Category: Football

  • ‘Man City’s surrender in Madrid marks end of an era’

    ‘Man City’s surrender in Madrid marks end of an era’

    Manchester City’s shocking decline and fall was confirmed by their own travelling supporters suffering on the top tier of the Bernabeu as they were being ruthlessly put to the sword by Real Madrid.

    The giant clock inside this magnificent arena was on 80 minutes when Mateo Kovacic lined up a tame shot that flew straight at Real keeper Thibaut Courtois, who was probably grateful for the exercise.

    City were trailing 3-0, a scoreline that flattered them, so the hardy band of followers decided irony was the best medicine for the torture of watching their once all-conquering side, breaking out into rapturous cheering and applause.

    Moments later, with City achieving the rare feat of stringing several passes together, chants of “Ole” came from the travelling support.

    This summed up a pitiful, desperate night for manager Pep Guardiola, as they subsided in the most timid fashion, a sense of inevitability draped over the Bernabeu from the moment Kylian Mbappe scored the first goal of a brilliant hat-trick after only four minutes.

    Losing to Real Madrid is an occupational hazard of the Champions League. Losing to Real Madrid by barely laying a glove on them is a sign of Manchester City’s steep downward curve this season.

    The credits were rolling, and not just on their Champions League campaign, as they failed to reach the last 16 for the first time since they failed to get past the group stage in 2012-13.

    They are surely rolling, too, on a great team in need of major renovation.

    In the most palatial surroundings of this rebuilt stadium, this had the look and feel of the end of an era.

    Guardiola almost seemed to accept this was the case as he stated in the aftermath: “Nothing is eternal.”

    He said: “The best team won. They deserved it. This is the benchmark. We have to accept it and move forward.

    “In previous seasons when we were better, it hurt more. We have to accept it and the reality of our team.”

    Asked whether a rebuild is needed, he said: “We have time. We have 13 games left in the Premier League to get into this competition next season.”

    City’s need for a changing of the guard was made to look even more stark by the ease in which they were dismissed by Real Madrid, yes the holders and the superpower of the Champions League, but also a side they have consistently pushed in matches almost too close to call over several years.

    Not here. This was a rout with a casual air.

    ‘There are no quick fixes’ – how do Man City recover from slump?

    Mbappe’s stunning hat-trick dumps outclassed Man City out

    Watch: Mbappe – the definitive story of a football prodigy

    Watch: How to win the Champions League – Real Madrid

    Abdukodir Khusanov had a difficult night in Madrid

    Real Madrid were able to play within themselves after four minutes, Mbappe’s hat-trick completed with superb speed of thought and foot for his second after 33 minutes then a low drive just after the hour.

    The Bernabeu, surrounded by thousands of fans forming a welcoming committee for Carlo Ancelotti’s side two hours before kick-off, with flares lighting up the Spanish sky and the the smell of cordite in the air, witnessed a procession, a very painful procession for those who travelled from Manchester.

    Guardiola, justifiably, will claim mitigating circumstances as Erling Haaland was only fit enough for the bench, not even taking part in the pre-match warm-up after sustaining a knee injury late in the 4-0 win against Newcastle United.

    And moments after Mbappe opened the scoring, John Stones suffered another injury and limped off.

    It was not that City lost, most observers expected this outcome after the 3-2 defeat in the first leg at Etihad Stadium, it was the manner of the defeat.

    City never looked like they believed they could pull off the “perfect” performance Guardiola stated was required to overturn that deficit. This was about as far from perfection as it gets.

    And the clues were everywhere that if it is not exactly back to the drawing board for Guardiola after six Premier Leagues, a Champions League, two FA Cups, four League Cups, a Super Cup and a Club World Cup in a magnificent run of successes, then it is certainly time for a new set of plans.

    Kevin de Bruyne, who has decorated this fixture over many years, was only on the bench after an ineffectual performance in the first leg.

    Stones, 31 in May, is still a pivotal figure but suffers so many injuries, while 34-year-old surprise starter Ilkay Gundogan delivered more evidence that he left his best at Manchester City in his glorious first spell.

    Goalkeeper Ederson, 31, is not the guarantee of reliability he once was while gifted midfield metronome Bernardo Silva is not the influence of old as he reaches 30. Jack Grealish, 30 in September, was also only on the bench.

    The renewal has started with new faces such as striker Omar Marmoush, who had no service worthy of the name here, and midfielder Nico Gonzalez, as well as 20-year-old defender Abdukodir Khusanov, who suffered as he was pressed into service in an unaccustomed right-back role

    Mbappe makes his mark to leave Manchester City struggling

    It was a tough night for the young defender, clearly seen as a weakness in City’s make-up and relentlessly targeted down the flank.

    Guardiola’s takeaway from this harrowing night must be that he needs a ruthless cull of those older names, players who have delivered so magnificently for him.

    Rarely has such an elite team’s form and quality fallen off the cliff so fast and so hard.

    This is a team that has been allowed to grow too old together, that is now unable to find the old hunger that enabled it to return to the well of success so brilliantly year after year.

    Guardiola has signed a new two-year contract and his task must be to fashion a new team before it is time to discuss another deal.

