Dani Alves: 'If You Win Without Effort, You Triumph With No Glory at All'

 Dani Alves poses at São Paulo’s training ground. Photograph: Joshua Law
Dani Alves poses at São Paulo’s training ground. Photograph: Joshua Law
TT

Dani Alves: 'If You Win Without Effort, You Triumph With No Glory at All'

 Dani Alves poses at São Paulo’s training ground. Photograph: Joshua Law
Dani Alves poses at São Paulo’s training ground. Photograph: Joshua Law

Dani Alves has won more major trophies than any footballer in history. He spent 17 years playing for some of Europe’s biggest clubs, redefining the nature of his position. And this July he captained Brazil to glory at the Copa América, his country’s first major silverware in over a decade. So, what does he still have left to prove? The answer, it seems, is quite a lot.

Alves has returned to live in his homeland for the first time since he left Bahia as a teenager in 2002. Many Brazilian stars come back to enjoy a few years of comfort before hanging up their boots, but he quickly lays that notion to rest. “I adore challenges,” says Alves with a smile. “I love it when nobody believes that things will happen and you go there and do it. That’s my passion. That lights the flame inside me.”

For now, two challenges are keeping that flame alight: his desire to restore São Paulo to their former glories and, ultimately, his ambition to win the World Cup in 2022. Alves will be 39 by the time the tournament begins, but he is deadly serious about making it to Qatar. “It’s my dream,” he says.

Alves was born in Juazeiro, 2,000km north of Brazil’s biggest city, but São Paulo are part of the reason he fell in love with football. “I’ve been a São Paulo fan since I was a child,” he says. “I’ve always liked being a champion and São Paulo were champions, champions, champions. My dad had a team called São Paulo too, an amateur team. He’d put the lads from the farms together to play.” When playing for that team, Alves would imitate Cafu, who helped São Paulo win back-to-back Libertadores and Intercontinental Cup titles in 1992 and 1993. “My childhood hero was my dad and second, Cafu, because of the position he played, because of his story. I like the story more than just the way of playing. Cafu’s story of persistence is fucking amazing. It gave me great hope.”

He was picked up by big local club Bahia as a boy, before being whisked off to Sevilla at the age of 19. “It was very quick,” he recalls. “I played one and a half championships for Bahia and went. That was the most difficult period of my career. I came from playing every game to not even being on the bench. It was a big shock. However, I learned early that it is during hard times that you really learn who people are, whether they take a step forward or backwards. I always found a way of getting results rather than looking for excuses. I started to do more to understand what the coach wanted. I wanted to find out what I needed to do to live up to expectations. And I ended up having a marvellous time at Sevilla. Together with my teammates, we changed the history of Sevilla.”

All these years later, winning that first Uefa Cup final against Middlesbrough in 2006 remains his favourite achievement. “The best moment of my career was when I won the first title with Sevilla,” he says. “It was with a team that, when I arrived, was battling against relegation. Being part of that reconstruction is an ecstasy of emotions. You see everyone crying, people happy in the city. A story started to be written there. Being part of that is sensational.”

His success with Sevilla helped him secure a move to Barcelona. “From there, I got to the most desirable place in world football, not just because of the players they have, but because of the identity, the quality of their game, the value they add to football. They really fight for the word ‘football’. It was a school, it is a school and it will continue being a school of football concepts. I’ve never seen anything like it. I had offers from other big clubs, but they didn’t offer me the chance of building something new. Barcelona was in that transition. After Ronaldinho, they dropped off a bit and wanted to get back to being what they were. I’d already made history as part of the reconstruction of a club, so I wanted to do that again.”

He sees his mission with São Paulo in the same light. The club have not won the league since 2008 and have not laid their hands on any silverware since 2012. Taking them back to that level is his passion project. “I’ve come to São Paulo to tell the story of a fan who has come to play for the club he supports. And who is going to fight for this club more than any other fan. I’m doing something no other fan can. I’m there, on the pitch supporting and playing at the same time. I’m playing for the club I dreamed of playing for. São Paulo is the only club I would play for, knock on wood, if they went down to the second division.”

