Petr Cech: 'Abramovich Didn’t Want to See Me in an Arsenal Shirt'

 Petr Cech has mixed feelings about a send-off against Chelsea, to whom he retains an ‘emotional attachment’. Photograph: James Williamson - AMA/Getty Images
Petr Cech has mixed feelings about a send-off against Chelsea, to whom he retains an ‘emotional attachment’. Photograph: James Williamson - AMA/Getty Images
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Petr Cech: 'Abramovich Didn’t Want to See Me in an Arsenal Shirt'

 Petr Cech has mixed feelings about a send-off against Chelsea, to whom he retains an ‘emotional attachment’. Photograph: James Williamson - AMA/Getty Images
Petr Cech has mixed feelings about a send-off against Chelsea, to whom he retains an ‘emotional attachment’. Photograph: James Williamson - AMA/Getty Images

Petr Cech begins at the end. The hope is a playing career that has spanned two decades will extend for another fortnight, that Arsenal progress beyond Valencia and, in far-flung Baku, their veteran goalkeeper is granted a fitting finale against the club with whom he won it all. “I don’t know if it is a dream scenario,” he says. “You have your last game, a European final and, if it is against Chelsea, an emotional attachment to the opposition team. It’s probably a bit too much … but if it happens, it happens. It’s the way it is.”

There is work to be done to make that a reality, starting at Mestalla, where Unai Emery’s visitors defend a 3-1 advantage from the first leg, but there would be something splendidly appropriate about Cech bringing down the curtain with a 15th winner’s medal after a collision with Chelsea at the Olympic stadium. After all, he had moved to Arsenal in 2015 intent upon guiding the club to European success, emulating in part what he had achieved over that glittering 11-season stint across the capital. The alternative would be slipping away on the quiet after Sunday’s last league game at Turf Moor. There is no choice to be made between Burnley and Baku.Regardless of how Thursday plays out, Cech will be recognised as one of the best goalkeepers of the modern era. No one comes close to matching his 202 clean sheets in the Premier League, a tally almost a full season – 33 games – higher than his nearest challenger. The man plucked from Rennes in 2004 managed a staggering 228 shut-outs in 494 games at Chelsea. In his pomp, he felt unbeatable: calm, unflustered, brave and authoritative. He was among a core of senior players alongside John Terry, Frank Lampard and Didier Drogba who, regardless of the identity of the manager, drove that club to trophies for more than a decade.

At some stage, perhaps in the summer once he has taken a step back from the day-to-day grind, he will reflect on it all. Such is his urgent desire for self-improvement and success with Arsenal, the 36-year-old has not yet allowed himself the time to consider what has been achieved. Remarkably, he has never watched a rerun of his greatest moment: the European Cup final at the Allianz Arena in 2012, when six Bayern Munich players strode up to take a penalty and, on each occasion, the Chelsea goalkeeper dived the right way. The saves from Arjen Robben in extra time, then Ivica Olic and Bastian Schweinsteiger in a shootout, in effect secured the club’s first European Cup.

“I’ve only seen a bit of the shootout once when my son was watching it, and once when we were in a hotel with the team and a Champions League show was on the television … we watched part of it then,” he says. “They showed the last couple of penalties. But I’ve never watched the whole game, and I’ve not watched the 2008 final either.” A reluctance to relive that loss to Manchester United in Moscow is understandable, but Munich represented the pinnacle. “But when people look back too often they lose track of the present. These are moments you watch when you stop.”

During preparations for the 2012 showpiece, Cech and the goalkeeping coach, Christophe Lollichon, had studied a 160-minute DVD detailing every Bayern penalty over the previous five years to spy clues in their habits and routines, from run-ups to rhythm. “Yet it still boils down to a player taking a decision under pressure out on the pitch. Schweinsteiger ran in a completely different way to all the clips I’d watched. But the moment he slowed down he gave me a clue because, usually when he stopped, he shot to his right side. It was at least a little indication.

“We’d watched Manuel Neuer as well and, with left-footed players, he usually dived to his left. Two weeks before the final we’d spoken to Juan Mata about that and, for all that time, he’d practised every day shooting to the other side. And then, in the shootout, he shot to Neuer’s left and he saved it. We said to him: ‘But you knew he would go that way!’ And he just came back with: ‘Do you really think I wanted to shoot there?’ In the heat of the moment, walking from the halfway line, putting the ball on the spot, he’d seen Neuer move a certain way and changed his mind. It’s only the ones who manage to go through this emotional hell who manage to score.”

Cech has shown strength of another kind in England. Retreat, briefly, to 2006 and that dreadful skull fracture sustained in collision with Reading’s Stephen Hunt. The injuries he suffered were life-threatening and yet he was back playing again, clad in that now familiar protective skullcap, after three months. “You don’t realise you sense with all the sensations on your skin, on your hair, and I have that area covered now. So I had to learn how to scan more behind me because of the helmet. That was the only change to my game.