    The Bernabeu is the most unforgiving arena in the Champions League, its stunning refurbishment complete with five tiers of stands looking down on City’s demise.

    It was a particular galling night for Guardiola, not simply because the task in front of him was laid out in graphic, gruesome detail before his very eyes, but also because Real Madrid’s fans revelled in his discomfort as a result of his Barcelona allegiances.

    Guardiola’s name was met with deafening jeers and whistles when it was read out before kick-off, and when one of the many giant screens captured his despair in close-up after Mbappe’s early strike, a huge roar of delight swept around the stadium.

    As City players trooped disconsolately away at the final whistle, some of them perhaps on their way out of this tournament forever with this club, there was no consolation to be had, certainly not from Gonzalez’s late goal.

    Manchester City have had a magnificent run. They have lit up domestic and European competition with the quality of their football but this was a night when it looked like their race was run. It is time for change.

    The dismissive way they were treated by a Real Madrid side they have regarded as rivals in recent years showed they need new blood to return to that former golden status.

    It happens to the best of them and Manchester City were the best of them. Not any more.

  • ‘A modern classic’ – Real Madrid & Man City’s European rivalry

    ‘A modern classic’ – Real Madrid & Man City’s European rivalry

    On Wednesday evening we will see the latest instalment of a Champions League rivalry between two of the era’s leading teams.

    Real Madrid v Manchester City at the Bernabeu, in the second leg of their knockout play-off, pits the record 15-time champions of Europe against the 2023 winners (20:00 GMT kick-off).

    Two of Europe’s most successful managers in Carlo Ancelotti and Pep Guardiola will again go toe to toe.

    A stellar playing cast will include Kylian Mbappe, Vinicius Jr and Jude Bellingham in one corner, with the likes of Erling Haaland, Kevin de Bruyne and Phil Foden in the other.

    The stakes are high, with the winner of their meetings in the three previous seasons going on to lift the trophy.

    A thrilling first leg lived up to its big billing, with Real twice coming from behind before Bellingham snatched a dramatic stoppage-time winner to hand them a slender 3-2 advantage.

    So could we be set for another classic encounter?

    The teams have met 13 times in the Champions League since 2012-13, with both sides having won four matches each with five draws.

    But it is the magnitude of some of those fixtures that has stoked up a level of antagonism between the clubs and their fans.

    “It feels like a modern classic because we’ve been playing against each other in this competition for many years,” Ancelotti said in the build-up to the tie.

    “So much depends on attitude, individual quality, confidence and personality. It’s such a high level that you have to bring out the best in every aspect of the game, not just one.

    “Whoever goes through will have a good chance of going far in the competition, as has been the case in recent years.”

    Having lost 6-5 on aggregate to Real in the 2021-22 semi-finals, City then thrashed the Spanish giants 5-1 over two legs at the same stage a year later on their way to replacing them as European champions.

    The sides were back at it in 2024 as Real fought a rearguard action in the second game of their quarter-final at Etihad Stadium before dramatically advancing after extra-time and a penalty shootout.

    However, with both teams having failed to advance automatically to the last 16 as one of the top-eight sides in this year’s new league phase, this will be the earliest that either side has been eliminated by the other in the knockout stages.

    “It’s not normal to play the same rivals all the time,” added Guardiola.

    Manchester City fans display a Rodri banner inside the stadium before the first leg

    City midfielder Rodri won the Ballon d’Or in 2024

    An added twist to the rivalry came at last year’s Ballon d’Or unveiling – when Real opted not to send anyone to the ceremony where City linchpin Rodri was named the world’s best player ahead of Vinicius.

    Guardiola insisted City felt “absolutely” no ill feeling towards Real over that apparent snub prior to last Tuesday’s first leg.

    However, the fact the City fans unfurled a huge banner referencing the situation – “Stop Crying Your Heart Out” – alongside a picture of the currently injured Spain midfielder kissing his trophy suggested otherwise.

    Ancelotti, who has the nickname of ‘Don Carlo’ in Spain, is the most successful manager in European Cup and Champions League history, having won the trophy a record five times.

    He is also the only manager to reach six finals and, like Guardiola, is one of seven men to have won the tournament as both a player and a manager having triumphed twice with AC Milan in 1989 and 1990.

    The 65-year-old also holds the distinction of being the only manager to win league titles in all of Europe’s big five leagues – England, Spain, Germany, Italy and France.

    Like the Italian, Guardiola has also scooped major honours in stints at Barcelona, Bayern Munich and City, winning La Liga and the Bundesliga three times apiece and the Premier League on six occasions.

    “Guardiola is a coach who has brought a lot to football, an innovator, and I have a lot of respect for him,” Ancelotti added.

    “He’s one of the best, if not the best. Every time we play against each other, it’s a nightmare to prepare for the games, because he always has ideas that make you think.”

    Guardiola’s coaching spell at the Nou Camp was also notable for delivering one of the greatest club teams of the modern era – featuring Lionel Messi, Andres Iniesta and Xavi – amid fierce competition from a star-studded Real squad.

    The 54-year-old is level with Bob Paisley and Zinedine Zidane on three European Cup wins as manager.

