Selfless Granit Xhaka Completes Unlikely Arsenal Redemption

Granit Xhaka hugs coach Mikel Arteta after Arsenal’s FA Cup semi-final win against Manchester City at Wembley. Photograph: Stuart MacFarlane/Arsenal FC/Getty Images
Granit Xhaka hugs coach Mikel Arteta after Arsenal’s FA Cup semi-final win against Manchester City at Wembley. Photograph: Stuart MacFarlane/Arsenal FC/Getty Images
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Selfless Granit Xhaka Completes Unlikely Arsenal Redemption

Granit Xhaka hugs coach Mikel Arteta after Arsenal’s FA Cup semi-final win against Manchester City at Wembley. Photograph: Stuart MacFarlane/Arsenal FC/Getty Images
Granit Xhaka hugs coach Mikel Arteta after Arsenal’s FA Cup semi-final win against Manchester City at Wembley. Photograph: Stuart MacFarlane/Arsenal FC/Getty Images

When Granit Xhaka stalked off the pitch against Crystal Palace in October, flinging off his shirt and swearing at the fans booing him down the tunnel, it felt like the sort of yarn that normally has only one ending. And so it was no surprise to see him here nine months on, putting in a statement performance against one of the world’s great midfields in a resounding FA Cup semi-final victory at Wembley. Hang on. May have got my lines mixed up there. Will get back to you.

Perhaps we should no longer allow ourselves to be surprised by things like this. After all, players mature and wither. Form comes and goes. Momentum shifts. Stars periodically align. But as Mikel Arteta’s Arsenal improbably stared down Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City with a display of clinical, gutsy counterattacking football, it was hard not to feel quietly flabbergasted at how quickly Xhaka seems to have earned his redemption.

At Wembley, Arsenal’s cup overflowed with heroes. Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang should probably have scored a hat-trick. David Luiz put in a monstrous performance, the sort that feels as much expiation for past sins as exhibition of current qualities: revenge, but against himself. Kieran Tierney has probably managed to surprise even himself at centre-back. But keeping the whole show on the road was the extraordinary Xhaka: not so much the beating heart of the side but its emergency defibrillator, a player who seems to have become so much more of a leader without the armband than he ever seemed to be with it.

For all the justifiable deluge of acclaim that will accompany Arteta’s counter-punching triumph, their second in the space of three days, Arsenal were fortunate here, too. Not remotely as fortunate as they were against Liverpool on Wednesday night, but any victory achieved with 29% possession and four shots against 16 is invariably going to owe something to happenstance. And it might easily be forgotten that Arsenal could have been out of the game within 15 gasping minutes. That they were not was almost entirely Xhaka’s doing.

Arsenal really were a strange colour of fish in those opening minutes, trying to pass themselves into a game that City were intent on taking by force. First Shkodran Mustafi was dispossessed by Raheem Sterling inside his own penalty area, with Xhaka steaming in to clear. Next Riyad Mahrez’s header across goal was desperately hooked off the line. Five minutes in, and Xhaka had already saved Arsenal twice. And as Arsenal took the lead, it was Xhaka who did more than anyone to consolidate their advantage: plugging the gaps in defence, throwing himself into the path of a Kevin De Bruyne piledriver, spreading play unfussily and economically. Not until the 78th minute, with Arsenal already 2-0 up and beginning to entrench themselves, did he put his first pass astray.

So what, exactly, has happened here? Xhaka could easily have gone back to Germany in the January transfer window. Hertha Berlin were interested. His agent had given a fairly pointed interview to a Swiss newspaper along similar lines. Arteta, as a new coach looking to put his own imprint on the squad, could easily have let him. Certainly few Arsenal fans would have mourned. And given Arteta’s risk-taking, no-compromises style of play, a football reliant on players you can trust and mould to your principles, you wondered just where a player of Xhaka’s on-field and off-field indiscipline would fit in.

Yet in a way, his resurrection reflects Arsenal’s own trajectory under Arteta: a process of growth and selflessness and machine-learning. Not everything has worked. Not everything has gone to plan. But like Arteta, Arsenal have made sure they learned something from every setback. By way of illustration, contrast this performance with the supine 3-0 defeat at the Etihad Stadium in the first game after lockdown. The overall approach hasn’t changed. What has is clarity of decision-making, sharpness of combinations, familiarity of assigned roles.

Certainly Xhaka seems to have benefited from a little more definition to his assignment. For much of his Arsenal career it wasn’t entirely clear to anyone – possibly including Xhaka himself – what trajectory he was supposed to be pursuing. Was he a box-to-box Vieira type? A deep-lying string-puller? Özil with a slide tackle? Francis Coquelin with a passing range? Under Arteta, and particularly in games such as this, his creative duties appear to have been streamlined in favour of accentuating his main strengths – recycling possession, smelling danger, never giving up on a lost cause.

