Champions League No Longer Contest of Champions but Battle between Leagues

A passerby takes a selfie with a giant replica of the UEFA Champions League ball displayed in Madrid on May 29, 2019 ahead of the final football match between Liverpool and Tottenham Hotspur on June 1. (AFP)
A passerby takes a selfie with a giant replica of the UEFA Champions League ball displayed in Madrid on May 29, 2019 ahead of the final football match between Liverpool and Tottenham Hotspur on June 1. (AFP)
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Champions League No Longer Contest of Champions but Battle between Leagues

A passerby takes a selfie with a giant replica of the UEFA Champions League ball displayed in Madrid on May 29, 2019 ahead of the final football match between Liverpool and Tottenham Hotspur on June 1. (AFP)
A passerby takes a selfie with a giant replica of the UEFA Champions League ball displayed in Madrid on May 29, 2019 ahead of the final football match between Liverpool and Tottenham Hotspur on June 1. (AFP)

Richard Scudamore retired too soon! No sooner had the Premier League’s executive chairman picked up his parachute payment and left the building than his most famous daft idea became reality. The 39th game, the extra helping of Premier League razzle dazzle featuring two top-flight sides facing off in some far-flung location for prestige and promotional purposes, actually happened on Wednesday in Baku, except people insisted on calling it the Europa League final. The same thing will happen again in Madrid on Saturday. Even Scudamore never proposed a 40th Premier League game, but that is what the Champions League final between Liverpool and Spurs is going to resemble.

Fear not, this will not be an attempt to belittle the considerable achievements of all four English sides involved in the two European finals, still less to suggest the Premier League now leads the world in any other respect than effective recruitment from abroad. It is just that a European final bringing together two sides who regularly play each other at home will inevitably lack an important ingredient: the European dimension is obviously missing.

The old European Cup format, for all its faults, would never have allowed such a thing to happen. You used to get only one team per country, and though the tradition of the winners entering the following season’s draw to try to defend their title would occasionally produce same-nation encounters in the knockout stage, there was never a year when the sides were kept apart until the final. Every single final until multiple entrants were allowed in 1997-98 pitted one nation against another. That was understood to be the point of the competition. After establishing your right to be called champions of your own country (or champions of Europe, in the case of the teams returning as holders), you then went into a hat with everyone else’s champions to work out some sort of international pecking order.

Maybe that is why some find it difficult to see the romance in an all-English final, even if a second one in 11 years suggests the Premier League is in reasonable health. The first meeting of two sides from the same country in a Champions League final dates back to only 2000, when Real Madrid beat Valencia. The ultimate turn-off from a pan-European or purist viewpoint would be two sides from the same city contesting the Champions League final, which has happened twice in recent seasons. No one was complaining about Real Madrid’s or Atlético Madrid’s right to be in the 2014 and 2016 finals – on both occasions they were among the strongest teams in Europe – though at the same time it seemed faintly ridiculous that such a mammoth, continent-sized contest should boil down to a backyard scrap between neighbors.

This time round, no one can possibly doubt Liverpool’s or Tottenham’s right to be in the final either. Their semi-final progress especially was exhilarating and one simply hopes there is some drama left over for tonight, bearing in mind the meeting of Manchester United and Chelsea in 2008 was mostly memorable for the penalty shootout. Instinctively one feels that though same-nation meetings en route to the final are almost guaranteed to be dramatic – think of Manchester City vs. Spurs in April or Liverpool vs. City last year – the same might not be true of a final itself. In a final, ideally, the protagonists should not know each other inside out. The sheer giddiness of the English teams’ progress through the later stages of the Champions League also owed something to the two-leg nature of ties and even the away-goal rule, which will not be factors in Madrid.

Yet perhaps this season of comebacks and surprises still has one or two unexpected plot twists left. There is no reason why Liverpool and Spurs should not showcase the best of the Premier League in the final, and the fact that English clubs are a little under-rehearsed when traveling to meet each other abroad should not mean a new tradition cannot be established.