“I’d been in a coma for three days and didn’t have any memory of the original incident, and that actually helped. When you are in a car accident and remember it, every time you are in a car and you see something coming then you have that feeling of: ‘What if the car suddenly turns?’ I don’t have that because I don’t remember anything. Diving at somebody’s feet was just something I’d done before and I never worried about doing again.

“Everybody told me not to play again that season. But, once the skull had fused and I’d started training, I felt ready. The only risk was an issue with post-traumatic stress, but I felt happier when I was on the pitch. I had my own issues, but playing actually helped me.”

His time at Chelsea would end in 2015, with Thibaut Courtois established in the first team and the Czech, capped a record 124 times, requesting a move in a meeting at Roman Abramovich’s London residence. “He wasn’t too happy, and didn’t want to see me in that [Arsenal] shirt, but he knew I’d done everything for his club. I expressed the reasons why, and he kind of closed his eyes and said: ‘OK, you can go.’ I was nervous because I didn’t have a plan B.

“The first season I was at Arsenal, we should have won the league but made a few mistakes at the end and Leicester had their fairytale. The one thing that has frustrated me was I came here because Arsenal wanted to go further in the Champions League, and I’ve hardly ever played in it. It’s a fantastic club with great people, all the history and the class, but I came to help them win that European title, and it’s very hard to do if you don’t play. That’s why I hope it happens now because, this season, I play in the Europa League. Maybe the dream I initially went there for can be realised.”

At some stage Cech Sr will be back at Stamford Bridge, whether as a coach or among technical staff. He has completed his Uefa A licence and is “keeping all doors open”. “It’s a very important step, what I do next,” he says. “But first Valencia and, hopefully, then Baku. At some stage all this will sink in. But I want to play another European final before it does.”

The Guardian Sport



Dortmund’s Injury Concerns Ease before Facing PSG in Champions League Semifinal

 Dortmund's German midfielder #23 Emre Can (L) and Dortmund's German head coach Edin Terzić attend a press conference on April 30, 2024 in Dortmund, western Germany, on the eve of the UEFA Champions League semi-final first leg football match between Borussia Dortmund and Paris Saint-Germain (PSG). (AFP)
Dortmund's German midfielder #23 Emre Can (L) and Dortmund's German head coach Edin Terzić attend a press conference on April 30, 2024 in Dortmund, western Germany, on the eve of the UEFA Champions League semi-final first leg football match between Borussia Dortmund and Paris Saint-Germain (PSG). (AFP)
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Dortmund’s Injury Concerns Ease before Facing PSG in Champions League Semifinal

 Dortmund's German midfielder #23 Emre Can (L) and Dortmund's German head coach Edin Terzić attend a press conference on April 30, 2024 in Dortmund, western Germany, on the eve of the UEFA Champions League semi-final first leg football match between Borussia Dortmund and Paris Saint-Germain (PSG). (AFP)
Dortmund's German midfielder #23 Emre Can (L) and Dortmund's German head coach Edin Terzić attend a press conference on April 30, 2024 in Dortmund, western Germany, on the eve of the UEFA Champions League semi-final first leg football match between Borussia Dortmund and Paris Saint-Germain (PSG). (AFP)

Borussia Dortmund’s injury worries have eased and coach Edin Terzić is hopeful all but two players will be fit for the Champions League semifinal first leg against Paris Saint-Germain.

Terzić said on Tuesday that left back Ramy Bensebaini and young forward Julien Duranville are definitely out of Wednesday’s match, but that others can return after missing the team’s 4-1 loss at Leipzig in the Bundesliga on Saturday.

Emre Can and Ian Maatsen are back and well-rested after serving suspensions last weekend.

“Marcel Sabitzer and Donyell Malen took part in training again yesterday,” Terzić said. “Donny couldn’t take part in everything. Marcel felt much better and was very happy. Sébastien Haller could take part in some of the training and we’ll see today how the final training session develops. For now, we’re assuming that the guys will be available tomorrow.”

Ivory Coast forward Haller has been laboring with a persistent left ankle injury.

Dortmund, which knocked out Atlético Madrid to reach the final four, already faced PSG in the group stage, losing 2-0 in Paris before drawing 1-1 at home and topping the group.

The German team is unbeaten in its last 10 games at home in the competition and will again look to the support from its “yellow wall.”

“They have added a very, very high level of quality to this team, a team that has been built up in recent years to win the Champions League,” Terzić said. “At the start of the season they may not have performed so well, but they always got their results, perhaps not yet with the performances they had imagined. But they improved a lot during the first half of the season.”

Terzić suggested Luis Enrique’s team is peaking at the right time.

“It’s not easy to stop them, though every team tries,” Terzić said. “If you take Kylian Mbappé, for example, with his exceptional individual quality, he has now scored 43 goals in 44 games. Opponents set themselves the goal of not letting him score in 44 games. It doesn’t always work.”

It's not just about Mbappé.

