Category: Sports

  • Lewandowski earns Barcelona win over Alaves to preserve title hopes

    Lewandowski earns Barcelona win over Alaves to preserve title hopes

    Robert Lewandowski’s second-half strike helped Barcelona beat Alaves 1-0 on Sunday to cut the gap on La Liga leaders Real Madrid down to four points.

    The Catalans, third, capitalised with a narrow victory after the champions slipped up across town at Espanyol on Saturday.

    Barcelona trail second place Atletico by three points before the Rojiblancos face Real Madrid in a tasty derby clash next weekend, which could allow Hansi Flick’s side to make up more ground.

    Lewandowski netted from a Lamine Yamal cross to settle a hard-fought match in which Alaves largely frustrated the hosts.

    “Before the game we knew we had to win,” Lewandowski told Movistar. “For us it’s a moment in which we have less points than Atletico and Real Madrid, (but) first it’s important that we win and later we can think about their points.

    “We have to play well, win and then we can look at the league table and see how many points we have exactly.”

    Flick’s team struggled to get going in the early afternoon sunlight at the Olympic stadium.

    The Catalans created barely anything of note in the first half as Alaves resisted stubbornly.

    One mazy Lamine Yamal dribble got home fans excited but there was little else to raise the pulse.

    Gavi and Tomas Conechny were both taken off after an ugly collision of heads.

    – ‘Patience’ pays –

    Lewandowski scuffed a shot narrowly wide and a low Pedri effort was comfortably fielded by Alaves goalkeeper Jesus Owono.

    Flick brought on Frenkie de Jong and Eric Garcia at half-time to try and speed up Barcelona’s game in possession and the team looked sharper as a result.

    Lewandowski sent a glancing header agonisingly wide of the far post soon before he broke the deadlock.

    The veteran Polish forward produced a poacher’s finish from close range after Yamal sent a cross-shot spinning towards him at the back post after 61 minutes.

    It was Lewandowski’s 18th goal of the league campaign, stretching his lead on Real Madrid’s Kylian Mbappe as the division’s top scorer to three.

    “A game like today is very important,” said Lewandowski.

    “We can’t always win with four, five or six goals, sometimes teams like this come along who defend deep and well, but we have a chance if we play with patience, and in the end we scored one more goal than them so we’re very happy.”

    Barca substitute Ferran Torres’s curling effort was pushed away by Owono at full stretch as the Catalans tried to make the game safe.

    Flick’s team could not produce a second but Alaves, who barely threatened Wojciech Szczesny’s goal throughout, were not able to mount a comeback.

    Later Sunday fourth-place Athletic Bilbao visit Real Betis among other matches.

  • Man United slump 0-2 to Crystal Palace at Old Trafford

    Man United slump 0-2 to Crystal Palace at Old Trafford

    Man United slumped to another meek home defeat as Crystal Palace won 2-0 at Old Trafford on Sunday, while Tottenham eased the pressure on Ange Postecoglou by beating Brentford 2-0.

    Jean Philippe-Mateta was Palace’s hero with both goals in the second half as Man United suffered a fifth defeat in their last six home league games.

    Victory takes the Eagles above the Red Devils in the table as Oliver Glasner’s side climb to 12th.

    Three consecutive wins for United had lifted the mood around Old Trafford but it was back to square one for Ruben Amorim after another home display lacking in creativity and riddled with defensive lapses.

    Amorim’s decision to start without a natural striker backfired with both Rasmus Hojlund and Joshua Zirkzee left on the bench.

    Midfielder Kobbie Mainoo started in a centre-forward role after scoring in a 2-0 victory over Romanian side FCSB in midweek.

    The England international’s scuffed strike came back off the post in Man United’s best effort of a bright opening before their attacking threat fizzled out.

    Crystal Palace have lost just one of their last seven league games to recover from a miserable start to the season.

    The visitors missed the creative spark offered by Eberechi Eze for the first hour as an injury meant he was only fit enough for a cameo appearance off the bench.

    But Eze made an instant impact as from his free-kick Maxence Lacroix’s header came back off the bar and into Mateta’s path to fire home.

    Worse was to follow for Man United as Lisandro Martinez had to be stretchered off with what appeared a serious knee injury.

