Manchester United’s 1999 Champions League Winners: Where Are They Now?

Ole Gunnar Solskjær is mobbed by his Manchester United teammates after coming off the bench to score a 93rd-minute winner in the 1999 Champions League final. Photograph: Colorsport/Rex/Shutterstock
Ole Gunnar Solskjær is mobbed by his Manchester United teammates after coming off the bench to score a 93rd-minute winner in the 1999 Champions League final. Photograph: Colorsport/Rex/Shutterstock
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Manchester United’s 1999 Champions League Winners: Where Are They Now?

Ole Gunnar Solskjær is mobbed by his Manchester United teammates after coming off the bench to score a 93rd-minute winner in the 1999 Champions League final. Photograph: Colorsport/Rex/Shutterstock
Ole Gunnar Solskjær is mobbed by his Manchester United teammates after coming off the bench to score a 93rd-minute winner in the 1999 Champions League final. Photograph: Colorsport/Rex/Shutterstock

Peter Schmeichel
The Dane left United after the 1998-99 treble season and played for Sporting Lisbon, Aston Villa and Manchester City before retiring in 2003. Has since worked as a television pundit for TV3 in Denmark and the BBC but was criticized in his home country when he agreed to host a show on Russia Today in 2018. Often seen watching his son, Kasper, play for either Denmark or Leicester City.

Gary Neville
A one-club man, the former right-back has been busy since his retirement in 2011. Under Roy Hodgson he became an assistant coach of England and, as a Sky Sports pundit, he is widely regarded as the UK’s finest – a role he gave up in 2015 and returned to in 2016 after an ill-fated spell as Valencia’s manager. Also has a range of business interests, including part-ownership of Salford City and Hotel Football, and has had plans approved to build a £200m skyscraper in Manchester city center.

Ronny Johnsen
One of only four players who played the full 90 minutes of the three decisive games – against Bayern Munich (Champions League final), Tottenham (Premier League) and Newcastle (FA Cup final) – in the treble year, and is now a Manchester United ambassador. Has been a pundit in Norway and was this month working on the possible merger between two clubs, Eik Tønsberg and FK Tønsberg, in an effort to put Tønsberg “on the football map”.

Jaap Stam
The Dutch defender fell out with Sir Alex Ferguson after criticizing the manager in his 2001 autobiography and was soon sold to Lazio, where he was banned for doping. Went on to feature for Milan and Ajax before retiring in 2007 and became a scout for Manchester United a year later. Coached in the Netherlands before Reading made him their manager in 2016. Currently in charge of PEC Zwolle but it was announced this month that he will become Feyenoord’s head coach in June.

Denis Irwin
Joining from Oldham for £625,000 in 1990, he left United with more than 500 appearances and as one of the club’s most decorated players. The dead-ball specialist played in the Champions League final at the age of 33 before joining Wolves in 2002, alongside his former teammate Paul Ince. Has worked for United’s in-house TV channel, MUTV, since 2004 and is also a columnist for Irish newspaper Sunday World.

The Welshman whose chest hair is inextricably linked with United’s 1999 treble spent 23 years in the first team, enjoying 13 league titles, two European Cups and four FA Cups. Appointed United’s caretaker manager after David Moyes’s sacking in 2014, and was assistant when Louis van Gaal took over. Also became a co-owner of Salford City. Left United when José Mourinho arrived in 2016 and succeeded Chris Coleman as Wales manager last year. Has won five of 11 matches in charge.

David Beckham
The most famous footballer – and arguably person – of his generation left United in 2003, not long after a boot kicked by a furious Ferguson struck him above the left eye. His £24.5m move to Real Madrid started a decade of globetrotting that also took him to LA Galaxy, Milan and Paris Saint-Germain before his retirement in 2013. His total of 115 international caps places him third on England’s all-time list. Co-owns nascent MLS side Inter Miami and has a stake in Salford City. Voted 33rd in a 2002 BBC poll of Greatest Britons, two above Boudica and seven above Henry VIII.

Nicky Butt
Started the final in place of the suspended Roy Keane. The Manchester-born midfielder handed in a transfer request in 2004 to join Newcastle. Finished his career with a brief spell in China before taking up a coaching role at United, where he has had a variety of positions from assistant to Giggs to his current job, head of the academy. Also has a stake in Salford City.

Jesper Blomqvist
Left United in 2001 and injuries meant he made no more than 15 league appearances at any of the clubs he went on to play for: Everton (15), Charlton (3), Djurgården (9), Enköping (10) and Hammarby (6). Has since become a favorite in TV shows such as Let’s Dance (Sweden’s Strictly Come Dancing, which he won in 2017). Recently opened a pizza restaurant in Stockholm.