    He has the edge on Ancelotti when it comes to their head-to-head contests, having had six victories to the Italian’s four, with Guardiola’s teams scoring 28 goals and conceding 21 in their 13 matches.

    In mitigation, Ancelotti could point to the fact that 12 goals against and four of those defeats arrived while he was managing Everton, a club with disparate ambitions to both Real and City.

  • Birmingham City  2 1  Bradford City

    Birmingham City 2 1 Bradford City

    Birmingham City survived a second-half scare against League Two Bradford City before substitute Lyndon Dykes’ late header won a dramatic Vertu Trophy semi-final to book Blues’ first Wembley appearance in 14 years.

    The twice EFL Trophy winners will now be at Wembley on 13 April to meet the winners of next week’s second semi-final between fellow League One sides Wrexham and Peterborough United.

    But victory came at a cost with the loss of Blues top scorer Jay Stansfield, who was taken to hospital after being stetchered off with a knee injury.

    It looked like Birmingham had broken Bradford’s stubborn resistance when Stansfield scored his 21st goal of the season just on the stroke of half-time.

    The visitors then levelled on 52 minutes when boyhood Bantams fan Bobby Pointon netted from close range in the same passage of play in which Stansfield was not only denied a penalty after being barged over, but suffered his injury.

    However, with the game heading for penalties, Dykes headed in to earn Blues a first return to Wembley since the 2011 League Cup win over Arsenal.

    Stansfield close to living Wembley dream witness

    Chances were sparse in the first half as Bradford’s injury-hit line-up, missing five cup-tied January signings, did a magnificent job closing down the hosts.

    One well-worked early Blues corner routine created an opening for Willum Willumsson, whose low shot was blocked, while Stansfield flashed an effort just wide. But the big breakthough did not come until just before half-time.

    Kieran Dowell’s free-kick was blocked, the rebound fell to Stansfield outside the right corner of the box, he took a touch to create more space and a better angle and then tilted to powerfully guide home a right-foot volley which flew just inside the left upright.

    If that was a dramatic end to the first half, it was more than matched by the way the second half began.

    Blues felt they should have had a penalty when Romoney Critchlow bundled over Stansfield in the box – but referee Scott Oldham waved their protests away.

    Instead, Bradford went straight down the other end and scored as Antoni Sarcevic crossed low from the right and Pointon lost his marker to ghost in at the near post and poke home.

    Bradford keeper Sam Walker made two saves from Willumsson and substitute Alfie May as Blues and their fans in a bumper 27,066 crowd were left feeling increasingly frustrated. But, on 88 minutes, the hosts got the winner.

    Tomoki Iwata crossed and Dykes climbed highest to divert his header into the left corner and take his side to a third final – three decades on from their two previous Wembley triumphs in this competition, in 1991 and 1995.

    Birmingham City boss Chris Davies told TodayPriceNG Sport:

    “It was a great cross from Tomoki Iwata, a great header from Lyndon Dykes and a great moment. It’s got us to Wembley.

    “It was a penalty, I didn’t have to see it again, and for them to break away and score just added insult to injury.

    “Jay Stansfield has gone to hospital. It’s his knee. He’s landed on him and he was in a lot of pain. We must just wait and see – and hope for the best.

    “We’ve still got one more step to go to win it, but for me to be able to lead out a team at Wembley is something special.”

    Birmingham City match-winner Lyndon Dykes:

    “We haven’t won anything yet, but to get to Wembley is great – and the boss has given us two days off too.

    “I played there for Scotland against England during Covid, but it will be nice to be there in front of a crowd.”

    Bradford City boss Graham Alexander told TodayPriceNGLeeds:

    “We’ve gone toe to toe with them. I can’t remember Sam Walker making any saves before their first goal, which was a sucker punch just before the break.

    “But I reminded the lads at half-time of some of the discipline that we had put into the first half and felt that we had maybe been a bit cheap on the ball and could be better.

    “And, in the second half, we showed that. We scored the goal of the night for me And then they brought an international class striker and he’s got the winner.

    “They stuck their chests out and represented the club in the best way. There are bigger things ahead for this side if they carry on the path they’re on.”

  • Man Utd weigh up £40m move for Ipswich’s Delap – Wednesday’s gossip

    Man Utd weigh up £40m move for Ipswich’s Delap – Wednesday’s gossip

    Manchester United are considering a move for Liam Delap, Liverpool are set to offer Newcastle Darwin Nunez plus cash in an attempt to land Alexander Isak, and Brighton might reluctantly sell Japan forward Kaoru Mitoma.

