Lionel Messi’s Enduring Luminous Talent Marks Him Out as the Best

Lionel Messi has won the 2019 Fifa men’s player of the year award, to go alongside his five Ballons d’Or. Photograph: Simon Hofmann - FIFA/FIFA via Getty Images
Lionel Messi has won the 2019 Fifa men’s player of the year award, to go alongside his five Ballons d’Or. Photograph: Simon Hofmann - FIFA/FIFA via Getty Images
TT

Lionel Messi’s Enduring Luminous Talent Marks Him Out as the Best

Lionel Messi has won the 2019 Fifa men’s player of the year award, to go alongside his five Ballons d’Or. Photograph: Simon Hofmann - FIFA/FIFA via Getty Images
Lionel Messi has won the 2019 Fifa men’s player of the year award, to go alongside his five Ballons d’Or. Photograph: Simon Hofmann - FIFA/FIFA via Getty Images

as it ever really in doubt? Lionel Messi is The Best: it’s official. On a night of pomp, power‑play and deliciously terrible tuxedos Messi won his seventh major player of the year award in Milan on Monday, a first Fifa The Best gong to go with his five Ballons d’Or and one edition of the now-defunct World Player of the Year.

Virgil van Dijk had been many people’s favorite to win the vote. Instead this was a case of Messi redux, a first such award since his 2015 Ballon d’Or. During which time Cristiano Ronaldo, his counterpart in the shared modern Goat‑dom, has hoovered up four of these increasingly overblown prizes. But not so now as Ronaldo came third and was left doing his best to project a veneer of magnanimous approval while Messi took the silver cup.

The women’s award was won by Megan Rapinoe, reward for a spectacular World Cup. Coaches of the year were Jürgen Klopp and Jill Ellis. And Fifa will be pleased with its work, another act of brand primping, of shoulders flexed, of power reasserted.

It is the fourth time the The Best awards have been staged. They are a re-working of the old world player of the year which, in a rare outbreak of good sense, was folded into the Ballon d’Or in 2010. Nature abhors an awards vacuum and The Best was relaunched in 2016.

To date the top two, the best of The Best, has read Ronaldo-Messi, Ronaldo-Messi, Modric-Ronaldo, and now Messi-Van Dijk. There will be some disappointment, and not just among Liverpool fans, that Van Dijk failed to take top spot. Victory in Milan would have garlanded a remarkable rise for a 28-year-old center-back who was turning out in mid-table with Southampton just over a year and a half ago; an elite footballer with no great frills or showy innovation in his game, exemplar instead of the low-throttle skills of defensive intelligence, solidity, and leadership.

All individual prizes in football are a bit jarring. Marketing campaigns and the cult of celebrity culture may tell us otherwise but fetishizing the individual goes against the essence of all team sport. Real footballing beauty, and indeed any meaningful concept of success, lies in the collective.

In this light there will be a temptation for some to see a hint of convenience to this result. Messi remains a mega-brand, sponsor‑catnip and perfect podium-candy for the unctuous Gianni Infantino. Lest we forget, Messi was banned for three months from international football this year after accusing referees at the Copa América of bias, all of which is apparently forgotten when it comes to nights such as these.

Yet there is an unarguable kind of sense here. This was a straight vote. The three-man shortlist was drawn up by “a panel of football experts” and votes cast by national team coaches and captains and a group of Fifa-approved “fans from all over the world”.

At the end of which the presence of Van Dijk on the podium is a welcome turn and even quite revolutionary. This is a player whose interest lies entirely in improving the combined effect of his team. If Liverpool are the best club team in the world right now, Van Dijk has been the engine to this success, just as Liverpool’s rise is a triumph of team-building, the submersion of the individual in the collective will. It is a process acknowledged now at the most vainglorious of awards dos.

Messi is still a deserving winner. It is easy to become a little inured to this, but his numbers are once again astonishing. During the qualifying period, 9 July 2018 to 13 July this year, Messi played 58 games and scored 54 goals. He captained Barcelona to the La Liga title, won the European golden boot and was also Champions League top-scorer.

Against this Van Dijk played 59 games, played a part in 29 clean sheets and was man of the match in the Champions League final. Ronaldo scored 31 goals in 47 games, won a Serie A title and captained Portugal to Nations League glory, a wonderful effort aged 34 and in a new team, even for a high‑functioning replicant super-being.

Still, though, Messi is something else. His legs have slowed a little and his role altered. But he remains a luminous, transcendent talent, with the power to ennoble even an occasion as inane and vacuous as The Best. Frankly one could have given him the gong just for his performance at Wembley against Tottenham, when he passed and dribbled and generally performed at a level that would surely match anything ever seen on an English pitch.