    Crystal Palace showed no mercy to secure the three points when Daniel Munoz charged through the middle of the home side’s defence and unselfishly squared for Mateta to knock in his sixth goal in five games.

    – Spurs ease relegation fears –

    Spurs eased fears they could be dragged into a relegation battle as Postecoglou’s injury-ravaged side kept a rare clean sheet to see off Brentford.

    The Bees were left to rue a number of missed chances against Tottenham’s makeshift defence with Micky van de Ven and Cristian Romero again absent.

    Brentford also lent the visitors a helping hand with the opening goal.

    Hakon Valdimarsson flapped at Son Heung-min’s corner and Vitaly Janelt headed into his own net on 29 minutes.

    Yoane Wissa’s header came off the bar as Brentford pushed for an equaliser.

    But Spurs picked them off on the counter-attack when Pape Sarr prodded through Valdimarsson’s legs from Son’s pass.

    Victory lifts Tottenham to 14th and 10 points clear of the relegation zone.

    Second-placed Arsenal start the day nine points adrift of league leaders Liverpool ahead of their blockbuster clash against defending champions Manchester City at the Emirates in the 1630GMT kick-off.

  • Slot urges Salah to sign new Liverpool deal after Saudi links

    Slot urges Salah to sign new Liverpool deal after Saudi links

    Arne Slot has urged Mohamed Salah to sign a new contract with Liverpool, advising the Egypt star against a lucrative move to Saudi Arabia.

    Salah has been in sensational form this season but is out of contract in June, with speculation persisting that the Saudi Pro League could be a possible destination for the Egyptian superstar.

    Saudi sports minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Turki Al-Faisal was asked whether the forward was the “big prize” for the Middle East nation in an interview on the Piers Morgan Uncensored YouTube channel on Thursday.

    “Definitely, because if he ticks all the right boxes, even for us, we’d love to have him,” the sports minister said.

    “We feel like we are one with the Egyptians, from our culture and our history and so on.”

    The 32-year-old Salah, who tops the Premier League goalscoring charts with 19 goals this season, said at the end of December he was still “far away” from reaching an agreement over a new deal at Anfield.

    Liverpool manager Slot reiterated at his pre-match press conference on Friday that the club want to keep hold of their talismanic striker, who joined the club in 2017.

    “We want him to extend, of course, as well,” he said. “That is clear, but I’m not surprised that Saudi wants him, I’m also not surprised if other countries want him as well.

    “He’s old and wise enough, he’s done so many smart things in his career that he will make the right decision for himself and hopefully for us as well.”

    Referring to the Saudi links, the Dutchman added: “He’s done so well without my advice for a long time, so he can probably keep doing what is best for his career, even without my advice.

    “But my advice to him would be different from the one you just mentioned.”

    Liverpool captain Virgil van Dijk and England defender Trent Alexander-Arnold are also out of contract at the end of the season, giving the Premier League leaders a headache.

    Slot, whose team face in-form Bournemouth on Saturday, said it “would be ridiculous” if he did not speak to his players about the future, but he refused to be drawn on the progress of contract talks.

  • UCL: Real Madrid vs Man City now a derby – Guardiola

    UCL: Real Madrid vs Man City now a derby – Guardiola

    Pep Guardiola has likened Man City’s upcoming Champions League clash with Real Madrid to a derby, as the two European giants prepare to face off for the fourth consecutive season.

    This is just as the Spaniard fears Man City’s bid to knock holders Real Madrid out of the Champions League will be hampered by the gruelling demands of the Premier League schedule.

    After beating Club Brugge on Wednesday to scramble into the knockout stages, Guardiola’s side were pitted against the 15-time European champions in Friday’s play-off round draw.

    Man City will host Real in the first leg on February 11 or 12 before travelling to Madrid for the return leg a week later.

    It is part of a brutal period for City, who travel to Arsenal in the Premier League on Sunday and have top-flight matches at home to Newcastle and Liverpool either side of the second leg.

    They also have an FA Cup fourth round trip to Leyton Orient and a league game at Tottenham in February.

    “Well it looks like a derby already, four years in a row facing Madrid,” Guardiola told reporters on Friday.