    Manchester United are weighing up a move for Ipswich Town’s £40m-rated England Under-21s striker Liam Delap, 22. Delap, who came through Manchester City’s academy, has 10 Premier League goals this season and is also interesting Chelsea. (i Paper), external

    Liverpool are prepared to offer Uruguay forward Darwin Nunez, 25, plus cash in exchange for Newcastle’s £100m-plus rated Sweden forward Alexander Isak, 25. Isak has scored 17 Premier League goals this season. (Football Insider), external

    However, Newcastle will not allow their best players to leave if they miss out on qualifying for next season’s Champions League. (Daily Mail), external

    Arsenal and Chelsea are interested in Eintracht Frankfurt’s French striker Hugo Ekitike, 22, as an alternative to Isak. (CaughtOffside), external

    Liverpool are set for a busy summer of transfer activity, with Barcelona and Netherlands midfielder Frenkie de Jong, 27, on a list of players the Reds might bid for. (Teamtalk), external

    Bournemouth manager Andoni Iraola, who has got Cherries fans dreaming of Europe, is top of Tottenham’s list if they decide to replace Ange Postecoglou, who has been in charge since June 2023 but is under pressure following a poor run of results. (Talksport), external

    Manchester City’s Argentine midfielder Maximo Perrone, 22, wants to turn his loan in Italy with Como – managed by former Arsenal and Chelsea midfielder Cesc Fabregas – into a permanent move. (Calcioline – in Italian), external

    Brighton might reluctantly sell Japan forward Kaoru Mitoma, 27, this summer for about £66m as he enters the final two years of his contract, with Chelsea one of the clubs interested. (CaughtOffside), external

    AC Milan’s Netherlands midfielder Tijjani Reijnders, 26, will sign a new deal with the Italian club until 2030. (Fabrizio Romano on X), external

  • Discipline, injuries & family – how Dembele turned career around

    Discipline, injuries & family – how Dembele turned career around

    Ousmane Dembele has long had a big reputation.

    The forward – who was once the second-most expensive player in history when he signed for Barcelona from Borussia Dortmund in 2017 in a deal worth £135.5m – was described by Barca president Joan Laporta as “better than Kylian Mbappe” in 2021.

    A week later, then-new Barcelona manager Xavi Hernandez said he was a player who, “when used properly, could be the best player in the world”.

    Two months on, having been told by a cash-strapped Barcelona to accept a new contract on reduced terms or leave, Xavi dropped him from the squad.

    That story reflects his time at Barcelona, a six-year spell of inconsistency and unfulfilled potential.

    In August 2023, the France international was bought by Paris St-Germain for just £43.5m, having scored 40 goals in 185 games and won three La Liga titles.

    Now – with 10 goals in his past five games – he is currently Europe’s most in-form striker, drawing comparison to the likes of Lionel Messi, who scored 13 goals in four games in March 2012, and Cristiano Ronaldo, who hit 11 goals in four games in May 2011.

    He is also being seen as PSG’s trump card in their quest for a first Champions League trophy.

    The 27-year-old has scored 18 goals in his past 11 appearances for PSG in all competitions and since the start of December, has scored more goals (18) than any other player in the big five European leagues.

    So, as PSG go into Wednesday’s Champions League play-off second leg against Brest with a 3-0 lead, what has changed and can his remarkable form last?

     

    Ousmane Dembele joined PSG for £43.5m from Barcelona in August 2023

    ‘He was Barcelona’s most fined player’

    Dembele arrived at Barcelona aged 20 as their most expensive signing, but his time at the club was a mix of injury setbacks and off-field issues.

    Despite being largely injury-free at Rennes and Dortmund, he sustained 14 muscle injuries at the Nou Camp, spending 784 days sidelined.

    Concerns over discipline and professionalism led the club to assign private chefs to him, while late nights because of gaming affected his training punctuality, making him the club’s most-fined player in recent years.

    Still, when fit, his explosive pace and dribbling made him a game-changer, as he showed glimpses of the talent Barcelona invested in.

    So what changed him?

    Those that know him best – and few do – say he changed after marrying his girlfriend Rima at a Muslim wedding in Morocco in December 2021, and soon after he had a child.

    The wedding came as a surprise to many of his team-mates, not least because they did not even know he had a partner.

    So the big changes to his life occurred in his last two seasons at Barcelona when, essentially, he grew up.

    He worked at home with a physiotherapist and frequently went to France to receive specialised preventative treatments. With the eyes and mind of a father, he began to see things differently.

    He finally took on board the importance of good nutrition and, for the past few seasons, has employed a French nutritionist who has helped him maintain a healthier lifestyle.

    Dembele always enjoyed the respect and esteem of his Barca team-mates, many of whom were surprised and disappointed to see him sold to PSG.

    ‘He is now the opposite to how he was perceived in Spain’

    Dembele has never lacked confidence, is super-passionate about football and arrived in Paris in August 2023 convinced of his ability to star and succeed at the club, despite the presence at the time of Mbappe.

    Last summer, manager Luis Enrique told Dembele that, without Mbappe in the team, he needed more goals from him to go with his large number of assists – carte blanche for the player to show a more selfish approach with less passing and a bigger desire to score.

    In private, the coaching staff have frequently told him that if he managed to convert a decent percentage of the chances that he creates, it can lead to collective success and then individual honours. The Ballon d’Or even.

    He has taken it all on board and is relishing playing in his new tactical role.

    Last season, he was mostly played on the right. Now he operates as a false nine, inside, where he touches the ball more, enjoys a greater freedom to receive passes and participate in the build-up but with more chances to finish.

    He is enjoying talking about tactics, about how to improve and about understanding the game. He is now the complete opposite of how he was perceived by many at Barcelona.