Striker Gonçalo Ramos also poses a threat with his heading, his ability to hold the ball and his strong running. Ramos has scored regularly in recent weeks, and the 22-year-old Portugal international praised coach Luis Enrique for creating a healthy competition for places that has made players much sharper.

“Nobody knows who’s starting in the game,” said Ramos, who has scored 14 goals in all competitions. “That’s why we are always ready for anything.”

Enrique has no injury worries and said the whole squad is fit.

He praised midfielder Vitinha, who scored in both legs of the quarterfinal against Barcelona.

“Vitinha is one of the best midfielders in the world. He can play on the wing, he can play as a holding midfielder and he can play inside (behind the forwards),” Enrique said through a translator. “One of the areas where he has improved, and that’s down to me, is his defending.”


Messi to Miami: Soccer Star, and a Few Teammates, Show up for Heat-Celtics Game

Soccer Football - Friendly - Argentina v Australia - Workers' Stadium, Beijing, China - June 15, 2023 Argentina's Lionel Messi reacts REUTERS/Thomas Peter/File Photo
Soccer Football - Friendly - Argentina v Australia - Workers' Stadium, Beijing, China - June 15, 2023 Argentina's Lionel Messi reacts REUTERS/Thomas Peter/File Photo
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Messi to Miami: Soccer Star, and a Few Teammates, Show up for Heat-Celtics Game

Soccer Football - Friendly - Argentina v Australia - Workers' Stadium, Beijing, China - June 15, 2023 Argentina's Lionel Messi reacts REUTERS/Thomas Peter/File Photo
Soccer Football - Friendly - Argentina v Australia - Workers' Stadium, Beijing, China - June 15, 2023 Argentina's Lionel Messi reacts REUTERS/Thomas Peter/File Photo

Lionel Messi took a night off to watch the Miami Heat. The Inter Miami star and eight-time Ballon d'Or winner as the world's best player — along with teammates Jordi Alba, Sergio Busquets and Luis Suarez — arrived just before tip-off of the Heat playoff game with the Boston Celtics on Monday night.

The group — some clad in Heat attire — arrived in the players' parking garage, then were brought in through a VIP entrance before making their way to their seats. Messi has been to the arena before for at least one other event, but never before had arranged to be at a Heat game since moving to Miami last year, The AP reported.

Inter Miami is 6-2-3 so far this season in Major League Soccer play, sitting in first place in the Eastern Conference and with the most points of any team in the league.

Messi had two goals and an assist in Inter Miami's 4-1 win at New England on Saturday, and has multiple goal contributions in five straight matches — the first MLS player ever to do that. He has nine goals and seven assists in seven matches with Inter Miami this season.

Messi, who led Argentina to the World Cup title in 2022, has more than 800 goals in his career for club and country, making him one of the greatest scorers in soccer history. He scored twice in the 2022 World Cup final against France, a match that ended 3-3 with Argentina prevailing 4-2 on penalty kicks.


Ronaldo Sells Stake in Brazilian Club Cruzeiro Amid Criticism

Cristiano Ronaldo. (Reuters)
Cristiano Ronaldo. (Reuters)
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Ronaldo Sells Stake in Brazilian Club Cruzeiro Amid Criticism

Cristiano Ronaldo. (Reuters)
Cristiano Ronaldo. (Reuters)

Two-time World Cup winner Ronaldo Nazário agreed to sell his stake in embattled Brazilian soccer club Cruzeiro on Monday. And he plans to do the same at Spain's second division club Real Valladolid, which he has controlled since 2018.

Ronaldo Nazário bought the indebted Cruzeiro's soccer department in 2021 for about $78 million and is reportedly selling it for almost $117 million.

The Brazil great started his career at the Belo Horizonte-based club, but as an owner he has been accused by supporters of failing to invest as much as promised, The AP reported.

“Maybe some (Cruzeiro fans) have exaggerated a little going against me, but this is irrelevant to me," Ronaldo Nazário said in a news conference.

"I know most fans are grateful to me and my team for putting Cruzeiro back in the national and international scene. My goal was reached. That was always the idea — to bring Cruzeiro back and, at the right time, give it to the right person.”

He did not provide many details on how he will divest from Valladolid, where he bought a 51% stake six years ago.

“My answer will be a short one; Valladolid is next,” Ronaldo Nazario said. “I will take some time off (after selling both Cruzeiro and Valladolid).”

Fans of the Spanish club have criticized Ronado Nazário's management for selling their players for high numbers, but failing to return some of that to their team, which was relegated twice since the Brazilian took over.

The new owner of Cruzeiro’s soccer department is Pedro Figueiredo, a billionaire and ardent fan who built one of Brazil’s biggest supermarket chains. He told Monday's news conference it will take him 10 years to pay the club’s debts.

Ronaldo Nazário bought Cruzeiro’s soccer department in a business operation that Brazilians know as SAF, which creates public limited companies in clubs that are often on the brink of bankruptcy. Such a move separates the profitable soccer departments from the rest of the club, which remains under control of its associates.