    “The draw could have been nicer? Yes. Bayern Munich was extremely difficult. Real Madrid difficult, we know that.”

    With City battling to qualify for next season’s Champions League, as well as trying to win this year’s tournament, Guardiola will have difficult selection decisions to make throughout the crucial period.

    While other European leagues adjust their fixtures to give clubs in the Champions League more time to prepare, the English top flight maintains a hectic schedule throughout the season.

    “Normally in the Premier League they always put toughest schedules for teams in Europe,” Guardiola said.

    “Schedule the most difficult ones because it is tough to play against Real Madrid or Bayern Munich, but the problem is in the middle is Newcastle.”

    – Fixture pile-up –

    Pressed on whether the Premier League champions deserve more help from domestic authorities over the schedule, Guardiola said: “Are you asking me this daft question after many years? Come on. Don’t ask me to say something impolite.

    “Always for many years it has been like this. I remember Alex Ferguson, Jose Mourinho and Arsene Wenger made the same complaints.

    “Do you think it is going to change? The broadcasters decide, they don’t ask me what is better to play.

    “I’m not complaining because we won trebles and had incredible success doing that.

    “I would love (more time) absolutely. But if you don’t like it, go to another country, don’t be Manchester City manager.”

    The draw sets up the fifth two-legged tie between City and Real in the past six seasons.

    Real ended City’s Champions League campaign in the quarter-finals last season but City beat Real in the 2022/23 semi-finals on their way to winning the Champions League for the first time.

    Guardiola’s hopes of repeating that triumph would be significantly boosted by the return of Rodri.

    City have struggled badly without the Spain midfielder, who was initially ruled out for the season after suffering a cruciate ligament injury against Arsenal in September.

    But the 2024 Ballon d’Or winner has made good progress and believes he can be back before the end of the season.

    “He is positive. But ACL is ACL for every football player and every athlete. You have to respect the human body,” Guardiola said.

    “To win one month and after have setbacks for the next season is not intelligent. Of course he wants to play tomorrow, I know that. It is going really well. Step by step we respect that.”

  • Roma to face Porto in Europa League knockout phase playoff [Full Fixtures]

    Roma to face Porto in Europa League knockout phase playoff [Full Fixtures]

    Former winners Porto were drawn Friday to face Claudio Ranieri’s Roma in the standout tie of the Europa League knockout phase playoff, while Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur were among the clubs to discover their potential opponents in the last 16.

    Porto, who won the Europa League in 2011 as well as its predecessor, the UEFA Cup, in 2003, will be at home in the first leg on February 13 with the return in Italy a week later.

    Other notable play-off round ties will see Jose Mourinho’s Fenerbahce come up against Anderlecht and Ajax play close neighbours Union Saint-Gilloise of Belgium.

    The eight winners from the play-off round will go through to the last 16, where they will join the top eight teams from the league phase.

    Lazio finished on top of the standings, just ahead of Athletic Bilbao, with United and Spurs coming third and fourth respectively.

    With the draw for the last 16 based on a pre-determined bracket, the two Premier League sides know they will face either the winners of the play-off tie between AZ Alkmaar and Galatasaray, or that between Midtjylland of Denmark and Real Sociedad.

    Spurs have already played AZ and Galatasaray in the league phase, beating the Dutch club 1-0 at home and losing 3-2 to the Turkish giants in Istanbul.

    United played Galatasaray in the Champions League group stage last season, taking just one point from a possible six.

    Real Sociedad are familiar opponents for the Old Trafford club: they met in the Champions League group stage in 2013/14, in the Europa League last 32 in 2021, and in the Europa League group stage in 2022.

    Rangers, the 2022 Europa League runners-up, scraped into eighth place in the league phase and can face FC Twente of the Netherlands, Norwegian champions Bodo/Glimt, Fenerbahce or Anderlecht in the last 16.

    The draw for the last 16 will take place on February 21, with the ties being played in the first half of March.

    This season’s Europa League final will be played in Bilbao on Wednesday, May 21.

