Amid ‘Scary Dream’, Ukraine’s Basketball Team Plays in Spain

Ukraine players during the national anthem before the match. (Reuters)
Ukraine players during the national anthem before the match. (Reuters)
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Amid ‘Scary Dream’, Ukraine’s Basketball Team Plays in Spain

Ukraine players during the national anthem before the match. (Reuters)
Ukraine players during the national anthem before the match. (Reuters)

After waking up at 5 a.m. to the news of their country being invaded and scrambling to find out if their relatives were safe back home, Ukraine’s national basketball team had to find the strength to play a World Cup qualifier in Spain on Thursday.

The game went on as scheduled despite the requests by some of the Ukrainian players to postpone it, and the mentally exhausted Ukrainian team lost 88-74.

“Today (was) a tough game for us,” Ukraine captain Artem Pustovyi said. “It’s really hard to play in this situation, with what we have now in our home. We tried to do our best. Nobody was thinking about the game. Everybody was thinking about our families, our wives and kids who are there. It’s a crazy day for us.”

Pustovyi said it was a “scary dream” to wake up to the news of what was happening back home.

“From five in the morning we don’t sleep because we received a lot of messages, we read a lot of news,” he said. “Nobody can believe that this happening in our country. But we are really sad because it is not a (expletive) dream. This is reality. How can you prepare yourself for the game? Our families stayed in Ukraine.”

Pustovyi also angrily berated Russian President Vladimir Putin in expletive-laden comments, calling his actions “crazy.”

He told other European nations to stick together because if Putin “is doing this (expletive) now in Ukraine, he will never stop, he will go to other countries.”

Ukraine coach Ainars Bagatskis, who is from Latvia, said it was “not so easy to talk about basketball ... in this crazy situation.”

“There was no mental preparation from the team,” he said. “From 5 a.m. in the morning everybody was awake. I’m proud of the players.”

The Spanish fans — and the home team — loudly applauded the Ukrainian players before and after the game and Bagatskis thanked the crowd in the southern city of Córdoba for their support.

“For moments, I think the crowd was more on our side,” he said.

Despite calls to postpone the game, Bagatskis said playing was maybe “the best thing” they could have done in this situation.

“For the moment, (it’s the) only thing we can do for the country. No more, no less,” he said.

The return game against Spain in Kyiv that had been scheduled for this weekend was postponed.

Bagatskis declined to disclose where the team would stay in the coming days, saying: "I don’t want to tell.”



Man City and PSG Face Unexpected Early Exit from Champions League in Dramatic Round of 18 Games 

Paris Saint-Germain's Spanish head coach Luis Enrique addresses for a press conference on the eve of the UEFA Champions League football match against Stuttgart on January 28, 2025 at the Stuttgart Arena in Stuttgart. (AFP)
Paris Saint-Germain's Spanish head coach Luis Enrique addresses for a press conference on the eve of the UEFA Champions League football match against Stuttgart on January 28, 2025 at the Stuttgart Arena in Stuttgart. (AFP)
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Man City and PSG Face Unexpected Early Exit from Champions League in Dramatic Round of 18 Games 

Paris Saint-Germain's Spanish head coach Luis Enrique addresses for a press conference on the eve of the UEFA Champions League football match against Stuttgart on January 28, 2025 at the Stuttgart Arena in Stuttgart. (AFP)
Paris Saint-Germain's Spanish head coach Luis Enrique addresses for a press conference on the eve of the UEFA Champions League football match against Stuttgart on January 28, 2025 at the Stuttgart Arena in Stuttgart. (AFP)

Manchester City and Paris Saint-Germain each face a shocking early exit from the Champions League for the first time in more than a decade when the final round of games Wednesday decide the new 36-team standings.

When the 18 games kick off at the same time, 9 p.m. Central European Time (2000 GMT), to complete the inaugural league-phase format, Man City is outside the top-24 places that advance to the knockout stage and 22nd-place PSG risks dropping out.

Man City must beat Club Brugge at home to rise safely from 25th place. A draw for PSG at 24th-place Stuttgart should be enough for both teams — barring a freakish big win for Dinamo Zagreb over AC Milan to take the tiebreaker on goal difference among teams that end on 11 points.

A PSG loss in Germany risks ending a run of 12 straight years playing in the knockout stage.

The final-day jeopardy also was unexpected for Man City, the Champions League winner two years ago, which let a two-goal lead slip in a 4-2 loss at PSG last week.

The English Premier League champion advanced 11 years in a row from the old group stage since going winless in the 2012-13 edition.

It is the kind of scenario Champions League organizer UEFA hoped for when approving the new format under severe pressure from storied clubs who demanded more lucrative games and more of them against high-end opponents.

Those same influential clubs -- including the super-wealthy state-backed pair of Man City and PSG - hardly imagined they would miss out on the knockout phase that brings global brand-building attention and tens of millions of euros in extra prize money from UEFA.

Real Madrid had to play just 13 games to win the Champions League last season, and now faces playing 17 to retain the title.

Madrid is 16th in the standings before going to play unheralded Brest after losing three of its seven games, including on its previous trip to France against Lille.

The record 15-time European champion can still rise to a top-8 finish — earning direct entry to the round of 16 in March — by beating 13th-place Brest, though needs other results to go its way.

Teams that finish from ninth to 24th enter Friday’s draw for the two-leg knockout playoffs played on back-to-back midweeks in February.

That shapes as an unwanted burden in the congested calendar for teams also chasing domestic titles, rather than bonus games to earn more revenue.

Bundesliga leader Bayern Munich is in 15th place, also on 12 points with Madrid, before hosting Slovan Bratislava, which has been overmatched losing seven straight games.

A 15-point tally, with a strong goal difference, could be enough to take eighth place currently held by Bayer Leverkusen, which heads a group of six teams on 13 points. Leverkusen hosts already eliminated Sparta Prague.

Bayern and Madrid can be helped by the tough schedule for teams ahead in the standings: Atalanta in seventh goes to Barcelona, 10th-place Monaco is at Inter Milan, while Lille and Feyenoord — 12th vs 11th — cannot both reach 15 points.

League-leading Liverpool has let most star players skip the trip to 19th-place PSV Eindhoven because it is one of the few teams with certainty.

Seven wins guaranteed Liverpool a top-two seeding in the tennis-like bracket for the knockout rounds. That draw will be made Feb. 21 after the playoffs round, setting up pairings through to the May 31 final in Munich.

Only Liverpool and Barcelona have already sealed their top-8 places, though Arsenal and Inter — both on 16 points — likely will join them. Atletico Madrid and Milan start Wednesday’s games on 15 points.