It may turn out that after the next couple of weeks football fans around Europe will be clamoring for more all-English finals, and with a possible five Premier League teams competing in the Champions League next season they may get their wish. Spain, for which read Real Madrid if you like, has tended to dominate the Champions League in recent years, but with Cristiano Ronaldo now playing in Italy and neither Real nor Barcelona quite the force they once were, Premier League clubs are well-placed to fill the void, particularly if Manchester City get their act together in Europe.

All-English finals may not be what the European Cup was originally about, but with at least four teams from one of the most competitive leagues around going through each year, the amount of hired and acquired expertise at places such as Liverpool, City, Chelsea and Tottenham is now sufficient to make progress more regular. There is no point in weeping over lost romance, or mentioning that this season’s Champions League finalists have never been crowned champions in their own country for as long as the Premier League has existed. This is the modern world, and the fact is that in the last couple of decades the Champions League has become less of a contest of champions and more of a battle between major leagues.

In the 20 editions of the Champions League since the turn of the millennium this will be the seventh time two teams from the same league have met in the final, which gives a fair idea of the way the competition is evolving. Liverpool are in their second consecutive final, Spurs their very first, and both sides are still improving. Given that it is probably only a matter of time before Pep Guardiola’s City join the party, there may not be an 11-year wait until we see the next all-English final.

The Guardian Sport



Sinner’s Mastery Mindset Makes Him Man to Beat as Clay Swing Intensifies

Laureus World Sports Awards - Palacio de Cibeles, Madrid, Spain - April 20, 2026 Italy's Jannik Sinner poses on the red carpet ahead of the awards ceremony. (Reuters)
Laureus World Sports Awards - Palacio de Cibeles, Madrid, Spain - April 20, 2026 Italy's Jannik Sinner poses on the red carpet ahead of the awards ceremony. (Reuters)
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Sinner’s Mastery Mindset Makes Him Man to Beat as Clay Swing Intensifies

Laureus World Sports Awards - Palacio de Cibeles, Madrid, Spain - April 20, 2026 Italy's Jannik Sinner poses on the red carpet ahead of the awards ceremony. (Reuters)
Laureus World Sports Awards - Palacio de Cibeles, Madrid, Spain - April 20, 2026 Italy's Jannik Sinner poses on the red carpet ahead of the awards ceremony. (Reuters)

Jannik Sinner was once viewed as an explosive talent custom-built for hardcourt tennis but the four-times Grand Slam champion's assiduous work on his patience and control has made him the man to beat on clay heading into the French Open.

It had long been assumed that in his era-defining rivalry with Carlos Alcaraz, Sinner would scoop up more Grand Slam titles on faster surfaces while the Spaniard would have the edge on red dirt.

Alcaraz, who has won seven majors, remains a formidable claycourt player and is the reigning Roland Garros champion but lost to Sinner in the Monte Carlo final earlier this month. He then suffered a wrist injury in Barcelona that has disrupted his preparations for Paris.

Sinner's progression will continue this week ‌in Madrid, which ‌is at a higher altitude than the other European clay venues ‌and ⁠quickens the pace ⁠of the surface, offering another opportunity for the 24-year-old to showcase his adaptability.

"Here it's a very unique playing style," Sinner said.

"It's a very high altitude and it can be windy at times, so it's very difficult to play. But I think every different kind of claycourt can help me as I'm trying to improve as a player."

Results at the big tournaments seemingly offer little to choose between Sinner and Alcaraz over the last couple of years but former player and sports psychologist Jeff Greenwald believes he has identified some ⁠subtle differences emerging.

"Sinner, even more than Alcaraz, has this unflappable demeanor that ‌is built from this deep love and appreciation of the process," ‌Greenwald told Reuters.

"He's the poster child for mastery, a desire to be as good as he can be, ‌which overrides the ever fluctuating, short-term obsession with this point, this win, that is almost always ‌trading the short-term result for longer-term success."

DECISIVE ADVANTAGES

That focus on mastery over moments has steadily reshaped Sinner's approach on clay, where his tactical discipline and ability to handle uncertainty are standing out as decisive advantages ahead of the French Open, which begins on May 24.