    Europa League Knockout Playoff Draw

    FC Twente v Bodo/Glimt

    Union SG v Ajax Amsterdam

    AZ Alkmaar v Galatasaray

    Ferencvaros v Viktoria Plzen

    Fenerbahce v Anderlecht

    PAOK v Steaua Bucharest

    Midtjylland v Real Sociedad

    Porto v AS Roma

    Dates for fixtures

    Playoff first leg: Feb. 13

    Playoff second leg: Feb. 20

    Last 16 draw: Feb. 21

  • Champions League playoff draw: Man City to face Real Madrid, Celtic meet Bayern [Full Fixtures]

    Champions League playoff draw: Man City to face Real Madrid, Celtic meet Bayern [Full Fixtures]

    Reigning champions Real Madrid will face 2023 winners Manchester City in the play-off round of this season’s Champions League, following Friday’s draw.

    It is the fourth year running in which the sides have been drawn against each other in a knockout tie, with Real emerging victorious in a penalty shoot-out in the quarter-finals last season.

    Celtic will face six-time European champions Bayern Munich in the play-off round of this season’s Champions League, following Friday’s draw for the start of the knockout phase.

    The Scottish champions are into the knockout stage for the first time in 12 years and last faced Bayern in the group phase in 2017/18, losing home and away.

    Champions League play-off draw: Full Fixtures

    Paris Saint-Germain vs Stade Brestois

    Benfica vs AS Monaco

    Juventus vs PSV

    Feyenoord vs AC Milan

    Real Madrid vs Manchester City

    Bayern Munich vs Celtic

    Club Brugge vs Atalanta

    Sporting CP vs Borussia Dortmund

    When is the knockout playoff round fixtures

    Following Friday’s Champions League draw, the fixture schedule are as follow:

    First legs: February 11-12, 2025

    Second legs: February 18-19, 2025 Each team will play one match on a Tuesday and the other on a Wednesday.

  • Champions League knockout draw: Date, time, potential fixtures

    Champions League knockout draw: Date, time, potential fixtures

    The draw for the knockout playoff round of the revamped UEFA Champions League is here.

    This stage marks a critical juncture in the competition, shaping the path teams must take to advance further.

    But which teams are involved? Why do league phase rankings matter? And when is the next draw? Here’s everything you need to know.

    When is the Champions League Draw for the Knockout Playoff Round?

    The draw is scheduled for Friday, Jan. 31, at 6 a.m. ET / 12 p.m Nigeria time at the House of European Football in Nyon, Switzerland.

    Clubs in the Champions League Draw for the next rounds

    Only the 16 teams that finished between 9th and 24th place in the league phase are involved in this draw.

    The top eight teams have already secured direct entry into the Round of 16 while teams finishing 25th to 36th are eliminated from the competition.

    Does where you finished in the league phase matter in the draw?

    The final league standings determine the knockout matchups, unlike previous seasons where open draws were used. The new seeding system ensures that the highest-ranked teams do not face each other until the latter stages, preserving competitive balance.

    For example:

    Liverpool and Barcelona, having finished first and second, cannot meet until the final.
    Arsenal and Internazionale, placed third and fourth, cannot play against Liverpool or Barcelona until the semifinals.
    Unexpected placements—such as Manchester City (22nd), Paris Saint-Germain, and Real Madrid finishing lower than expected—have led to early heavyweight clashes.
    Man City (22nd) must face either Real Madrid (11th) or Bayern Munich (12th).
    PSG could meet Barcelona or Liverpool in the Round of 16 if they progress.
    The knockout playoff draw: how does it work?

    The draw will follow a structured pairing system:

    Teams are paired based on their final positions (e.g., 9th vs. 10th, 11th vs. 12th, and so on).
    Each pair is drawn into opposite halves of the knockout bracket.
    Example: Real Madrid (11th) and Bayern Munich (12th) cannot meet until the final.
    Paired teams have two possible opponents before the draw.
    Example: Real Madrid and Bayern Munich will face either Celtic (21st) or Man City (22nd).
    Unseeded teams (17th-24th) are drawn first, determining their place in the bracket.
    Seeded teams (9th-16th) are drawn next, ensuring that a lower-ranked team faces a higher-ranked team.
    The higher-seeded teams play the second leg at home.
    Will there be country protection?

    No. Clubs from the same country can face each other starting from this round. For instance, PSG could face AS Monaco or Brest.

    Teams may be drawn against an opponent they already faced in the league phase, including their most recent Matchday 8 rival.