Dwight Yorke
Signed from Aston Villa at the start of the 1998‑99 season, the forward ended the campaign as United’s top scorer with 28 goals. He went on to play for Blackburn, Birmingham and Sunderland before working as a television pundit. Yorke is now an official United ambassador and was in Singapore this week at the International Champions Cup launch.

Andy Cole
The striker, who scored the winning goal in the semi-final against Juventus, was replaced by Solskjær in the 81st minute of the final. Cole stayed at United for another two seasons before joining Blackburn and eventually retiring in 2008. He suffered kidney failure in 2014 and was saved after his nephew Alexander stepped forward as a donor. Cole joined Sol Campbell’s coaching staff at Macclesfield in January.

Raimond van der Gouw
The Dutchman is a goalkeeping coach at Vitesse Arnhem, the club from which he joined United in 1996. A back-up keeper at Old Trafford, he had identical roles at West Ham and Waalwijk before finishing at Apeldoorn aged 44. Worked as a goalkeeping coach under Keane at Sunderland.

David May
Remembered for his wholehearted celebrations despite not coming off the bench at the Camp Nou, the central defender made only six appearances for United that season but ended up staying at Old Trafford until 2003. He now presents a weekly show on MUTV, having briefly dabbled in importing wine.

Phil Neville
Left United in 2005 without much fanfare but became hugely influential at Goodison Park and captained Everton, where he ended his playing career. Media and coaching roles followed before he was named as manager of England Women last year despite no previous managerial experience, save for a caretaker role at Salford City, where he is a part-owner. Has excelled in charge of the Lionesses, with England one of the favorites for this summer’s World Cup after winning the SheBelieves Cup this month.

Wes Brown
The teenager was an unused substitute against Bayern and spent the next season on the sidelines because of injury but he went on to play nearly 250 times for United before his departure in 2011. Spent the twilight of his career in India playing for Kerala Blasters under the former United coach René Meulensteen and is now part of the United legends squad.

Jonathan Greening
Now known as Jono, according to the website of i2i International Soccer Academy, where he works as a coach and mentor. Greening has a Uefa A licence and has coached at Nottingham Forest and York, two of his former clubs. Also played or Middlesbrough and West Brom after leaving United in 2001.

Teddy Sheringham
The other super-sub from that night in Barcelona amassed more than 850 club appearances in his 25-year league career and scored well over 300 goals. But Sheringham proved less successful as a manager, lasting only a few months at Stevenage in 2016 and again in India at the Kolkata side ATK last year. Was with Yorke in Singapore working as a United ambassador.

Ole Gunnar Solskjær
The scorer of United’s stoppage-time winner was a key squad figure but rarely a regular starter across his 11 years as a player at Old Trafford. After injury forced him to retire in 2007, aged 34, he coached United’s reserves before taking charge at Molde in his native Norway in 2011, immediately winning consecutive league titles. He had a brief, unsuccessful spell at Cardiff in 2014, before returning to Molde in 2015. United borrowed him in December; now he is the permanent manager.

(The Guardian)



Man City Host Liverpool, Arsenal Chase Treble in FA Cup Quarter-Finals

Liverpool's Mohamed Salah takes a selfie with a fans smartphone as he celebrates after scoring his side's fourth goal during the English Premier League soccer match between Liverpool and Tottenham Hotspur at Anfield in Liverpool, England, Sunday, April 27, 2025. (AP)
Liverpool's Mohamed Salah takes a selfie with a fans smartphone as he celebrates after scoring his side's fourth goal during the English Premier League soccer match between Liverpool and Tottenham Hotspur at Anfield in Liverpool, England, Sunday, April 27, 2025. (AP)
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Man City Host Liverpool, Arsenal Chase Treble in FA Cup Quarter-Finals

Liverpool's Mohamed Salah takes a selfie with a fans smartphone as he celebrates after scoring his side's fourth goal during the English Premier League soccer match between Liverpool and Tottenham Hotspur at Anfield in Liverpool, England, Sunday, April 27, 2025. (AP)
Liverpool's Mohamed Salah takes a selfie with a fans smartphone as he celebrates after scoring his side's fourth goal during the English Premier League soccer match between Liverpool and Tottenham Hotspur at Anfield in Liverpool, England, Sunday, April 27, 2025. (AP)

Liverpool face a daunting trip to Manchester City in the standout tie of the FA Cup quarter-finals this weekend as Mohamed Salah seeks to end nine spectacular seasons at Anfield on a high.

Arsenal and Chelsea will expect to reach the semi-finals at Wembley against lower tier opposition, while West Ham and Leeds put their battle for Premier League survival on hold in a bid to reach the last four.

AFP Sport examines what to look out for in the four ties:

Manchester City v Liverpool, Saturday

City produced perhaps their best performance of the season to dominate Arsenal and win the League Cup final 2-0 before the international break.