So for now put out more flags and keep dishing up those chunks of metal. As with Ronaldo, we will feel the true weight of that much‑garlanded presence only when it is finally gone.

(The Guardian)



Sputtering Arsenal Face Test of Character in Sporting Clash

Arsenal's Spanish manager Mikel Arteta looks on during the English FA Cup quarter-final football match between Southampton and Arsenal at St Mary's Stadium in Southampton, southern England on April 4, 2026. (AFP)
Arsenal's Spanish manager Mikel Arteta looks on during the English FA Cup quarter-final football match between Southampton and Arsenal at St Mary's Stadium in Southampton, southern England on April 4, 2026. (AFP)
TT

Sputtering Arsenal Face Test of Character in Sporting Clash

Arsenal's Spanish manager Mikel Arteta looks on during the English FA Cup quarter-final football match between Southampton and Arsenal at St Mary's Stadium in Southampton, southern England on April 4, 2026. (AFP)
Arsenal's Spanish manager Mikel Arteta looks on during the English FA Cup quarter-final football match between Southampton and Arsenal at St Mary's Stadium in Southampton, southern England on April 4, 2026. (AFP)

Mikel Arteta has urged shell-shocked Arsenal to embrace a major test of their character as they seek to recover from a pair of devastating defeats in Tuesday's Champions League quarter-final at Sporting Lisbon.

Arteta's side suffered a shock 2-1 defeat at second tier Southampton in the FA Cup quarter-finals on Saturday, a fortnight after losing 2-0 to Manchester City in the League Cup final.

The Gunners had been chasing an unprecedented quadruple until their domestic cup dreams were demolished in painful fashion.

The chastening loss to Southampton was only Arsenal's fifth defeat this season and marked the first time they have been beaten in successive games in this campaign.

Arsenal's slump has plunged the club's long-suffering fans into a bout of soul-searching.

The north Londoners haven't won a trophy since the 2020 FA Cup and three consecutive runners-up finishes in the Premier League have raised doubts about their ability to finally land silverware.

Arteta is convinced Arsenal can handle the mounting pressure of bidding to win the Champions League for the first time, while aiming to finally lift the Premier League trophy after a 22-year wait.

"In the season, you always have moments, normally two or three. This is the first moment that we have with a certain level of difficulty," Arteta said.

"We're going to say difficulty when we're going to play the Champions League quarter-finals and the run-up for the league.

"If this is a difficult period, I believe there are many other ones that are much more difficult, so let's stand up, make yourself comfortable and deliver like we've been doing all season."

- 'Beautiful period' -

Arteta knows Arsenal are in a strong position in both competitions, travelling to Lisbon as favorites to dispatch Sporting and holding a nine-point lead over second-placed Manchester City in the Premier League.

"I love my players. What they have done for nine months, I'm not going to criticize them because we lost a game in the manner that they are putting their bodies through everything," Arteta said.

"I'm going to defend them more than ever. Someone has to take responsibility. That's me and we have the most beautiful period of the season ahead of us."

Arsenal will also take heart from their 5-1 rout of Sporting in the Champions League group stage last season, when their Sweden striker Viktor Gyokeres was playing for the Portuguese club.

Gyokeres endured a difficult start to his first season with Arsenal following his move to the Emirates Stadium last year.

But he has emerged as an influential presence in recent weeks, scoring their equalizer against Southampton and netting twice in the north London derby win at Tottenham.

Gyokeres also bagged Sweden's late play-off winner against Poland to book their place at the World Cup.

But Arsenal's double bid is in danger of being derailed by injuries, with Declan Rice and Bukayo Saka is a race to be fit to face Sporting after missing the Southampton game and England's recent friendlies.

Gabriel Magalhaes is also a doubt after the center-back was forced off with a knee injury against Southampton.

Arsenal midfielder Christian Norgaard struck an upbeat note in the face of adversity.

"The message is to have a positive body language, to talk with your team-mates, with the coaching staff. Now is not the time to go with our heads down for too long," Norgaard said.

"It's fine to be frustrated and also to analyze what went wrong, but then we also have to look forward because there are so many big games coming up for this club."


Alcaraz Ready to Get His Socks Dirty with Return to Clay

Spanish tennis player Carlos Alcaraz poses for a selfie with a fan after his training session held at Murcia Royal Tennis Club 1919 in Murcia, Spain on 31 March 2026. (EPA)
Spanish tennis player Carlos Alcaraz poses for a selfie with a fan after his training session held at Murcia Royal Tennis Club 1919 in Murcia, Spain on 31 March 2026. (EPA)
TT

Alcaraz Ready to Get His Socks Dirty with Return to Clay

Spanish tennis player Carlos Alcaraz poses for a selfie with a fan after his training session held at Murcia Royal Tennis Club 1919 in Murcia, Spain on 31 March 2026. (EPA)
Spanish tennis player Carlos Alcaraz poses for a selfie with a fan after his training session held at Murcia Royal Tennis Club 1919 in Murcia, Spain on 31 March 2026. (EPA)

Carlos Alcaraz said he ‌was eager to get his socks dirty on clay again as the world number one returned to his preferred surface in Monaco this week to build momentum for his French Open title defense.