Cruzeiro stockpiled trophies over the past two decades but was in Brazil’s second division from 2020-22 amid fears it could disappear due to its huge debt, which amounted to more than 1 billion Brazilian reals ($200 million).

Ronaldo Nazário’s decision to chip in helped the club stay afloat during its worst days.

“Cruzeiro was in intensive care when I came. I halved the debts, the revenue increased five times. I am leaving Cruzeiro in a comfortable hospital bedroom now,” he said.

Six other top-flight clubs have sold their soccer departments in SAF operations in recent years; Cruzeiro archrival Atletico Mineiro; Bahia, which is owned by the Manchester City group; John Textor’s Botafogo; Cuiaba; Fortaleza; and Vasco da Gama.

Cruzeiro's is Brazil's first SAF operation to change hands.

Cruzeiro fans showed on Sunday they were excited about Ronaldo Nazário leaving the club. A banner at Mineirao Stadium read “Bye, Ronaldo” during the team’s 3-1 win against Vitória in the Brazilian championship.

Valladolid fans also protested against the Brazilian after their team was relegated in 2023. The Spanish club co-leads the second division with Leganés on 64 points after 37 matches. The top two teams will automatically be promoted to La Liga next season.

For many Cruzeiro supporters, Ronaldo Nazário was identified more with local rival Corinthians, where the striker finished his professional career in 2011.

New owner Figueiredo defended Ronaldo Nazário's management of the club.

“I apologize on behalf of Cruzeiro fans," Figueiredo said. “What some did to Ronaldo was not fair. He put his name in the business and he is upset with this situation. I hope tomorrow (the criticism) is not against me.”


Nadal Tested in 3-hour Win over Cachin at Madrid

29 April 2024, Spain, Madrid: Spanish tennis player Rafael Nadal celebrates defeating Argentine Pedro Cachin during their men's singles round of 32 match at the Mutua Madrid Open Tennis tournament. Photo: José Oliva/EUROPA PRESS/dpa
29 April 2024, Spain, Madrid: Spanish tennis player Rafael Nadal celebrates defeating Argentine Pedro Cachin during their men's singles round of 32 match at the Mutua Madrid Open Tennis tournament. Photo: José Oliva/EUROPA PRESS/dpa
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Nadal Tested in 3-hour Win over Cachin at Madrid

29 April 2024, Spain, Madrid: Spanish tennis player Rafael Nadal celebrates defeating Argentine Pedro Cachin during their men's singles round of 32 match at the Mutua Madrid Open Tennis tournament. Photo: José Oliva/EUROPA PRESS/dpa
29 April 2024, Spain, Madrid: Spanish tennis player Rafael Nadal celebrates defeating Argentine Pedro Cachin during their men's singles round of 32 match at the Mutua Madrid Open Tennis tournament. Photo: José Oliva/EUROPA PRESS/dpa

After spending more than three hours on the court and earning a hard-fought victory, Rafael Nadal was feeling optimistic again.
Nadal's body withstood its toughest test yet at this Madrid Open in a 6-1, 6-7 (5), 6-3 win over 91st-ranked Pedro Cachin on Monday, The Associated Press reported.
He didn't show any signs of physical limitations in a victory that earned him a spot in the round of 16 at the clay-court tournament where he is the record five-time champion.
“It’s positive, now I don’t feel that something went wrong on my body, but I need to wait until tomorrow, being 100% honest,” he said. “I am trying my best to keep dreaming. Tomorrow is another day to keep dreaming. To keep playing in front of this amazing crowd and, to me, that means everything.”
Nadal will next face 31st-ranked Jiri Lehecka. He said he needs “to find a way to be able to play days in a row and still be competitive.”
“I don’t know if I am in that moment yet,” the 22-time Grand Slam champion said. “Let’s see what can happen tomorrow."
The 37-year-old Nadal is trying to get in shape for next month's French Open. Since his latest injury layoff, he's had two matches in Barcelona and was pessimistic about his physical condition after arriving in Madrid. But he's won three more times in the capital.
Nadal again looked comfortable early on against Cachin. The Argentine rallied in the second but was broken twice while serving for the set before eventually prevailing in the tiebreaker.
Nadal didn’t look as loose in the final set, but did look tired. He wasn't as consistent with his shots but picked up three breaks to seal the victory to the delight of the local crowd in the Caja Magica.
“I took more risks in the third set, but it’s hard after so many months without competing,” Nadal said. “I hadn’t played a match like this in a long time. I don’t know how I’m going to wake up. But I’m already happy for having won three matches in a row.”
Cachin asked for Nadal's shirt after congratulating him at the net, and received the gift moments later.
Top-seeded Jannik Sinner was not at his best but had enough to defeat Pavel Kotov 6-2, 7-5. Sinner, who has been dealing with a hip issue, will face 16th-seeded Karen Khachanov.
“I have been struggling a little bit with my right hip,” Sinner said. “We’re trying to find a solution and I don’t think it’s anything serious. Sometimes I feel it more like today and some days are a little bit better."
Third-seeded Daniil Medvedev was two points from defeat before he rallied to beat Sebastian Korda 5-7, 7-6 (4), 6-3.
Fifth-seeded Casper Ruud beat Cameron Norrie 6-2, 6-4.