They remain in the running to match their feat as the only English side to ever win the domestic treble of League Cup, FA Cup and Premier League in 2018/19.

Liverpool face a defining 10 days for their season and possibly Arne Slot's future at Anfield.

Languishing fifth in the Premier League, the FA Cup and Champions League are the Reds' only remaining hope of glory.

After visiting the Etihad, Slot's men face European champions Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League quarter-finals over two legs on April 8 and 14.

Despite leading Liverpool to a record-equaling 20th English top-flight title less than a year ago, Slot is under huge pressure to end a difficult second season on a high if he is to remain in the job.

The rest of Liverpool's season will also be marked by a long farewell to Salah.

The Egyptian announced over the international break that he will leave at the end of the campaign having netted 255 goals so far for the club.

"Hopefully he can make his legacy even more special in the upcoming weeks and months where we still play for something special, but he will always leave this club as a legend," said Slot.

Chelsea v Port Vale, Saturday

Chelsea can ill afford to add a massive cup upset to a maelstrom of discontent on and off the pitch at Stamford Bridge.

Four consecutive defeats have plunged manager Liam Rosenior's future into doubt less than three months into his reign.

Enzo Fernandez and Marc Cucurella have spoken out publicly in recent weeks, criticizing the decision to sack Enzo Maresca in January.

Chelsea then announced a Premier League record pre-tax loss of £262.4 million ($349.3 million) for the year to June 30 on Wednesday, sparking speculation over who the Blues may have to sell this summer.

A Port Vale side rooted to the bottom of League One and headed for the fourth tier should still pose little problems for the Premier League giants.

But Vale have won as many games in the FA and League Cup this season (seven) as they have in 38 league games.

Southampton v Arsenal, Saturday

Mikel Arteta's team selection will be scrutinized at St. Mary's after most of his key players pulled out of international duty with injuries.

Declan Rice, Bukayo Saka, William Saliba and Gabriel Magalhaes were among the 10 Gunners to withdraw from action with their nations.

Arteta is seeking a reaction after Arsenal's six-year wait for a trophy was prolonged by City at Wembley.

But they remain in pole position for a first Premier League title in 22 years and also have a favorable Champions League quarter-final draw against Sporting Lisbon.

West Ham v Leeds, Sunday

The priority for both sides may be Premier League survival, but the draw has handed them a rare chance to make the last four.

Leeds have not reached the FA Cup semi-finals since 1987, while West Ham last made it that far 20 years ago.

West Ham sit in the Premier League relegation zone, four points adrift of Leeds, but have used the positive momentum of a cup run to turn their season around.

Since ending a 10-match winless run against QPR in the third round, Nuno Espirito Santo's side have lost just three of 13 games.


Barca Need Yamal at Best without Raphinha for Atletico 'Trilogy'

Barca winger Lamine Yamal could be crucial in the triple-header against Atletico Madrid over the next fortnight. ANDER GILLENEA / AFP
Barca winger Lamine Yamal could be crucial in the triple-header against Atletico Madrid over the next fortnight. ANDER GILLENEA / AFP
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Barca Need Yamal at Best without Raphinha for Atletico 'Trilogy'

Barca winger Lamine Yamal could be crucial in the triple-header against Atletico Madrid over the next fortnight. ANDER GILLENEA / AFP
Barca winger Lamine Yamal could be crucial in the triple-header against Atletico Madrid over the next fortnight. ANDER GILLENEA / AFP

Barcelona winger Raphinha's untimely injury heaps further pressure on teenage star Lamine Yamal ahead of the club's triple-header against Atletico Madrid.

The Spanish champions visit Atletico on Saturday as they bid to maintain or even extend their lead at the top of La Liga, before two further games against Diego Simeone's team in the Champions League quarter-finals, said AFP.

Barca have already faced Atletico three times this season, beating them in La Liga in December but falling in the Copa del Rey semi-final over two legs.

Without Raphinha, out with a hamstring injury until May, the onus will be on 18-year-old winger Yamal to provide the magic Barca need to proceed on two fronts in the approaching inevitably intense battles with Atletico.

Barca hold a four-point lead on Real Madrid, who visit Mallorca earlier on Saturday, at the top of the table.

Yamal played for Spain this week in a goalless draw against Egypt in Cornella at Espanyol's stadium.

Yamal has shown maturity beyond his years since bursting onto the scene as a 15-year-old, including starring for Spain as they won Euro 2024 and blossoming further still as Barca claimed a domestic treble last season.

The youngster, often compared to another graduate from Barca's La Masia youth academy, Lionel Messi, seems to save his best performances for the biggest occasions.

Yamal netted six times for Barca in his last seven matches across all competitions, and the Catalan giants will hope he can continue that form into the final phase of the season.

He admitted in February that he has not been happy this season, in part due to a long-running groin injury, but lately feels better.