    When is the knockout playoff round fixtures
    First legs: February 11-12, 2025
    Second legs: February 18-19, 2025 Each team will play one match on a Tuesday and the other on a Wednesday.
    What happens to the top eight clubs?

    Once the knockout playoff round is complete, the top eight league finishers will still have four possible opponents for the Round of 16.

    Example: Liverpool and Barcelona could face PSG, Benfica, Monaco, or Brest.
    These teams will be assigned based on the outcomes of the playoff round, ensuring fair distribution across the bracket.
    When will the draw for the round of 16 hold?
    Date: Friday, February 21, 2025
    Format: The top eight teams will be drawn into the bracket, ensuring that Liverpool and Barcelona remain in separate halves.
    Schedule:
    First legs: March 4-5, 2025
    Second legs: March 11-12, 2025
    The knockout bracket will then be locked through to the final.

  • Real Madrid ‘yet to show their best’, warns Ancelotti

    Real Madrid ‘yet to show their best’, warns Ancelotti

    Carlo Ancelotti said Real Madrid “are improving but are yet to show their best” as his side bid to earn automatic qualification to the Champions League last 16 against Ligue 1 club Brest on Wednesday.

    The reigning champions of Europe are ensured of their place in at least the knockout play-off round as the league phase of the revamped Champions League wraps up with its final matchday this week.

    However, after suffering three defeats in their opening seven matches, 16th-placed Real are only in with an outside chance of securing a top eight finish and automatic progression to the last 16.

    A faltering start to the defence of their Spanish and Champions League titles now seems to be behind Ancelotti’s charges after they have won nine of their last 10 outings in all competitions.

    “I think the team are improving but are yet to show their best, even though we’re getting close,” Ancelotti said during his pre-match press conference on Tuesday.

    “The idea and the vision that we have for this team, I think it’s clear to everyone and the team have improved collectively, but also individually.

    “That’s the case for Kylian Mbappe, but also for Rodrygo (Goes) or (Jude) Bellingham and all the other players. They’ve all worked very hard.

    “Kylian is playing very well. I think he just needed a little time to improve athletically and adapt to his new environment… Now we’re taking full advantage of having Mbappe with us and the qualities he can bring to the team.”

    Criticised for his performances at the start of the season following his long-awaited transfer from Paris Saint-Germain, France captain Mbappe has got among the goals as Madrid surged to the top of La Liga over the winter.

    The 26-year-old has 21 goals in 31 matches for Real, eight of which have come in January.

    Los Blancos sit only one point outside of the top eight but seven teams are currently between them and eighth-placed Bayer Leverkusen.

    One of these sides are Wednesday’s opposition Brest, who have impressed on their European debut, with four wins from seven so far.

    “Brest have done an excellent job in this Champions League,” said Ancelotti.

    “They have a point more than us… It’s no coincidence that they took 13 points in the first phase.

    “They are a very good team who know how to take advantage of the qualities of their players,” added the veteran Italian.

    – ‘Don’t stand a chance’ –

    Brest are also assured of progression to the knock-outs, something their coach described as “difficult to imagine” when the Breton outfit got their campaign underway with a 2-1 win over Sturm Graz in neighbouring Guingamp as their own stadium is not up to UEFA requirements.

    “If someone had told us… that Real Madrid would be behind us (now), we would have believed that even less,” added Brest coach Eric Roy during his press conference on Tuesday.

    “We got off to a good start in the competition, while Real were perhaps in a period where they were a little less good.

    “We saw them lose in Lille (1-0), we saw them lose at home to AC Milan (3-1).

    “We managed to over-perform, they may have under-performed, and that’s certainly why today we have a

    point more than them.”

    The Frenchman promised his side would look to be proactive against their fancied opponents.

    “We’ll have to play, but when I say play, I mean really play, in other words be capable of causing problems for our opponents,” said Roy.

    “The fantastic thing about football is that it’s still the sport where the favourite doesn’t always win.

    “It’s obvious that if you look at the stats, if you look at the budget, if you look at the fixture list, if you look at the squad, you can tell yourself that you don’t stand a chance.

    “But in football, you can be inferior and still win games. It doesn’t happen often, but it can happen.”