Rugby-England’s Vunipola Fined for Assault After Arrest in Mallorca

Billy Vunipola -  File photo by David Rogers/Getty Images
Billy Vunipola - File photo by David Rogers/Getty Images
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Rugby-England’s Vunipola Fined for Assault After Arrest in Mallorca

Billy Vunipola -  File photo by David Rogers/Getty Images
Billy Vunipola - File photo by David Rogers/Getty Images

England rugby international Billy Vunipola was sentenced to four months' imprisonment and fined 240 euros ($256.92) for assault and battery after being arrested by police in Mallorca, Spain, following an incident at a pub.

Palma's Examining Court also ordered him to pay 500 euros to a police officer who was injured during the incident following a speedy trial on Sunday.

Under Spanish law, a prison sentence of less than two years does not usually lead to serving any time behind bars unless there are previous criminal records.

According to a report in the Ultima Hora newspaper, Vunipola was tasered twice by police after threatening customers and security personnel and removing his shirt in a bar named Epic in Palma early on Sunday.

The report added that the 31-year-old was handcuffed by the police and taken to the Son Espases hospital in Palma, where he was sedated, before being taken to court on Sunday afternoon.

Vunipola plays for Premiership Rugby club Saracens, who said in a statement that they were aware of the incident and would deal with it "internally".

Vunipola has made 75 appearances for England and was part of the team that finished runners-up in the 2019 World Cup. He was not selected in the England squad for this year's Six Nations.

His brother Mako also played for England until his retirement in January, while his father played for Tonga.


Luis Enrique is Rebuilding Reputation Quickly After Finally Getting PSG to Play Like a Team

Spain coach Luis Enrique -File Photo/ JAVIER SORIANO -AFP
Spain coach Luis Enrique -File Photo/ JAVIER SORIANO -AFP
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Luis Enrique is Rebuilding Reputation Quickly After Finally Getting PSG to Play Like a Team

Spain coach Luis Enrique -File Photo/ JAVIER SORIANO -AFP
Spain coach Luis Enrique -File Photo/ JAVIER SORIANO -AFP

Luis Enrique has managed to rebuild his reputation quickly in his first season at Paris Saint-Germain.

With the French league title already in the bag, PSG now has a chance to win a historic treble of trophies — which would firmly re-establish Enrique as one of the top coaches in Europe after his image was tarnished by an unsuccessful spell with Spain.

PSG wrapped up the French league title with three games to spare this weekend, in one of the most dominant seasons in the league’s history.

The team is on a 26-game unbeaten streak in the league since September. With just one loss in 31 Ligue 1 matches so far, PSG has an unassailable 12-point lead over second-place Monaco.

“I wouldn’t have imagined this scenario going as positively as this,” the 53-year-old Enrique said.

The Spanish coach led Barcelona to nine trophies from 2014 to 2017, including the Champions League title, but his reputation took a big knock during his tenure with Spain's national team. Spain had just one win in four games at the 2022 World Cup and was eliminated by Morocco in the last 16.

Enrique can put that setback firmly behind him if he manages to also lead PSG to an elusive Champions League title, something the Qatari-backed club couldn't even achieve when it had Lionel Messi and Neymar playing alongside Kylian Mbappé, according to The AP.

PSG plays at Borussia Dortmund in the first leg of the Champions League semifinals on Wednesday. It has also reached the French Cup final, where it faces Lyon on May 25.

There is no doubt PSG has made huge progress under Enrique's helm.

PSG also won the French league in the past two seasons, but got knocked out in the last 16 of the French Cup and the Champions League under Christophe Galtier last year, and under Mauricio Pochettino in 2022.

Trophies aside, Enrique showed his leadership skills by successfully navigating the tense relations between Mbappé — who will leave the club at the end of the season — and PSG's Qatari owners.

Enrique started Mbappé on the bench seven times this season, both to manage the France striker’s playing time and to test his options for next season. The strategy has worked well so far as Mbappé still leads the league with 26 goals — nine more than anyone else — and scored twice in the second leg against Barcelona in the Champions League quarterfinals.

TACTICAL MASTER

PSG owes a lot of its success to Enrique’s tactical shrewdness.

Manuel Ugarte started the season as the team's holding midfielder, but Enrique noticed that Vitinha was better at playing the ball out from the back than Ugarte, a ball winner by trade. So Enrique switched from using Vitinha as a box-to-box player to deploying him as a deep-lying playmaker in front of the defense. And Vitinha’s vision and passing skills have helped PSG get more control in midfield.