Is this his ceiling? Is Xhaka’s improvement simply an impressive curiosity ahead of the inevitable arrival of Thomas Partey in the transfer window? Or are we finally seeing a great midfielder coming into bloom? On a landmark night for the Arteta project, perhaps the best endorsement you could give is that all three feel equally plausible.

The Guardian Sport



Horner Leaves Red Bull After Reported 80 Million-Pound Payoff

Red Bull Racing's British team principal and CEO Christian Horner reacts prior to the third practice session at the Red Bull Ring race track in Spielberg, Austria, on June 28, 2025, ahead of the Formula One Austrian Grand Prix. (AFP)
Red Bull Racing's British team principal and CEO Christian Horner reacts prior to the third practice session at the Red Bull Ring race track in Spielberg, Austria, on June 28, 2025, ahead of the Formula One Austrian Grand Prix. (AFP)
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Horner Leaves Red Bull After Reported 80 Million-Pound Payoff

Red Bull Racing's British team principal and CEO Christian Horner reacts prior to the third practice session at the Red Bull Ring race track in Spielberg, Austria, on June 28, 2025, ahead of the Formula One Austrian Grand Prix. (AFP)
Red Bull Racing's British team principal and CEO Christian Horner reacts prior to the third practice session at the Red Bull Ring race track in Spielberg, Austria, on June 28, 2025, ahead of the Formula One Austrian Grand Prix. (AFP)

Former Formula One team boss Christian Horner officially left Red Bull on Monday after being ousted in July, with British media reporting an 80 million-pound ($108 million) settlement.

A Red Bull statement on the team website announced the 51-year-old's formal departure but did not mention any financial terms.

Horner, one of the sport's most successful team principals, was removed from his position at Milton Keynes by the Austrian energy drink company on July 9 after 20 years at the helm.

The Briton, who was replaced by Laurent Mekies, had remained an employee technically despite being released from his operational duties with the team.

The Daily Mail and Times newspapers both reported he had left with an 80-million-pound package -- less than he would have received had he served out his contract to 2030 -- and would be in a position to return to Formula One next year.

Media reports have said that Horner, who had been cleared of allegations of misconduct by a female employee at Red Bull, could take a stake in another team if he does make a comeback.

"I’m incredibly proud of what we achieved as a team breaking records and reaching heights no-one would ever believe were possible and I will forever carry that with me," Horner said in the statement.

There was no immediate comment about his future plans.

Red Bull have won the last two races, including Sunday's in Azerbaijan, with four-times world champion Max Verstappen dominant from pole position.


Dembele and Kelly Among the Favorites to Win Men’s and Women’s Ballon d’Or Award in Paris 

PSG's Ousmane Dembele during the League One soccer match Paris Saint-Germain against Angers at the Parc des Princes stadium, on Aug. 22, 2025 in Paris. (AP)
PSG's Ousmane Dembele during the League One soccer match Paris Saint-Germain against Angers at the Parc des Princes stadium, on Aug. 22, 2025 in Paris. (AP)
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Dembele and Kelly Among the Favorites to Win Men’s and Women’s Ballon d’Or Award in Paris 

PSG's Ousmane Dembele during the League One soccer match Paris Saint-Germain against Angers at the Parc des Princes stadium, on Aug. 22, 2025 in Paris. (AP)
PSG's Ousmane Dembele during the League One soccer match Paris Saint-Germain against Angers at the Parc des Princes stadium, on Aug. 22, 2025 in Paris. (AP)

Paris Saint-Germain forward Ousmane Dembele and England forward Chloe Kelly are among the leading contenders to win the men’s and women’s Ballon d’Or award on Monday.

They are frontrunners among the 30 men’s and 30 women’s nominees revealed last month by France Football magazine, with the winners announced at a ceremony in central Paris.

The 28-year-old Dembele was inspirational in leading PSG to its first Champions League title and is among a remarkable nine PSG players vying for the men’s award. Goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma has since joined Manchester City but was nominated as a PSG player.

Teenage Barcelona star Lamine Yamal and Liverpool's Mohamed Salah are among the other men's candidates.

When England won the women’s European Championship in July, the 27-year-old Kelly blasted home the decisive penalty in the final against World Cup winner Spain. She also won the women’s Champions League with surprise winner Arsenal.

She faces competition from defender Lucy Bronze and goalkeeper Hannah Hampton — her England teammates who both play for Chelsea — and from Barcelona midfielder Aitana Bonmatí, the winner of the past two awards.

Barcelona players have won the past four women's awards.

PSG players absent

Because the French soccer league postponed Sunday night’s match between host Marseille and PSG by 24 hours due to a severe weather forecast, the match at Stade Velodrome is scheduled to start Monday at 8 p.m. local time (1800 GMT).