    And the goals have flowed. His tally of 23 coming from all angles.

    This season, he has scored 16 in Ligue 1 (eight with his right foot, six with the left, two headers), six in the Champions League (four right, two left) and one left-footed goal in the Nations League.

    Can Dembele deliver holy grail to PSG?

    It has not all been smooth sailing for Dembele in Paris though. Despite his quiet facade, he still has fire inside.

    In September, following PSG’s 3-1 victory over Rennes, there was a heated exchange between player and manager – leading to Dembele’s exclusion from the squad for a subsequent Champions League match against Arsenal.

    Luis Enrique emphasised the importance of players fulfilling their responsibilities to the team, saying: “When a player doesn’t meet their obligations, this is the sort of thing that can happen.

    “The best thing I did was not to play him in London against Arsenal, even though that was heavily criticised. This is my best decision of the year. He did the rest himself.”

    Dembele did not like the way he had been talked to by the manager in front of the squad and overreacted. Soon after he apologised.

    He was also sent off against Bayern Munich and after that, spending two games on the bench, it was incorrectly suggested that Luis Enrique had punished him.

    He was actually rested because the coach thought he was a bit unfocused and needed a mental rest. Those two games were two unexpected draws against Nantes and Auxerre.

    This week we saw a video of training with the two men hugging and laughing.

    Luis Enrique was also full of praise for Demble after he scored twice in the first-leg win against Brest.

    “Ask him what he has had for breakfast since Christmas! Actually those who see him regularly are not surprised,” he said.

    For some time many have believed that the holy grail of a Champions League triumph for PSG might be dependent on the on-field achievements of one of France’s heroes.

    That could still be the case – just not with Mbappe, but a rejuvenated Dembele.

  • Benfica  3  3  Monaco  Aggregate score Benfica 4 , Monaco 3 (Agg 4-3)

    Benfica 3 3 Monaco Aggregate score Benfica 4 , Monaco 3 (Agg 4-3)

    A below-par Benfica held off a spirited comeback from Monaco in a thrilling draw in Lisbon to seal their place in the Champions League last 16.

    Vangelis Pavlidis’ superb goal in Monaco last week gave the Portuguese side a 1-0 lead in the play-off first leg, but it was the Ligue 1 side who were superior at the Estadio da Luz.

    Monaco’s appeals for an early penalty were denied before Krepin Diatta forced Benfica goalkeeper Anatoliy Trubin into a superb save.

    Despite their slack start, the hosts were gifted a 22nd-minute opener.

    Monaco defender Wilfried Singo slipped under pressure and presented the ball to the in-form Pavlidis, who fired across the face of goal for Kerem Aktürkoglu to convert on the slide.

    To Monaco’s credit they bounced back and almost equalised when Breel Embolo’s header bounced off the post and rolled across the face of goal.

    Less than a minute later they got the goal they deserved as former Liverpool attacker Takumi Minamino squeezed a shot inside Trubin’s near post.

    Monaco should have levelled the tie at 2-2 in first-half injury-time, but Embolo spooned his effort over after Maghnes Akliouche put him through.

    The second half began with Eliesse ben Seghir forcing Trubin into another fine save, but minutes later the Ukrainian goalkeeper could only watch as the Moroccan curled a strike into the bottom corner.

    Yet just like earlier, Monaco handed Benfica another chance to retake the lead. Captain Thilo Kehrer kicked the back of Fredrik Aursnes’ leg and Pavlidis converted the resulting penalty for his seventh goal of the campaign.

    Monaco made it 3-2 on the night with nine minutes left through substitute George Ilenikhena, but three minutes later Orkun Kokcu flicked Alvaro Fernandez’s pin-point cross past visiting goalkeeper Radoslaw Majecki to level and secure a remarkable 4-3 aggregate win.

    Benfica will face either Barcelona or Liverpool in the last 16.

  • AC Milan  1  1  Feyenoord ,Aggregate score AC Milan 1 , Feyenoord 2 (Agg 1-2)

    AC Milan 1 1 Feyenoord ,Aggregate score AC Milan 1 , Feyenoord 2 (Agg 1-2)

    AC Milan crashed out of the Champions League after being held to a draw by Feyenoord in the second leg of their knockout play-off at San Siro Stadium.

    The Italians wiped out a 1-0 deficit in last week’s first leg after just 36 seconds as Santiago Gimenez netted against his former club with the fastest goal in this season’s Champions League.

    But Milan full-back Theo Hernandez was sent off in the 51st minute for two yellow cards and Feyenoord substitute Julian Carranza headed in the decisive 73rd-minute goal to seal a 2-1 aggregate success.

    The last-16 draw, to be held on Friday, will decide whether the Dutch club face Inter Milan or Arsenal next month.

    Milan boss Sergio Conceicao said: “It’s a big defeat for me and I made many mistakes.

    “I am responsible for this defeat. We should have been better on a mental level. This elimination is down to me, not Theo or anyone else. I’m the one who’s responsible – Theo has given a lot to Milan.”

    Seven-time European champions Milan had the perfect start with Gimenez’s effort.