Likewise, Enrique quickly noticed that Lucas Beraldo struggled in the first leg of the Champions League quarterfinal against Barcelona as Robert Lewandowski dragged him all over the pitch. Enrique dropped Beraldo in the second leg to let the more experienced Marquinhos and Lucas Hernandez deal with Lewandowski. PSG won 4-1 to reverse a 3-2 home defeat in the first leg and advance.

Enrique was already known for his tactical flexibility at Barcelona, and has shown the same willingness to adapt at PSG by using different formations.

PSG has played with both a back four and a back three this season, and switched from using a lone striker in some games to two strikers in others.

Those variations helped Enrique rotate the team, make tactical experiments and create different kinds of problems for opponents.

“In order to be able to compete for every trophy, as I have said, you need a really big squad of at least 23 players. That is what we need here, and as the season has progressed, we have seen the importance of those players,” Enrique said.

Players’ versatility has been the key to Enrique’s rotation policy.

Marquinhos, Hernandez and Beraldo have been used as both center backs and fullbacks this season. Carlos Soler and Warren Zaire-Emery are midfielders but had to deputize in the right back position.

Lee Kang-in has played as a winger and as a midfielder. And Enrique even used France winger Ousmane Dembele in the No. 10 position a couple of times.

But perhaps Enrique's greatest achievement has been to build team chemistry at a club where star players have often seemed more influential than the coaches in the past.

PSG's repeated failures in the Champions League have usually been due to the fact that the collective performance seemed smaller than the sum of its parts.

By contrast, PSG now looks like a genuine team.


Arsenal, Man City Both Win to Keep It Tight at the Top in Race for Premier League Title

Gabriel (L) of Arsenal and his teammates celebrate their 3-2 win after the English Premier League soccer match between Tottenham Hotspur against Arsenal FC in London, Britain, 28 April 2024. (EPA)
Gabriel (L) of Arsenal and his teammates celebrate their 3-2 win after the English Premier League soccer match between Tottenham Hotspur against Arsenal FC in London, Britain, 28 April 2024. (EPA)
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Arsenal, Man City Both Win to Keep It Tight at the Top in Race for Premier League Title

Gabriel (L) of Arsenal and his teammates celebrate their 3-2 win after the English Premier League soccer match between Tottenham Hotspur against Arsenal FC in London, Britain, 28 April 2024. (EPA)
Gabriel (L) of Arsenal and his teammates celebrate their 3-2 win after the English Premier League soccer match between Tottenham Hotspur against Arsenal FC in London, Britain, 28 April 2024. (EPA)

Arsenal survived a late scare at Tottenham to stay narrowly ahead in the race for the Premier League title on Sunday.

The 3-2 win at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium ensured Mikel Arteta’s team remained at the top of the standings, ahead of defending champion Manchester City, which won 2-0 at Nottingham Forest.

But Arsenal had to endure a nervous finish despite powering to 3-0 lead in a London derby that was supposed to be one of its biggest tests in the title chase.

“The last 20 minutes wasn’t nice, but it was worth it,” Arsenal forward Bukayo Saka said afterward. “We know it is a big derby and they don’t want to lose 3-0 at home. Momentum shifted their way, but I am proud of the boys — we managed to get the three points.”

An own-goal from Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg and further strikes from Saka and Kai Havertz put Arsenal into a commanding position at the break. But in the face of a potential rout, Tottenham responded in the second half through Cristian Romero and a penalty from Son Heung-min in the 87th minute, The AP reported.

Under pressure, Arsenal held on and remains one point clear at the top, having played a game more than City.

The advantage is still with Pep Guardiola's team, which will clinch a fourth-straight title if it wins its remaining games this season and responded to Arsenal's win with victory of its own at relegation-fighting Forest.

With Liverpool’s title hopes further diminishing after dropping five points in two games this week, it is down to Arsenal to challenge City's domestic dominance.

Having collapsed late on in last season’s title race, Arteta’s players look more capable of going the distance this time around.

An away fixture against its fiercest rival, Tottenham, was a major test of its credentials at this stage of the campaign. And while Arsenal was guilty of letting Spurs back into a game that should have been killed off much earlier, victory when tension was high was a test of character.

“Maybe last season that could have ended in a draw and we showed we have the experience,” Saka said. “We know City are an amazing team, but they are not perfect, we just need to do our job.”

-MAN CITY WINS

Arsenal's win meant the pressure was on City to keep the heat on its title rival.

It was always favorite to beat a Forest team that is desperately fighting for survival but without Phil Foden, who was ill, and Erling Haaland on the bench, Guardiola was without two of its big match-winners in the starting 11.

An injury to goalkeeper Ederson also forced City into a change at halftime.

But Guardiola's team looks to be in unstoppable form and a 2-0 win extended its unbeaten record in the league to 19 games, dating back to a 1-0 loss to Aston Villa at the start of December.

Back then there were questions about City's ability to win a sixth title in seven years. While Arsenal may lead the way, City's title-winning know-how could make the difference.

So could Haaland, who stepped off the bench to score the goal that effectively killed off Forest's challenge.