Sinner's mental strength could be tested in a different way as he confronts ‌the weight of expectation that comes with being seen by many as the favorite rather than the challenger over the next few weeks.

Greenwald said ⁠expectations were the most ⁠natural, yet potentially damaging, distractions for even great players.

"They try to not get preoccupied by them with the 'process mindset' as best they can but most of the players are vulnerable to this reality, given that their livelihoods are on the line," he added.

"This is where Sinner has an advantage ... he didn't develop this (mindset) after becoming successful. It was baked into his training and development. So whether he's labelled a favorite by the media and other players, this will not affect him.

"More than anything, it'll only solidify the confidence, remarkable resilience and joy he brings to every match."

If Alcaraz is fit to play, the French Open could prove a major mental test for Sinner after he lost to his great rival in last year's epic title clash.

However, with the career Grand Slam on the line for the Italian, he wants Alcaraz to be on the other side of the net at Roland Garros.

"When you want to win, you want to do it by beating the best and he's among them," Sinner said.


Mexico to Beef Up Security at Tourist Sites after Shooting at Pyramids in Lead Up to World Cup

National Guard troops patrol the Teotihuacan pyramids, which remained closed a day after a gunman opened fire on tourists at the archaeological site outside Mexico City, Tuesday, April 21, 2026. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)
National Guard troops patrol the Teotihuacan pyramids, which remained closed a day after a gunman opened fire on tourists at the archaeological site outside Mexico City, Tuesday, April 21, 2026. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)
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Mexico to Beef Up Security at Tourist Sites after Shooting at Pyramids in Lead Up to World Cup

National Guard troops patrol the Teotihuacan pyramids, which remained closed a day after a gunman opened fire on tourists at the archaeological site outside Mexico City, Tuesday, April 21, 2026. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)
National Guard troops patrol the Teotihuacan pyramids, which remained closed a day after a gunman opened fire on tourists at the archaeological site outside Mexico City, Tuesday, April 21, 2026. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)

Mexico’s government said it was beefing up security at tourist sites after a man opened fire on tourists at pyramids outside of Mexico City less than two months before the FIFA World Cup.

The Monday shooting, carried out by a lone gunman on top of one of the Teotihuacan pyramids — a UNESCO Heritage Site and one of Mexico's most frequented tourist attractions — killed one Canadian tourist and injured a dozen more.

It also set off a flurry of questions the next morning by reporters to Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum about what security protocols her government was taking ahead of the sports competition, which Mexico will jointly host with the United States and Canada over the summer.

About an hour from Mexico City, Teotihuacan was slated to be a key site for visitors during the festivities. Just days before the shooting, local lawmakers even pushed forward an initiative to revive a nighttime interactive light show projected on the pyramids for World Cup visitors, which was previous suspended at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The unexpected act of violence comes as Sheinbaum's government has gone to great lengths to project an image of safety ahead of the soccer competition, following a surge of cartel violence February in the World Cup host city of Guadalajara.

"Events like this only further magnify the negative images that Mexico has on security issues, undermining the narrative that President Sheinbaum is trying to build that Mexico is a safe country," The Associated Press quoted Mexican security analyst David Saucedo as saying.

On Tuesday, Sheinbaum acknowledged that the archaeological site lacked security filters to prevent the attack in part, she said, because the shooting “was an isolated incident" that hasn't occurred before in such a public space.

While Mexico suffers from cartel violence, especially in strategic and rural areas, mass shootings in public spaces are rare in Mexico compared to the US, where it is much easier to legally obtain a gun.

She noted that the shooter appeared to be motivated by “outside influences," particularly the 1999 Columbine massacre in Colorado.

“Our obligation as a government is to take the appropriate measures to ensure that a situation like this does not happen again. But clearly, we all know — Mexicans know — that this is something that had not previously taken place,” Sheinbaum said Tuesday morning.