"I have that desire to smile on the pitch that I haven't had for a long time and I'm very happy, now I'm happy playing," said Yamal after scoring the first hat-trick of his career, against Villarreal.

In recent weeks Barca have been dependent on the forward in attack and goalkeeper Joan Garcia at the other end.

Strikers Robert Lewandowski and Ferran Torres have struggled for consistent form, while Marcus Rashford has fallen somewhat out of favor.

Raphinha's injury opens the door for the England international, on loan from Manchester United, to start on the left again.

Yamal's pressing and off-the-ball work is an excellent example for Rashford, who despite his strong contribution in terms of assists, sometimes lacks the relentless energy and focus Flick wants from his forwards.

As well as Raphinha, Barca are also likely to be without Frenkie de Jong at the weekend, but Jules Kounde and Alejandro Balde may be able to return after injury.

Simeone's Atletico, fourth by a distance from fifth-place Real Betis, have little to play for in the league but will want to build momentum before Wednesday's Champions League quarter-final first leg at Camp Nou.

Player to watch: Largie Ramazani

Valencia have risen to mid-table in recent weeks, largely thanks to the form of Belgian forward Ramazani. The 25-year-old, on loan from Premier League side Leeds, has scored five goals in his last nine appearances. Los Che host Celta Vigo on Sunday looking to add to their run of three wins from their last four matches.


Napoli and AC Milan Face Off as Italy Licks its World Cup Wounds

Napoli and AC Milan will be looking to close the gap on Serie A leaders Inter Milan. Fayez Nureldine / AFP/File
Napoli and AC Milan will be looking to close the gap on Serie A leaders Inter Milan. Fayez Nureldine / AFP/File
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Napoli and AC Milan Face Off as Italy Licks its World Cup Wounds

Napoli and AC Milan will be looking to close the gap on Serie A leaders Inter Milan. Fayez Nureldine / AFP/File
Napoli and AC Milan will be looking to close the gap on Serie A leaders Inter Milan. Fayez Nureldine / AFP/File

Napoli and AC Milan will face off on Monday with Serie A leaders Inter Milan in their sights, but the return of domestic football over Easter has been completely overshadowed by the fallout from Italy failing to reach yet another World Cup.

Leading Milan by six points with eight matches remaining in the season, Inter would ordinarily be confident of claiming a 21st league crown ahead of the visit of Champions League chasers Roma on Sunday.

But Napoli and Milan have re-ingnited what had looked to be a dead title race, helped by Inter picking up just two points in their last three matches before a traumatic international break for Italian football fans.

Napoli are a point behind Milan after having won their last four matches following the end of a near season-long injury crisis, but will be without Romelu Lukaku after the Belgium striker incurred the wrath of the reigning champions for staying in his home country for treatment on a hip problem.

But that row, Saturday's showdown and the title battle all fade into the background when faced with the national team's latest humiliation, failing to reach a third straight World Cup.

The reaction to Tuesday's play-off defeat on penalties to Bosnia and Hercegovina has been the same to the previous two that cost Italy a place at the world's biggest football tournament: rip it up and start again.

Football federation chief Gabriele Gravina was the first to fall on his sword, his resignation coming on Thursday afternoon, two days after saying he would wait a week before making a decision.

He was followed by the national team's general manager Gianluigi Buffon, with coach Gennaro Gattuso also expected to step down over the coming days.

Now the talk is of how to bring Italian football back to the top table after years of flops from the national team and the slow decline of the country's top clubs on the European stage.

Inter were the one club that had stayed with the best on the continent but even they have helped contribute to the doom, gloom and despondency after being dumped out of the Champions League by Norwegian minnows Bodo/Glimt.

Cristian Chivu's team has also become a sort of symbol of Italy's failure, with defender Alessandro Bastoni being sent off in the first half against Bosnia and academy product Pio Esposito smashing over the first penalty in the shoot-out.

And on Saturday Roma will be hoping to lift a depression of their own by staying in the hunt for a top-four finish.

Knocked out of the Europa League by Bologna and wobbling in Serie A, Roma have an awful record against the division's top teams and trail fourth-placed Como by just three points.

But with Como at Udinese on a run of five straight wins Gian Piero Gasperini's Roma, sixth and level on 54 points with Juventus, risk falling further off the pace.

Player to watch: Lautaro Martinez

Inter's recent wobble coincided with Martinez's injury absence but the Argentina striker should start at the San Siro on Sunday night.

Martinez has not played since his muscular problems began in Inter's home humbling at the hands of Bodo and in the five league matches that Inter have played in that time the Milanese giants have picked up eight points.

The 28-year-old leads the Serie A scoring charts with 14 goals and Inter will be hoping that he can stay fit in the final weeks, while he, unlike Italy, has one eye on the World Cup.