    Christian Pulisic’s cross to the back post was nodded back into the danger zone by Malick Thiaw for the Mexico international to head home from close range for his sixth goal of the competition – five of which came in Feyenoord colours before he left them in the winter transfer window.

    Conceicao’s side pushed for the aggregate lead as Tijjani Reijnders and Joao Felix went close, before Hernandez’s fierce strike cannoned off the upright in the 23rd minute.

    Rafael Leao was denied by Timon Wellenreuther in the closing stages of the first half and the Feyenoord goalkeeper was also tested again early in the second half by Kyle Walker’s low drive from the edge of the box.

    The Dutch side, under interim manager Pascal Bosschaart, were then handed a boost when Frenchman Hernandez received a second booking for simulation six minutes after the restart.

    Feyenoord capitalised on the numerical advantage as Carranza met Hugo Bueno’s cross to plant a thumping header past Milan captain Mike Maignan and send his side through to the last 16 of of the premier European competition for the first time since 1974.

    However, they will be without Givairo Read for the last-16 tie as the right-back received a red card for violent conduct when tensions flared between the sides after the final whistle.

    Milan struggles continue with upset

    Sergio Conceicao replaced Paulo Fonseca at AC Milan in December

    Once a powerhouse of European football, Milan have now only made it to the last 16 of the Champions League once since the 2013-14 season.

    That was under Stefano Pioli, who led them to the semi-finals in 2022-23 and also helped them lift their first Serie A title in 11 years in 2022.

    However, the Rossoneri have failed to hit those heights since Pioli left after a five-year spell at the end of last season, with former Porto boss Conceicao their second manager in this campaign after replacing Paulo Fonseca, who was sacked in December.

    Conceicao took charge of the club with Milan eighth in the Serie A table and, although results have picked up recently, they are still in danger of missing out on European football next season.

    Milan are currently one point behind sixth-placed Fiorentina, who occupy the spot for the Conference League play-off round, and five adrift of fourth-placed Juventus and a place in next season’s Champions League.

    Despite having lifted the Italian Super Cup by beating Inter Milan shortly after his appointment, this disappointing early exit from the Champions League will pile further pressure on Conceicao.

  • Preston North End  1  1  Millwall

    Preston North End 1 1 Millwall

    A superb goal from Emil Riis earned Preston North End a point at home to Millwall in the Championship.

    The Danish striker fired in from long range early in the second half after Mihailo Ivanovic had scored an equally impressive opener, dipping a 25 yard free-kick over the home side’s defensive wall in the first half.

    Both teams knew that a win would put them four points off the play-off places in the Championship table, but the two goals were rare moments of quality in a workmanlike game.

    Preston, who had manager Paul Heckingbottom in the stand as he serves a touchline ban, called striker Milutin Osmajic – subject of an FA investigation – off the substitutes’ bench at half-time as they sought to come from behind.

    The stats suggested that this was always going to be a tight affair, with Millwall having drawn half of their 16 away games and the Lilywhites having done the same in nine of their 17 at Deepdale, where they have also struggled to score goals.

    Both sides have been eking out results however, with Preston now unbeaten at home in the last 12 games in all competitions and the Lions having lost just one of their last eight, but they simply cancelled each other out.

    Millwall goalkeeper Lukas Jensen did well to turn an early Riis shot round the post, but the Londoners also had opportunities, with Ivanovic bouncing a header off the crossbar from a raking Joe Bryan cross

    With set pieces always going to be a big factor in the game, Preston almost forced an opener as Liam Lindsay’s far-post header from a corner was turned goalwards by Lewis GIbson. His prod was blocked on the line and in the ensuing melee Ryan Porteous could only hook the ball over the bar.

    Millwall came up with the first moment of real quality in the match five minutes before the break, as Preston developed a bad habit of conceding free-kicks around their own penalty area. Bryan had hit the wall from two of them but Ivanovic took the third and found the top corner.

    The Serb scored the only goal in away wins at Luton and Portsmouth last month, but this time the lead lasted less than two minutes after half-time, as Preston threw on Osmajic to give his side a more physical presence up front.

    That paid as Japhet Tanganga failed to deal with a high ball, and as it fell Riis who caught it beautifully on the volley to send it bouncing beyond Jensen and into the corner of the net.

    Preston looked most likely to win it as Osmajic fired one chance over the bar, and in added time Will Keane failed to get a clean connection on Robbie Brady’s whipped free-kick and then Kaine Kesler-Hayden dragged a shot wide.

    Post-match reaction

    Preston boss Paul Heckingbottom:

    “We were certainly the dominant team but it’s a positive point having gone behind to a team who defend really well.

    “It’s a positive point and there were some good performances from a lot of the players as well.

    “It’s not a free-kick that they score from. That’s the frustration. Ali (McCann) kicks it away with his left foot. That’s another reason that I’m pleased with the point in the end.

    “For all the ball we had, we lacked penetration. It was more about risking the ball, being a bit more direct and putting our three (attackers) in the middle of the pitch high up.”

    Millwall manager Alex Neil told TodayPriceNG London:

    “It was a tough match, they have a really strong record at home and have lost one in 15, but it was a strange game in that we looked more dangerous when they had their best spells.