When Alves was unveiled by the club in August, he was given a hero’s welcome, received by 45,000 people in the Morumbi stadium and handed the No 10 shirt by Kaká. He has mostly been playing a free role in the centre of midfield. “I’m a full-back who plays a combination game. But here – because of the characteristics of Brazilian football, the way the team plays and, a lot of times, the teammates – you don’t have so many [short-passing] combinations. If I play in the position I did for 20 years, I can’t interfere as much in the game.

“When I get involved, I help my teammates to become better. It’s been like that my whole career – at Bahia, Sevilla, Barcelona, Juventus and PSG. Those clubs have a history of having done that for a while. Here, the coach changes all the time and you’re always trying to adapt to the coach you have. In my position in the middle I’m better for my teammates. I’ll be sincere, I created a new way of playing as a full-back. No false modesty. I am always adapting to my teammates. If they’re wide, I’ll go into the middle. If they’re attacking, I’ll help with the control. If the ball’s on the other side, I tuck in. I play as a creative midfielder from the back.

“Barcelona gave me this understanding. When I played with Xavi or Rakitic, there was always a player controlling the game. If I was wide, Xavi or Rakitic were behind me. Seeing them play, I thought: ‘When you have a winger who stays wide, you need to stay in the area of control.’ At São Paulo, my challenge is to be able to understand my teammates and to combine with them as well as possible.”

Pep Guardiola, he says, was vital in developing his positional game. “This understanding is one of the greatest qualities for players who can manage it. There are a lot of people who want the ball, want the ball, want the ball. Sometimes they could cause more harm without it. That’s what I did at Barcelona. When Pep taught me how to play without the ball at Barcelona, that season I got something like 18 assists.”

Has Guardiola dome something similar with Raheem Sterling at Manchester City? “The same thing. Obviously, you have to have players to execute it. If the executors are not so good, the quality is not so high. The most interesting thing is that Pep always manages to find quality. That’s why players always stand out with him.”

Alves does not limit himself to improving his team on the pitch. He wants to help his club and Brazilian football as a whole. “The clubs must try to create a collective playing identity. Brazilian football needs to reinvent itself in this regard. For individual quality, I’ve never seen a country like it. Every year, there are innumerable quality players. But you see a lot of individuality. There aren’t clubs that are brilliant for a long time because of their collective play.

“If you have a clear idea, you are less likely to change the manager every year. There are clubs that have two or three coaches in a year. It’s madness. You never create stability. There needs to be better planning. You have to make important choices and really back them. That’s what generates stability inside a club and a team. We should mirror European clubs, who create an identity. It’s rare to see a big European club that one year is fighting for the title and the next is fighting to avoid relegation. Because the clubs are stable. São Paulo has a great identity as a club that really cares about its academy, but they don’t take care on a collective level. I want to bring in a bit of the experience I had abroad of how you can make a club better.”

He is not the only one. In the last few months, Filipe Luís, Rafinha, Ramires and Luiz Adriano have returned to Brazil. “It tells you that Brazilian football is evolving,” says Alves. “Clubs are bringing in players who’ve constructed great careers and would still attract interest from Europe. Some of them are my friends and they know they can bring a lot to Brazilian football and help the younger players in their lives. Here in Brazil, you have to be mentally stronger than in any other place because of all the demands. Everything turns into a meme, a joke or taking the mick.”

Alves sees himself as a positive role model for young players. “You need examples to act as a mirror. There are lots of examples here in Brazil that, let’s say, are fogged-up mirrors. They need more professional examples of how to respect the profession, respect football and its rules, respect their career as a high-level profession. That’s a bit of the idea behind us coming back to Brazil.”

As well as the opportunity to be part of a rebuilding project, Alves was attracted by São Paulo’s offer of a contract that runs until December 2022. The European clubs chasing his signature only offered 12-month deals. “I wanted the stability to be able to fight for my dream, which is playing the 2022 World Cup. The other clubs didn’t believe in my potential. They think I don’t have anything to offer any more. I’m going to show that, if you’re willing to pay the price, you can do what you want.”