That clashes with the Ballon d’Or ceremony and prevents most PSG players from attending.

However, Dembele, and his fellow nominees Desire Doue and Joao Neves are injured and not in the matchday squad, leaving them free to attend the ceremony.

PSG’s Luis Enrique was nominated for best coach.

The Ballon d’Or was created by France Football magazine and has been awarded since 1956 for men, and since 2018 for women. It is voted for by journalists from the top 100 countries in the FIFA rankings for the men’s award and the top 50 FIFA-ranked countries for the women’s award.

Each journalist, one per country, selects players in ranked order with points attributed to each position.


Barca Ease to Getafe Win, Atletico Held after Missed Penalty

Barcelona's Spanish forward Ferran Torres (C) opened the scoring with a powerful finish at the end of a slick move. Josep LAGO / AFP
Barcelona's Spanish forward Ferran Torres (C) opened the scoring with a powerful finish at the end of a slick move. Josep LAGO / AFP
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Barca Ease to Getafe Win, Atletico Held after Missed Penalty

Barcelona's Spanish forward Ferran Torres (C) opened the scoring with a powerful finish at the end of a slick move. Josep LAGO / AFP
Barcelona's Spanish forward Ferran Torres (C) opened the scoring with a powerful finish at the end of a slick move. Josep LAGO / AFP

Ferran Torres struck twice for champions Barcelona as they beat Getafe 3-0 on Sunday to stay on Real Madrid's tails at the top of La Liga.

Dani Olmo was also on target for the Catalans, who trail leaders Madrid by two points after Xabi Alonso's side beat Espanyol on Saturday to maintain their 100 percent record, AFP said.

Atletico Madrid's stuttering start to the season continued in a 1-1 draw at Mallorca, in which their striker Julian Alvarez missed a penalty.

Playing at the 6,000 capacity Johan Cruyff stadium besides their training ground again as the club waits for the necessary licenses to reopen their renovated Camp Nou home, Barcelona dominated an unambitious Getafe team.

Despite his brace against Newcastle in the Champions League, German coach Hansi Flick left Marcus Rashford on the bench, with Spanish media reporting that it was because the England international was late for a morning meeting.

Flick has dropped other players from the line-up for the same offence in the past, including defender Jules Kounde.

"(Rotation) is normal because every three or four days we have a match, we need fresh legs on the pitch," said Flick, when asked why Rashford did not start.

Rashford's replacement as the stand-in for injured teenage superstar Lamine Yamal, Torres, took his chance with both hands.

"We have a lot of matches so it's really good to have everyone on this (level of) performance," added Flick.

The Spaniard opened the scoring with a powerful finish at the end of a slick move, with Olmo backheeling the ball into his path in the box.

Torres's second finish was even better, guided into the bottom left corner from outside the box after Raphinha sent him through on goal.

The forward crashed a shot off the bar as a first half hat-trick beckoned.

Several Barca players lost their temper before the break as Getafe put in several hard and late tackles, with Kounde the victim of many of them.

Flick sent on Rashford for Raphinha at half-time, perhaps in order to save the Brazilian from a potential red card.

"A lot of the time, they don't try to do anything apart from too many fouls, in my opinion, but we managed it well," Torres told DAZN.

"I said to the team: we have to focus on our match, not on their match," said Flick.

Rashford created Barcelona's third, zipping inside from the right flank and unselfishly cutting the ball back for Olmo to finish, and had two efforts of his own saved by Getafe goalkeeper David Soria.

The only bad news for Barca was substitute Fermin Lopez appearing to pull up hurt in stoppage time.

Frustrated Atletico

Earlier, Atletico were held by Mallorca despite outplaying the hosts.

Diego Simeone's side, reduced to 10 men after Alexander Sorloth's red card, took the lead through Conor Gallagher but Vedat Muriqi levelled in the 85th minute.

The draw left Atletico 12th, having won just one of their first five league matches.

"I think we dominated the game from start to end, until we scored and they, with one more player, turned up the pressure," Atletico captain Koke told DAZN.

"It's clear that what matters is scoring goals and they don't want to go in."

The draw leaves Atletico nine points behind leaders Real Madrid, and seven behind Barcelona.

Licking their wounds after a painful late Champions League defeat at Liverpool in midweek, Atletico were left with a similar feeling.

"We have to improve to hold on in games... (but) we're building a new team, a lot of players have come in. We're on the right path," said Simeone.

Mallorca goalkeeper Leo Roman made several saves, including from Alvarez's penalty after captain Antonio Raillo handled David Hancko's shot in the first half.

The Rojiblancos' job was made harder when Sorloth was dismissed for a high challenge on Raillo in the 72nd minute, but a few minutes later they took the lead as Gallagher netted a rebound.

Simeone's side could not hold on and Muriqi nodded the hosts level with five minutes remaining.