Small clubs cross fingers for World Cup windfalls

In this Friday, May 23, 2014 file photo, France's soccer player Paul Pogba signs an autograph before a training session at the Clairefontaine training center, outside Paris. Not all the money that will change hands after the World Cup, when clubs trade players who distinguish themselves on football’s biggest stage, will line the pockets of selling clubs, agents and the players themselves. A sliver of the wealth will also trickle down to football’s grassroots, to unpretentious, volunteer-run clubs where kids take first steps toward their dreams of making a career in the sport. (AP Photo/Christophe Ena, File)
In this Saturday, April 25, 2018 photo, customers line up for refreshments in the canteen of the club, US Torcy, east of Paris, France, where France midfielder Paul Pogba played when he was a teenager. Not all the money that will change hands after the World Cup, when clubs trade players who distinguish themselves on football’s biggest stage, will line the pockets of selling clubs, agents and the players themselves. A sliver of the wealth will also trickle down to football’s grassroots, to unpretentious, volunteer-run clubs where kids take first steps toward their dreams of making a career in the sport. (AP Photo/John Leicester)
In this Saturday, May 5, 2018 photo, children line up in a stadium tunnel before taking the pitch for the Torcy Cup, in Torcy, east of Paris, France. The tournament is organized by the amateur club US Torcy, in the Paris suburb, where France midfielder Paul Pogba played when he was a teenager. Not all the money that will change hands after the World Cup, when clubs trade players who distinguish themselves on football’s biggest stage, will line the pockets of selling clubs, agents and the players themselves. A sliver of the wealth will also trickle down to football’s grassroots, to unpretentious, volunteer-run clubs where kids take first steps toward their dreams of making a career in the sport. (AP Photo/John Leicester)
In this Saturday, May 5, 2018 photo, children wait to play in the Torcy Cup, in Torcy, east of Paris, France. The tournament is organized by US Torcy, the amateur club in the Paris suburb of Torcy where France midfielder Paul Pogba played when he was a teenager. Not all the money that will change hands after the World Cup, when clubs trade players who distinguish themselves on football’s biggest stage, will line the pockets of selling clubs, agents and the players themselves. A sliver of the wealth will also trickle down to football’s grassroots, to unpretentious, volunteer-run clubs where kids take first steps toward their dreams of making a career in the sport. (AP Photo/John Leicester)

Small clubs cross fingers for World Cup windfalls

In this Friday, May 23, 2014 file photo, France's soccer player Paul Pogba signs an autograph before a training session at the Clairefontaine training center, outside Paris. Not all the money that will change hands after the World Cup, when clubs trade players who distinguish themselves on football’s biggest stage, will line the pockets of selling clubs, agents and the players themselves. A sliver of the wealth will also trickle down to football’s grassroots, to unpretentious, volunteer-run clubs where kids take first steps toward their dreams of making a career in the sport. (AP Photo/Christophe Ena, File)
In this Saturday, April 25, 2018 photo, customers line up for refreshments in the canteen of the club, US Torcy, east of Paris, France, where France midfielder Paul Pogba played when he was a teenager. Not all the money that will change hands after the World Cup, when clubs trade players who distinguish themselves on football’s biggest stage, will line the pockets of selling clubs, agents and the players themselves. A sliver of the wealth will also trickle down to football’s grassroots, to unpretentious, volunteer-run clubs where kids take first steps toward their dreams of making a career in the sport. (AP Photo/John Leicester)
In this Saturday, May 5, 2018 photo, children line up in a stadium tunnel before taking the pitch for the Torcy Cup, in Torcy, east of Paris, France. The tournament is organized by the amateur club US Torcy, in the Paris suburb, where France midfielder Paul Pogba played when he was a teenager. Not all the money that will change hands after the World Cup, when clubs trade players who distinguish themselves on football’s biggest stage, will line the pockets of selling clubs, agents and the players themselves. A sliver of the wealth will also trickle down to football’s grassroots, to unpretentious, volunteer-run clubs where kids take first steps toward their dreams of making a career in the sport. (AP Photo/John Leicester)
In this Saturday, May 5, 2018 photo, children wait to play in the Torcy Cup, in Torcy, east of Paris, France. The tournament is organized by US Torcy, the amateur club in the Paris suburb of Torcy where France midfielder Paul Pogba played when he was a teenager. Not all the money that will change hands after the World Cup, when clubs trade players who distinguish themselves on football’s biggest stage, will line the pockets of selling clubs, agents and the players themselves. A sliver of the wealth will also trickle down to football’s grassroots, to unpretentious, volunteer-run clubs where kids take first steps toward their dreams of making a career in the sport. (AP Photo/John Leicester)