Has Brazilian society changed since he left? “I see some improvements and the continuation of some erroneous things. Corruption and violence exist everywhere, but are greater here because of the size of the country, the size of the population, the poverty. We are a bit of a selfish country. People don’t worry about others enough. It’s always ‘me’, never ‘us’. But nobody lives like Brazil. We are a people that, despite the difficulties, enjoy the world more than any other. People should focus on the incredible things the country has. From the moment you start thinking about the human being, rather than what they do and what they can offer you, things start to become more caring.”

The issue of prejudice has come up recently in football, something Alves experienced first-hand at Villarreal in 2014. A banana was thrown at him from the stands, which he picked up and ate. Asked about how best to confront the problem of racism, he does not seem too hopeful. “It’s never going to end. The less importance you give it, the better you will live. Giving it less importance is not acceptance. You can’t accept that people humiliate you. When I did that [ate the banana], they created a campaign. I said: ‘Sorry, I don’t want to be involved in campaigns that won’t achieve anything.’ The awareness raised is momentary. People will forget afterwards.”

Neither does he believe that punishing clubs is the way forward. “How are you going to punish a club for the actions of one person, 10 people, 50 people? It wouldn’t be fair. It would be fair if you catch the perpetrator and punish them. In football, like in any other area, there is no space for racists. You have to identify the culprit and punish them. The rest are not at fault.”

Alves hopes his energy will influence those around him positively, but do people under-appreciate him because of his gregariousness? “If they do, that’s their problem. What matters is what I give people. I want people to have fun, to smile. Sometimes, people are too bitter. My objective is always to give my best to people. I might be crazy, but I’m a good kind of crazy. I want everybody to be happy.”

By now he has kicked off his football boots and is leaning back in his seat, giving long, meandering answers on any subject that crops up. “I have a lot of theories,” he says. “I believe if your life follows a straight line, you have a dead life. Life has to oscillate and you have to try to make the ups greater than the downs.”

On the topic of ups and downs, Alves was voted player of the tournament as Brazil won the Copa América on home soil, yet it was a strange tournament marred by low attendances, poor pitches and ill-tempered crowds. Did that negativity affect the dressing room? “No. The Venezuela game [a 0-0 draw after which they were booed] was better than some of the games we lost, but people don’t want to know because the result was a draw. Your effort makes no difference; you have to get the results. We started to think: ‘What is the final objective?’ To win the Copa América. We have to go through phases. We’re not going to stroll through, smoking a cigar and drinking champagne. No, my friend. No. You have to ralar a bunda no chão [scrape your bum on the floor].

“That redoubled my confidence in my team. I knew nothing would shake us. The team knew what it was doing. That’s what matters. If you beat Venezuela and lose the semi-final to Argentina, you’re fucked. We said: ‘Be calm. The result didn’t come. Breathe deep and on to the next one.’ That’s the maturity of a great side.”

After the title was won, many in Brazil suggested the team had performed better because of Neymar’s absence. Alves will not even entertain this theory. He scoffs and, unusually, is temporarily lost for words. “Those people don’t know anything about football,” he says once his initial disgust has passed. “It’s impossible, impossible, impossible, impossible that the Seleção will be better without a special guy like Ney.”

Now, Alves’ eyes are fixed firmly on the biggest trophy of all. “I’m going after that dream to be champion, to close an era with the Brazilian national team, to help my country get back on top. You know what motivates me most? When everybody stops believing in me. When they say: ‘This guy is worthless, this guy can’t play in midfield, can’t do this or that.’ Just wait. On the way there I’m going to work like a filho da puta, like I’ve done all my life. That’s why I came here. I was comfortable in Europe, but I like discomfort. Nothing in life is easy. If you want to reach you objectives, you have to make the effort. Unless your dad owns the team – when my dad ran our São Paulo, I always played and played up front.”