Josko Gvardiol headed City in front in the first half, but Chris Wood had two clear chances from close range to score for Forest.

Haaland missed City's last two games through injury, but was quickly back on the scoresheet with a clinically taken goal just nine minutes after coming on as a substitute.

Among those in the crowd to watch were his father, Alf-Inge, and rock star Noel Gallagher.

The goal saw Haaland move clear of Cole Palmer as the league's top scorer with 21 goals.

“It's an important win, it does not matter how we do it, and it is good to be back," Haaland said. “We knew it was going to be a fight, and the pitch was not the easiest to play on but we cannot complain, it is about winning and that is exactly what we did.”

- BOURNEMOUTH RECORD

Without a win in its first nine league gamesthis season, Bournemouth is now in the top half of the table and has set its own Premier League points record.

A 3-0 win against Brighton moved Andoni Iraola’s team up to 10th and on 48 points. Bournemouth’s previous best in the top flight was 46 points in the 2016-17 season under former manager Eddie Howe.

Goals from Marcos Senesi, Enes Unal and Justin Kluivert secured victory against a Brighton team that is going in the other direction after six games without a win.


Bayern, Dortmund Seek Champions League Glory to Kick off Big Summer of Soccer for Germany

Germany is preparing to stage the European Championship over June and July - (File Photo/AP)
Germany is preparing to stage the European Championship over June and July - (File Photo/AP)
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Bayern, Dortmund Seek Champions League Glory to Kick off Big Summer of Soccer for Germany

Germany is preparing to stage the European Championship over June and July - (File Photo/AP)
Germany is preparing to stage the European Championship over June and July - (File Photo/AP)

It’s shaping up to be quite the few weeks for German soccer.

The country is preparing to stage the European Championship over June and July, with Germany’s national team taking a nicely timed upturn in form.

Before that, Germany might yet be celebrating having a European champion once again, with Bayern Munich and Borussia Dortmund making up half of the lineup for the Champions League semifinals beginning this week.

The last time Bayern and Dortmund both reached the Champions League semifinals was in 2013 and they went on to meet in the title match at Wembley Stadium, with Bayern winning 2-1. As fate would have it, Wembley will be hosting the final this year, too.

Setting up a repeat of that 2013 final would mean upsetting the odds.

Bayern is up against another European heavyweight in Real Madrid, the record 14-time champion and king of the competition.

Dortmund faces Paris Saint-Germain, whose star striker Kylian Mbappe is looking to lead the French team to its first ever Champions League title in his last season there before a likely move to Madrid, The AP reported.

Germany didn’t have a single semifinalist in each of the last three seasons. In the 2019-20 competition, it had two – Bayern and Leipzig – and Bayern was the eventual champion.

This season, Bayern and Dortmund have mounted impressive European campaigns while underperforming on the domestic front.

Bayern has relinquished its Bundesliga title to Bayer Leverkusen after an 11-year hold on the biggest prize in German soccer, and needs to win the Champions League to avoid a first trophy-less season since 2012.

Dortmund, meanwhile, is in fifth place in the league so its deep run in Europe has come as something of a surprise.

Here’s a closer look at the two games:

- BAYERN MUNICH vs. REAL MADRID (TUESDAY)

Madrid should arrive well rested after the Spanish league moved its game at Real Sociedad to Friday. Madrid won 1-0.

With Madrid set to win Spain’s domestic title, coach Carlo Ancelotti kept Jude Bellingham, Vinícius Júnior, Eduardo Camavinga, Toni Kroos, Federico Valverde, Antonio Rudiger and goalkeeper Andriy Lunin on the bench at the start of the league game in San Sebastian. Forward Rodrygo did not travel with the team because of flu.

All started against Manchester City in the second leg of the quarterfinals and are expected to be back in the starting lineup against Bayern.

Bayern coach Thomas Tuchel is leaving at the end of the season, and the Champions League — which he won with Chelsea in 2021 — offers him the chance to go out on a high.

Two months on from Bayern's announcement that Tuchel would depart, he seems more popular than ever among sections of the Bayern support. Part of that is down to the calm, controlled way Bayern knocked out Arsenal in the second leg of their quarterfinal. Partly it's a reaction to Bayern's failure to hire top coaching targets like Bayer Leverkusen's Xabi Alonso or Germany's Julian Nagelsmann.

As Tuchel nears the end of a troubled tenure at Bayern, he's often seemed more upbeat than ever.

“If people want me to stay, it is still an issue that has no priority," Tuchel said Friday when asked about a fan petition begging the club to keep him. "Even if in this case it is a pleasant issue for me."

The injuries that have plagued Bayern this season are easing off, too. Tuchel predicted Friday that Serge Gnabry would recover from his latest problem in time to play — and score — against Madrid on Tuesday, while fellow forward Leroy Sané could also return.

- BORUSSIA DORTMUND vs. PARIS SAINT-GERMAIN (WEDNESDAY)

PSG won another French league title on Sunday — after second-place Monaco lost at Lyon — but the Champions League is the trophy the Qatar-backed club is desperate to finally get its hands on.