Mexican Security Secretary Omar García Harfuch, the face of the government's crackdown on cartels, said on Tuesday that security forces had been ordered to “immediately strengthen security" at archaeological sites and major tourist destinations across the country.

He said the government will increase the presence of Mexican National Guard, boost security checks at key sites and fortify surveillance systems to “identify and prevent any threats” against citizens and visitors.

The announcement was an effort by Mexican authorities to assuage ongoing concerns about violence in Mexico ahead of the tournament.

Sheinbaum's government has touted security successes under her leadership. Homicides have dipped sharply since she taken office to the lowest levels in a decade, government figures show. The government has also taken out a number of top capos and highlighted a dip in fentanyl seizures at the US-Mexico border.

But they have hit hurdles in recent months, namely a burst a violence in Guadalajara in February, triggered by the killing of Mexico’s most powerful cartel boss. The bloodshed was met with a wave of concern by people in and outside of Mexico.

Sheinbaum vowed there would be “no risk” for fans coming to the tournament and FIFA president Gianni Infantino said he had “full confidence” in Mexico as a host country.

Sheinbaum later met with FIFA representatives to assess security for the World Cup matches to be played in Mexico.

Mexico’s government doubled down on security measures, which include deploying 100,000 security forces across the country, particularly concentrated in the country’s three host cities, Mexico City, Guadalajara and Monterrey.

Officials said it would deploy more than 2,000 military vehicles, as well as dozens of air crafts and drones, and establish security perimeters around areas like stadiums and airports in key cities.

"As you can see, we are very prepared for the World Cup," Sheinbaum said in early March.

Despite the rare nature of the Monday shooting at the pyramids, the extreme act of violence reignited scrutiny by some about the government's capacity to prevent violence during the soccer tournament, and once again boosted pressures on the government.

FIFA was approached for comment about the pyramid shooting, but the soccer body typically does not address security issues and incidents that happen away from tournament venues.

Saucedo, the security analyst, said that pressures to concentrate security in host cities and tourist areas like Teotihuacan may come at the expense of other more crime-torn areas in greater need of police and military.

"Events like the one that took place yesterday in Teotihuacan clearly show that public safety agencies are overwhelmed," he said.


Bellingham Buys Minority Stakes in the Hundred Franchise Birmingham Phoenix

Soccer Football - LaLiga - Real Madrid v Deportivo Alaves - Santiago Bernabeu, Madrid, Spain - April 21, 2026 Real Madrid's Jude Bellingham reacts. (Reuters)
Soccer Football - LaLiga - Real Madrid v Deportivo Alaves - Santiago Bernabeu, Madrid, Spain - April 21, 2026 Real Madrid's Jude Bellingham reacts. (Reuters)
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Bellingham Buys Minority Stakes in the Hundred Franchise Birmingham Phoenix

Soccer Football - LaLiga - Real Madrid v Deportivo Alaves - Santiago Bernabeu, Madrid, Spain - April 21, 2026 Real Madrid's Jude Bellingham reacts. (Reuters)
Soccer Football - LaLiga - Real Madrid v Deportivo Alaves - Santiago Bernabeu, Madrid, Spain - April 21, 2026 Real Madrid's Jude Bellingham reacts. (Reuters)

England ‌international Jude Bellingham has acquired a minority stake in The Hundred franchise Birmingham Phoenix, co-owners Warwickshire County Cricket Club said on Wednesday.

The Real Madrid midfielder will take a 1.2% holding and will focus ‌mainly on ‌community engagement and ‌social ⁠projects. Warwickshire will ⁠remain the majority stakeholder with 50.4% shares, and Knighthead Capital Management will hold 48.4%.

"I feel like I owe the ⁠city something," the 22-year-old ‌said ‌in a statement.

"I was fortunate ‌growing up I had ‌the option of playing cricket and playing football, but some kids don’t have that ‌opportunity. It’s important that if I can get ⁠involved ⁠in something like this to shine a light on an opportunity for kids, then even better."

The sixth season of the tournament, which uses a 100-ball format, runs from July 21 to August 16.