Despite his jovial exterior, it is this drive that has carried him from his dad’s São Paulo team to the real thing. A few days ago, he says, “[São Paulo director Diego] Lugano came and asked me: ‘How is it that this little body, these skinny legs, have won more titles than any other in the history of football?’ My reply is that it’s not my body, it’s my soul. My body might look fragile, but it’s here and here,” he points to his head and bangs his right palm over his heart.

“Success is giving your best. Achievement is depriving yourself of things to get to where great young people aim to be. You have to say: ‘I’m here, focused. I’ll put my blinkers on and nothing will put me off.’ Sometimes in life you have be deaf, dumb and blind and let your soul carry you to get closer to your objectives. If you win without sacrifice, without effort, you will triumph with no glory at all.”

The Guardian Sport



Team by Team Review of the F1 Miami Grand Prix

 Ferrari driver Charles Leclerc, of Monaco, steers into a turn during the Formula One Miami Grand Prix auto race Sunday, May 5, 2024, in Miami Gardens, Fla. (AP)
Ferrari driver Charles Leclerc, of Monaco, steers into a turn during the Formula One Miami Grand Prix auto race Sunday, May 5, 2024, in Miami Gardens, Fla. (AP)
TT

Team by Team Review of the F1 Miami Grand Prix

 Ferrari driver Charles Leclerc, of Monaco, steers into a turn during the Formula One Miami Grand Prix auto race Sunday, May 5, 2024, in Miami Gardens, Fla. (AP)
Ferrari driver Charles Leclerc, of Monaco, steers into a turn during the Formula One Miami Grand Prix auto race Sunday, May 5, 2024, in Miami Gardens, Fla. (AP)

Team by team review of Sunday's Miami Formula One Grand Prix, round six of the 24-race season (listed in current championship order):

RED BULL (Max Verstappen 2, Sergio Perez 4)

Verstappen was beaten, in a race he finished, for the first time since Singapore last September. The triple champion, who started on pole and won Saturday's 100km sprint, stretched his lead over Perez to 33 points. Red Bull said he ended the race with a damaged car, possibly due to hitting a bollard. Perez almost took out Verstappen at the start, when he misjudged the first corner and careered across the track. He moved up to fourth post-race when Sainz collected a five second penalty.

FERRARI (Charles Leclerc 3, Carlos Sainz 5)

Leclerc, who started second on the grid, took his third podium in six races. The Monegasque struggled with rear grip early on, with Sainz itching to get past, and pitted on lap 19 from third, coming back out in seventh before moving back up. Sainz started third and pitted a lap before the safety car and was summoned to stewards after the race for a clash with McLaren's Piastri, dropping from fourth to fifth.

MCLAREN (Lando Norris 1, Oscar Piastri 13)

Norris celebrated his first F1 win in his 110th race, cashing in when the safety car was deployed on lap 28 before he had pitted, giving him a cheap stop. The Briton was able to pit from the lead and stay ahead of Verstappen before pulling away. He is the 114th F1 driver since 1950 to win a race. Piastri set fastest lap but without a bonus point. He dropped to last after pitting for a new front wing following a clash with Sainz. The win was McLaren's first since Monza 2021 and 184th in total.

MERCEDES (Lewis Hamilton 6, George Russell 8)

Russell started seventh on medium tires and Hamilton eighth on hards. Russell dropped to 10th at the start and struggled for pace on the hard tire later on. Both drivers were jumped by Tsunoda who pitted during the safety car period, but Hamilton took the place back and ran Perez close at the end.

ASTON MARTIN (Fernando Alonso 9, Lance Stroll 17)

Alonso pitted for medium tires on lap 23 when the virtual safety car was deployed after Verstappen hit a bollard and left it on the track in a dangerous position. The Spaniard passed Alpine's Ocon for ninth on lap 48. Stroll pitted before the safety car was deployed, compromising his strategy. He was then penalized 10 seconds for leaving the track and gaining an advantage in a battle with Williams' Alex Albon.