Alcaraz won his fifth Grand Slam title by beating Jannik Sinner in an epic final at Roland Garros last June, adding to his 2025 clay court triumphs in Monte Carlo and Rome and a runner-up finish in ‌Barcelona.

"This is probably ‌one of the best times ‌of ⁠the season for me," ⁠Alcaraz told reporters in Monaco on Sunday.

"I miss clay every time the clay season is over. It's been a long time since Roland Garros that I haven't touched clay. In my first practices, I said to my team that it's time to ⁠get the socks dirty again. It feels ‌amazing to be back ‌on clay."

Alcaraz, who missed last year's Madrid Open due to ‌injury, hoped to play a full schedule before ‌Roland Garros, where the main draw begins on May 24.

"Monte Carlo, Barcelona, Madrid, Rome ... that's the plan," said the 22-year-old.

"It's very demanding physically and mentally. The week in ‌Barcelona is perhaps when I should rest, but Barcelona is a very important tournament ⁠for ⁠me.

"My plan is to take care of my body as much as possible during matches and tournaments."

The seven-times Grand Slam champion said winning the Monte Carlo title proved to be a turning point last season.

"After the feeling that I got here, I just got better and better," he added.

"I understood and I realized how I should play after this week. That's why I did an exceptional year."

Alcaraz will open his campaign against either Stan Wawrinka or Sebastian Baez in the second round.


Jodar Continues Spain's Teenage Tradition with ATP Title in Morocco

MIAMI GARDENS, FLORIDA - MARCH 22: Rafael Jodar of Spain returns a shot against Tomas Martin Etcheverry of Argentina during Day 6 of the Miami Open at Hard Rock Stadium on March 22, 2026 in Miami Gardens, Florida. Rich Storry/Getty Images/AFP
MIAMI GARDENS, FLORIDA - MARCH 22: Rafael Jodar of Spain returns a shot against Tomas Martin Etcheverry of Argentina during Day 6 of the Miami Open at Hard Rock Stadium on March 22, 2026 in Miami Gardens, Florida. Rich Storry/Getty Images/AFP
TT

Jodar Continues Spain's Teenage Tradition with ATP Title in Morocco

MIAMI GARDENS, FLORIDA - MARCH 22: Rafael Jodar of Spain returns a shot against Tomas Martin Etcheverry of Argentina during Day 6 of the Miami Open at Hard Rock Stadium on March 22, 2026 in Miami Gardens, Florida. Rich Storry/Getty Images/AFP
MIAMI GARDENS, FLORIDA - MARCH 22: Rafael Jodar of Spain returns a shot against Tomas Martin Etcheverry of Argentina during Day 6 of the Miami Open at Hard Rock Stadium on March 22, 2026 in Miami Gardens, Florida. Rich Storry/Getty Images/AFP

Rafael Jodar joined the list of title-winning Spanish teenagers with his victory at the Grand Prix Hassan II in Morocco on Sunday and the 19-year-old said having the right mentality was the key to success in his first ATP tournament on clay.

Jodar's 6-3 6-2 win over Marco Trungelliti put him into an elite group of Spaniards who captured ATP titles as teenagers in the professional era, including Rafa Nadal, Carlos Alcaraz, Carlos Moya, Juan Carlos Ferrero and Tommy Robredo.

Ranked outside the top 900 a year ago, Jodar climbed to ⁠a career-high world ⁠number 57 on Monday.

"It was the first tournament on clay for me so it was going to be difficult at the beginning, but I always have the mentality that I have to give my best tennis and what I have in that match," Jodar told the ATP ⁠website, according to Reuters.

"That's what I did in all the matches, so it means a lot to win my first ATP title in Marrakech."

Jodar said he was trying to follow in the footsteps of his idol, 22-times Grand Slam champion Nadal, but he did not set himself targets for the year.

"I never set a goal in the season. Just to try to give my best and improve my tennis level," he added.

"But overall, I think I did a great ⁠week on ⁠clay here in Morocco, so I'm very happy how the week went for me and I will try to make sure this is just the beginning. It has to give me motivation for the next challenges."

Argentina's Trungelliti was left impressed by Jodar after a 69-minute mauling.

"Today, I guess I got kicked by this young man," said the 36-year-old, the oldest first-time tour-level finalist in the professional era.

"It was sad for me because I was expecting a great final, but at least you saw a great final from one side."