated like guests waiting outside the door. Oceania barely got a look. And after a while, that started feeling old, even if the matches were still fun.

The Club World Cup Opened The Door Wider

The Club World Cup brought in continental champions from around the world. Then FIFA made it even bigger with the new 32-team version. More clubs. More routes in. More room for weird matchups you’d never get in the Champions League.

• A club from Asia can face a European giant, and suddenly the match has a little edge because nobody really knows how it’ll feel after 20 minutes

• South American clubs still matter, but they’re no longer the only non-European answer in the room

• Smaller regions get actual visibility, which sounds boring until your club is the one finally being shown worldwide

The Format Became More Like A Real Tournament

The Intercontinental Cup was mostly one match. That gave it charm. I actually like that. One final, one night, no bloated ceremony around it. Football sometimes works better when it doesn’t try to become a festival.

But the Club World Cup is built differently. It has rounds. In the expanded version, it has groups and knockouts. Teams need to survive more than one bad evening. That changes the feeling completely.

Raj once told me he preferred the old version because he could watch it while eating dinner and be done before his tea got cold. Then he saw a Club World Cup group match between two clubs he’d barely followed and spent the next morning checking their league tables. That’s the difference. It pulls you sideways.

One Match vs A Whole Month

A one-off final feels sharp. No warm-up. No second chance. Just walk in and prove it.

A tournament feels heavier. You need squad depth. You need travel management. You need players who don’t vanish after one good game. And because the Club World Cup now stretches across a proper window, it feels less like a bonus match and more like a thing clubs have to plan around.

That’s good, mostly. But also a little annoying. Football already has too much stuff squeezed into the calendar, and FIFA pretending everyone is fresh is slightly funny.

The Meaning Of “World Champion” Changed

In the Intercontinental Cup days, “world champion” mostly meant “best of Europe vs best of South America.” Fair enough for that era. Those were the power centers. The talent was there. The history was there too.

Now the label has to work harder.

The Club World Cup tries to make the title feel global. Not perfect. Not even close. European clubs still arrive with deeper squads and stupid money. But at least the path is more open than before, and that matters.

• The old cup had romance, especially if you enjoy football with a bit of smoke in the air

• The new one has scale. Sometimes too much scale, but scale all the same

The Intercontinental Cup Didn’t Fully Disappear

This is the funny part. FIFA brought back the Intercontinental Cup name for an annual event, while the Club World Cup became the bigger four-year tournament. So now the Club World Cup is the mega version, and the Intercontinental Cup fills the yearly gap.

Clean? Not really. Football naming is a mess on purpose, I’m convinced.

But the idea is easy once you stop caring about the branding. The Club World Cup is now the big global club tournament. The Intercontinental Cup is the shorter yearly fight between continental champions, with Europe usually entering late because, well, football politics.