    “We hit the bar with a header and then had a great free kick that ends up in the back of the net.

    “It was relatively even in terms of opportunities but they dominated the ball and were the team that controlled the game in that sense.

    “Their goal was an opportune moment where Riis has smashed it from 25 yards, a great finish and it ends in the back of the net.

    “We can play better but a point is not to be snuffed at coming here.”

  • Bayern Munich  1  1   Celtic Aggregate score Bayern Munich 3 , Celtic 2 (Agg 3-2)

    Bayern Munich 1 1 Celtic Aggregate score Bayern Munich 3 , Celtic 2 (Agg 3-2)

    Celtic’s Champions League adventure came to a halt in gut-wrenching fashion as Bayern Munich struck in the 94th minute to deny them a stunning victory in Germany and snatch a 3-2 aggregate victory.

    Trailing 2-1 after the first leg of the play-off round at Parkhead, Celtic led when Nicolas Kuhn capitalised on Kim Min-jae’s error to give Brendan Rodgers’ side a shock lead just after the hour.

    That was after a first half in which Celtic passed up four fine opportunities to score – Kuhn, Callum McGregor, and Daizen Maeda, twice, all going close – while England captain Harry Kane hit the bar before he was substituted at half-time.

    Celtic would not be denied after the break, though, when Maeda burst forward and funnelled the ball to Kuhn, who took advantage of Kim’s hesitancy to slip past Manuel Neuer.

    Bayern, stunned into action, pushed for a leveller. Leon Goretzka nodded wide; Joshua Kimmich forced Kasper Schmeichel into a fine save; and Leroy Sane drilled a shot just past the post.

    Celtic were on the back foot, unable to get out of their own half and counter Vincent Kompany’s side, and eventually – with extra time within sight – they cracked to concede with the last kick of the game.

    Michael Olise’s cross was met by Goretzka, whose header was brilliantly saved by Schmeichel. The ball dropped in front of the empty goal, and Cameron Carter-Vickers’ attempts to clear were thwarted by Alphonso Davies, who bundled over the line.

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    Football is so often a cruel game, and it was hard not to feel for the Celtic players who lay dejectedly on the turf as their Bayern counterparts ran to the corner celebrating, and no doubt breathing a huge sigh of relief.

    All the fight and resolve that they had shown for almost 180 minutes had been sapped from them by the scrappiest, ugliest of goals.

    The Scottish champions hustled and harried, and stood up when tested. Schmeichel added more saves to his highlights reel, while his defence headed, blocked and cleared almost everything that came at them.

    There were chances. McGregor blazed over in the first half when he should have hit the target. Kuhn had one cleared off the line, before his cross to the back post missed Maeda by a matter of inches.

    They forced another opportunity when Dayot Upamecano sliced a pass. Kuhn played in Maeda with Neuer off his line, but the Japanese forward chipped wide.

    There is a German saying – coming close is also missing it. It feels harsh to be critical given the monumental effort Celtic produced, but they needed to be more clinical.

    They were less than a minute from extra time, and who knows what would have happened then? Perhaps more cruelty and dejection. Perhaps immortality among the Celtic annals for years to come.

    Although they return to Glasgow beaten, they return with pride.

    This looks like a different team to the one battered in Dortmund just a few months ago. They’ve matured considerably and look like growing even further.

    Bayern pass tougher inspection than expected

    Although Celtic have been flying domestically and did well in the Champions League group stage, Bayern would have been happy with the draw.

    After two gruelling encounters, they will just be happy to have made it through unscathed after an almighty scare.

    They did pin Celtic back at times, and you don’t take 23 shots – with 10 on target – without putting your opponents on the ropes.

    But the longer it went, the more doubts started to grow as to whether the Bundesliga leaders had an answer. Ultimately, they did.

    The Celtic goal rocked them. They were forced into near-fatal errors, and more mistakes than they have made in any Champions League game this season.

    Their weaknesses were exposed, but having pulled through Kompany can now gird his loins. He knows where he needs to improve and it wouldn’t be a surprise to see this team go all the way to the final.

    Match stats

    Bayern have reached the Champions League last 16 in each of the last 17 seasons and in each of their last 21 appearances in the competition.

    They remain unbeaten against Scottish opposition at home in major European competition (P11 W7 D4). Celtic have failed to win any of their 16 away games against German opposition (D4 L12 – including East Germany).

    Kuhn became the first German to score against Bayern Munich in the Champions League since Mergim Berisha for Red Bull Salzburg in November 2020. He is the first to do so in the knockout stages since Lukas Podolski for Arsenal in March 2014 (last 16).

    Bayern have made more errors leading to opposition shots than any other team in the Champions League this season (13 – 5 in the build-up to goals conceded).

     

     

  • Man City need ‘perfect game’ – can Guardiola find miracle in Madrid?

    Man City need ‘perfect game’ – can Guardiola find miracle in Madrid?

    Pep Guardiola strode into the Bernabeu Stadium’s palatial surroundings knowing Manchester City must overturn the odds – and logic – in a special place that usually reserves its miracles for Real Madrid.

    He has known every emotion in this legendary arena on a Champions League journey that has brought him here with Barcelona, Bayern Munich and Manchester City.

