Monday, June 30, 2025

Fluminense upset Inter in Club World Cup knockout match: updates and reaction

Fluminense upset Inter in Club World Cup knockout match: updates and reaction
Inter 0 Fluminense 2: Cano and Hercules send second Brazilian side through to Club World Cup quarter-finals
Fluminense are through to the Club World Cup quarter-finals after beating Inter 2-0 in Charlotte on Monday. Renato Gaucho’s side started quickly and took the lead after only three minutes via an opportunistic header from German Cano. Inter fans might have hoped that an early setback would spur their side into a concerted response but there was little evidence of that in the rest of the first half.

Cristian Chivu’s team eventually managed to build some momentum in the second half but some obstinate Fluminense defending — and the woodwork — kept the Italian side at bay. And, as Inter pressed ever more desperately for an equaliser, Fluminense broke and sealed the game in injury time via a tidy finish from Hercules.

Before this current tournament began, no Brazilian club had beaten a European side in a competitive match since 2012. Things are a bit different in 2025. Fluminense will now face the winner of the game between Manchester City and Al Hilal in the quarter-finals.

How good is Jhon Arias?

It is intended as a rhetorical question, but it works both ways. The Fluminense winger has been one of the stand-out performers at this tournament, a fast, skilful, powerful winger who seems to threaten every time he gets the ball. After winning FIFA’s “Superior Player” award in two of his team’s three group games, he deservedly made it three out of four here.

Arias will turn 28 into September. This time four years ago, he was still playing in his native Colombia for Independiente Santa Fe. But he was an integral part of the Fluminense team that won their first-ever Copa Libertadores title in 2023, then the Colombia team that reached last year’s Copa America final, and he has excelled at the Club World Cup.
He is a joy to watch and, if is he is to spend his entire club career in South America, Fluminese’s gain appears to be Europe’s loss.

Why were Inter so poor?

You can blame it on the warm weather. You might even blame it on a poor playing surface in Charlotte, but there is little hiding from the fact that Inter’s overall performance was not up to standard.

Fluminense’s early goal dictated the pattern of the game in the early stages, often staying compact, counter-attacking when necessary, and drawing numerous fouls to kill any kind of momentum that Chivu’s side threatened to build.

For all that you can credit the Brazilian side for a streetwise performance, Inter did not circulate the ball quickly enough to threaten Fluminense’s back line, with too much possession played laterally and not enough penetration in the final third.

Defensively, Inter’s inability to comprehensively defend open-play crosses has been their undoing in the crucial stages of this season. While they progressed past Barcelona in the semi-finals of the Champions League, Hansi Flick’s side provided a blueprint for Paris Saint-Germain to follow as they duly picked off Inter in the final — including well-worked goals from crosses.

Considering their back-five defensive line, it is surprising that there is such a lack of organisation at times, as Inter defenders get pulled out of position. Matteo Darmian committed the ultimate defensive sin by letting the ball bounce in the six-yard box to allow German Cano to score from close range. The fact that neither Stefan de Vrij nor Alesandro Bastoni were in the penalty area when the ball was crossed only adds to the narrative.

While you might point to an isolated poor performance from Inter, there have been signs of their defensive weakness for some time.

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