And there would be no better way for Kylian Mbappe to sign off at the end of the season than by leading PSG to victory in European club soccer's elite competition.

The club is already planning for life without its superstar striker, who is set to walk away as a free agent, with players like Randal Kolo Muani, Ousmane Dembele and Goncalo Ramos expected to help fill the void in his absence. But Mbappe could still have a big say in the Champions League and he scored two goals in PSG's 4-1 comeback win against Barcelona in the quarterfinals.

PSG drew 3-3 at home to Le Havre on Saturday after coming back from 3-1 down and needing an equalizer from Ramos in the fifth minute of stoppage time.

It's been a strange season for Dortmund and that was underlined by Saturday's 4-1 loss against top four rival RB Leipzig.

Dortmund has certainly saved its best performances for the Champions League, none better than the comeback win over Atletico Madrid in the quarterfinals.

Striker Sebastien Haller scored in the first leg against Atletico but injured his ankle in Dortmund's next game and hasn't played since. Forward Donyell Malen has been struggling with pain, too.

Much could depend on which version of Jadon Sancho turns up to face PSG.

Sancho, who scored against Leipzig, has shown glimpses of his obvious talent since returning to Dortmund in January on loan from Manchester United. The issue is whether the former England forward can consistently play at his best.

“Both I and Jadon have noticed he isn’t at the peak of his performance yet, but that’s totally OK. That’s something we were aware of when we decided to bring him back, but we know that he’s able to reach that maximum very quickly,” Dormund coach Edin Terzic said Friday. “Every training session, Jadon has a moment that shows his incredible talent and we see how hard-working he is with the team.”


Thiago Silva to Leave Chelsea at End of Season

Reuters file photo of Thiago Silva
Reuters file photo of Thiago Silva
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Thiago Silva to Leave Chelsea at End of Season

Reuters file photo of Thiago Silva
Reuters file photo of Thiago Silva

Brazil defender Thiago Silva will leave Chelsea at the end of the season after four years at the club.

The 39-year-old Silva made the announcement on Monday, saying he is leaving the door open for a return to Chelsea “in another role.”

“Goodbyes are for those that leave and don’t come back,” he said in a message to Chelsea's fans. “I intend on coming back one day.”

Silva joined Chelsea in 2020 after his contract at Paris Saint-Germain expired. He said he only planned to stay at the English club for one season.

He continued playing for the team after winning the Champions League at the end of his first season there. Now his sons are playing in Chelsea's youth teams, The AP reported.

“It’s a source of great pride to be a part of the Chelsea family — literally because my sons are here,” Silva said. “I hope they can continue their careers here at this victorious club that many players wish to be part of.”

Chelsea has five league games left this season but is languishing in ninth place after an inconsistent campaign under first-year coach Mauricio Pochettino.


Arsenal Survives Scare at Tottenham, Extends Lead at the Top to 4 Points

Gabriel (L) of Arsenal and his teammates celebrate their 3-2 win after the English Premier League soccer match between Tottenham Hotspur against Arsenal FC in London, Britain, 28 April 2024. (EPA)
Gabriel (L) of Arsenal and his teammates celebrate their 3-2 win after the English Premier League soccer match between Tottenham Hotspur against Arsenal FC in London, Britain, 28 April 2024. (EPA)
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Arsenal Survives Scare at Tottenham, Extends Lead at the Top to 4 Points

Gabriel (L) of Arsenal and his teammates celebrate their 3-2 win after the English Premier League soccer match between Tottenham Hotspur against Arsenal FC in London, Britain, 28 April 2024. (EPA)
Gabriel (L) of Arsenal and his teammates celebrate their 3-2 win after the English Premier League soccer match between Tottenham Hotspur against Arsenal FC in London, Britain, 28 April 2024. (EPA)

Arsenal survived a late scare at Tottenham to stay ahead in the race for the Premier League title on Sunday.

A 3-2 win at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium ensured Mikel Arteta's team will remain at the top of the standings after the latest round of fixtures and keep the pressure on defending champion Manchester City, which played at Nottingham Forest later Sunday.

But Arsenal had to endure a nervous finish despite powering to 3-0 lead in a London derby that was supposed to be one of its biggest tests in the title chase.

Tottenham responded in the second half through Cristian Romero and Son Heung-min's penalty in the 87th minute.

Under pressure, Arsenal held on to extend its lead over second-place City to four points. After the match against Forest, City will still have a game in hand.

Arsenal took the lead against Spurs through Pierre-Emile Hojberg's own-goal in the 15th. Bukayo Saka added a second in the 27th and Kai Havertz made it 3-0 at the break with another in the 38th.

Romero capitalized on Arsenal goalkeeper David Raya's errant kick in the 64th to set up a potential comeback.

Bournemouth beat Brighton 3-0 after goals from Marcos Senesi, Enes Unal and Justin Kluivert.