    And on Wednesday, Guardiola will once more appear alongside his friend and great adversary, Real Madrid coach Carlo Ancelotti, beneath those towering stands knowing victory will rank among his finest achievements.

    Guardiola rates City’s chances of overturning a 3-2 deficit from the first leg of this play-off to reach the last 16 as “1%”.

    And, to gauge the opinions of locals in a city that has held more Champions League victory parades than any other, they feel Guardiola is erring on the side of optimism.

    Guardiola was in measured mood when he appeared in front of the media at the Bernabeu, an environment that represented enemy territory during his time as player and coach with Barcelona – and his message was crystal clear.

    “We have to make it almost the perfect game,” he said. “We have to attack. We have to score goals. This is the idea.”

    Guardiola is determined City will not leave the Bernabeu wondering or with regrets, saying: “We must play with courage. We must be ourselves. It will need incredible courage and we must play to win.

    “We could still lose, but we have to show that courage and be ourselves. We have to play so well, especially after the result we took away in the first leg.”

    Opta statistics rate City’s chances of advancing at a more optimistic 19.8%, but those percentages must be viewed through the prism of Real’s history in this tournament and the muscle memory that kicks in for the 15-time winners when it matters.

    Guardiola’s record with City against Real is chequered, though it started with victory in the last 16 in 2020, the two legs being played six months apart because of the Covid-19 pandemic.

    The most bitter moment came two years later when City led by two goals on aggregate in the 90th minute of the semi-final second leg at the Bernabeu, only for Rodrygo to score twice within seconds, Karim Benzema’s injury-time penalty sending Real on to eventual victory over Liverpool in the final in Paris.

    When Guardiola, as Manchester City manager, claimed his third Champions League crown in 2023, after winning with Barcelona in 2009 and 2011, Real were thrashed 5-1 on aggregate in the semi-final, the Spanish champions then prevailing on penalties last season.

    He said: “I have some incredible memories here – sometimes good ones, sometimes not so good.

    “We know at this stage, and in this stadium, the pressure is there – but you get that in Milan, in Barcelona, at Anfield. You have to suffer at these places, but you have to reduce those moments.”

    Real’s remarkable win against City in 2022 is the sort of sporting lightning strike Guardiola will seek to turn back on them, but he must do it with a fading team that has lost its domestic supremacy after winning a historic four successive Premier Leagues, and now faces the prospect of going out of the Champions League before the last 16 for the first time in 12 years.

    Carlo Ancelotti (left) and Pep Guardiola will be meeting in the Champions League for the 10th time

    The wily Ancelotti was not taking Guardiola’s bait about percentages when he spoke in Madrid on Tuesday, saying: “He doesn’t really think that. We don’t think we have a 99% chance. We have a small advantage – and we have to take advantage of that.”

    Guardiola responded: “For the first time he didn’t believe me. I always say what I think, and this time you don’t believe me.”

    Statistics pile up like giant obstacles in front of City’s route to the last 16, explaining why Real are overwhelming favourites after two goals in a late surge gave them victory at Etihad Stadium.

    It was the 40th time Real have won the first leg of a European knockout-stage tie away from home, progressing on 37 of the previous 39 occasions.

    City’s defeat, meanwhile, was the fifth time they have lost the first leg of a Champions League knockout-stage tie, going on to be eliminated on the previous four occasions.

    For Ancelotti, this tournament’s greatest coach with five wins, he will be meeting Guardiola in the Champions League for the 10th time, on eight occasions with Real against City. The Italian has won four of their nine meetings, never losing at home, winning two games and drawing two.

    Of more recent significance is that to unseat the holders, City will have to alter poor form in the competition after losing their past three away games to Sporting, Juventus and Paris St-Germain.

    Guardiola’s spirits will be lifted by Saturday’s 4-0 win over Newcastle United which included a hat-trick inside 14 first-half minutes for new Egyptian signing Omar Marmoush, while Erling Haaland demonstrated his quality with both goals in the first-leg defeat, his first against Real Madrid.

    Haaland has been prolific in the Champions League, scoring 49 goals in 48 games. If he scores at the Bernabeu, he will become the fastest player to 50 goals in appearances and age, at 24 years and 213 days.

    It could even be a Champions League farewell to Manchester City for modern greats of the club such as Kevin de Bruyne, Ilkay Gundogan and goalkeeper Ederson, while others such as Bernardo Silva and Mateo Kovacic are also in their 30s.

    Guardiola would not be drawn as he said: “I would like to answer this but it will be at the end of the season. We still have a lot to play for, to qualify for the Champions League next season, we are still there in the Champions League this season. We have the FA Cup and the Club World Cup.”

    Silva added: “If you had told me at the start of the season that we would be in this position in the Champions League and the Premier League I wouldn’t have believed you. We deserve to be in this complicated situation because of where we finished.

    “We have to believe. We still believe things can go our way, but this season is certainly a lesson for the future.”

    For Manchester City, that future is now – in the forbidding, unforgiving surroundings of the Bernabeu on Wednesday.

    And if Guardiola can overcome those “1%” odds in this footballing cathedral, it will rank alongside the best results of his career.