  • Al Hilal, Neymar reach agreement to end contract

    Al Hilal, Neymar reach agreement to end contract

    Brazilian star Neymar on Monday ended his injury-plagued 18 month stay in Saudi Arabia as his club, Al-Hilal said they had “agreed to terminate the player’s contract by mutual consent”.

    “The club expresses its thanks and appreciation to Neymar for what he has provided throughout his career with Al-Hilal, and wish the player success in his career,” said a club statement posted on social media.

    The 32-year-old former Barcelona and Paris Saint-Germain forward played just seven times since joining the club in August 2023, despite a reported salary of around $104 million a year.

    Neymar, the subject of what is still the biggest transfer in football history when he joined Paris Saint-Germain from Barcelona in 2017 for a fee of 220 million euros ($230 million at), joined Al-Hilal in August 2023.

    He followed fellow superstars Cristiano Ronaldo and Karim Benzema to the lucrative Saudi league.

    But two months after his arrival in Riyadh, he ruptured a cruciate ligament in his left knee while playing for Brazil in a World Cup qualifier in October 2023, which kept him on the sidelines for a year.

    He returned for Al Hilal with two brief appearances in October and November but injured a hamstring and has not played since. He said he is targeting the World Cup.

    The club’s coach Jorge Jesus said recently: “He can no longer play at the level we are used to. Things have become difficult for him, unfortunately.”

    Earlier in January, Neymar said he was aiming to play in the 2026 in the US, Canada and Mexico.

    – ‘Last shot’ –

    “I know this will be my last World Cup, my last shot, my last chance and I will do everything I can to play in it,” he told CNN.

    While Neymar had been curted by MLS teams in the United States, reports in Brazil said Santos, the club where Neymar made his name in his now fading career, was in talks for him to return to his homeland.

    A return to Brazil would likely be the last chance for a player who is his country’s all-time leading scorer with 79 goals in 127 matches.

    At the start of his career he was cast as the heir to Pele.

    After scoring 107 goals in 177 appearances for Santos, he joined Barcelona in 2013, becoming the young star of a team that also featured Lionel Messi and Luis Suarez, which swept to the Champions League title in 2015 by beating Juventus 3-1 in the final in Berlin.

    A year later he scored the winning penalty in a shootout as Brazil won the men’s football gold medal at the 2016 Rio Olympics.

    transfer fee of 220 million euros ($230 million).

    He won five Ligue 1 titles and he and prolific French forward Kylian Mbappe led PSG to the final of the Champions League in the Covid-blighted 2019-2020, but they lost to Bayern Munich.

    PSG reunited Neymar with Messi in the French capital, but the trio with Mbappe failed to gel as personal rivalries got in the way and he was pushed to the exit, and to Saudi Arabia, by the Parisian management in 2023.

  • 15 years after, fans still harass me over 2010 World Cup miss – Aiyegbeni

    15 years after, fans still harass me over 2010 World Cup miss – Aiyegbeni

    Former Super Eagles striker Yakubu Aiyegbeni has opened up that even 15 years after his infamous miss at the 2010 World Cup against Korea, Nigerian fans still bombard him for not putting away that sitter.

    The miss was such that he was faced with an empty net with both goalkeeper and defender beaten inside the six-yard box, and that eliminated Nigeria from the 2010 World Cup.

    “I still get messages from people, different people on that miss,” ‘The Yak’ said on a podcast. “One asked how will I explain this miss to my daughter Kayla. “I was like wow, 13, 14 years ago people still think about that.

    “I got another  message again  that said I  was the worst Super Eagles striker.” ‘The Yak’ said this hurts because the fans do not remember that he scored twice in Sudan for Nigeria to qualify for the 2002 World Cup in Korea and Japan.

    “We went to Sudan when nobody thought we would qualify for the World Cup because the weather there was crazy, the weather was so hot,” he recalled. “A draw or a loss and we are out.

    “I scored two, Julius Aghahowa and ‘Jay Jay’ Okocha also scored for us to win 4-0 and that got us the ticket to the World Cup. “But Nigerians never speak about that and that I played 99.9% of these games to qualify Nigeria to the World Cup and I was still dropped (from going to the World Cup).”