RB (Yuki Tsunoda 7, Daniel Ricciardo 15)

Tsunoda did a long first stint and added to RB's haul after Ricciardo finished fourth in Saturday's sprint, the first points of the Australian's season. Ricciardo started last on the grid after qualifying 18th with a three-place penalty from China.

HAAS (Nico Hulkenberg 11, Kevin Magnussen 18)

Magnussen collected two more time penalties totaling 30 seconds, one for entering the pits during a safety car period and not changing tires and the other for causing the collision with Sargeant that triggered the safety car. The Dane was also handed two penalty points, taking his 12-month tally to 10 and leaving him only two from a race ban. Hulkenberg overtook Hamilton on lap two but was passed again on lap 10.

ALPINE (Esteban Ocon 10, Pierre Gasly 12)

Ocon scored Renault-owned Alpine's first point of the campaign, starting from 13th on medium tires and pitting on lap 22 for hards. Gasly started 12th and pitted on lap 12. The Alpine pair went wheel to wheel early on.

WILLIAMS (Alex Albon 19, Logan Sargeant retired)

Sargeant crashed backwards into the barrier after contact with Magnussen, who was trying to overtake, and became the race's only retirement. Albon picked up floor damage as he defended on older tires than rivals had, running off in the closing laps. He was the first to pit on lap 10.

SAUBER (Zhou Guanyu 14, Valtteri Bottas 16)

Still no points for the Swiss-based team, who mixed up their strategies with Bottas switching from softs to hards on lap 11 and then mediums on lap 29. Zhou did one stop on lap 28 with mediums to softs.


From Trump to Verstappen Everyone Celebrates Norris F1 Win

McLaren's British driver Lando Norris is tossed in the air as his team celebrates his victory in the 2024 Miami Formula One Grand Prix at Miami International Autodrome in Miami Gardens, Florida, on May 5, 2024. (AFP)
McLaren's British driver Lando Norris is tossed in the air as his team celebrates his victory in the 2024 Miami Formula One Grand Prix at Miami International Autodrome in Miami Gardens, Florida, on May 5, 2024. (AFP)
TT

From Trump to Verstappen Everyone Celebrates Norris F1 Win

McLaren's British driver Lando Norris is tossed in the air as his team celebrates his victory in the 2024 Miami Formula One Grand Prix at Miami International Autodrome in Miami Gardens, Florida, on May 5, 2024. (AFP)
McLaren's British driver Lando Norris is tossed in the air as his team celebrates his victory in the 2024 Miami Formula One Grand Prix at Miami International Autodrome in Miami Gardens, Florida, on May 5, 2024. (AFP)

It is doubtful there has been a more popular winner of a Formula One race in recent years than McLaren's Lando Norris, who was celebrated by everyone for Max Verstappen to Donald Trump following his victory at the Miami Grand Prix on Sunday.

It was a long overdue triumph for Norris, who held the record for most podiums without a win (15), including an agonizing eight runner-up finishes, in 110 grand prix making the likeable Briton easy to root for.

Even Verstappen, Red Bull's triple world champion who hates to lose and was denied a hat-trick of Miami wins by the McLaren driver, was among the first to congratulate Norris, who was mobbed by his team, crowd surfed along pit land and drenched in a shower of champagne.

"It was a long time coming, and I'm very happy to be beaten by Lando today," smiled a genuinely pleased Verstappen. "He definitely deserved it.

"It's great winning your first race. It's always quite emotional. It brings you back to all the days that you worked towards your dream of being on the podium."

Former US president Donald Trump, who visited the McLaren garage prior to the race, was delighted to back a winner, telling Norris later he was his lucky charm.

"He saw me after and he came to congratulate me," said Norris, who had told his grandmother before coming to Miami that he was going to win a race. "He (Trump) said he was my lucky charm because it was my win, but I don't know if he's going to come to more races."

Norris's mother and father were ecstatic, though they weren't in Miami to witness the moment.

"A big celebration," Adam Norris told Sky Sports. "I was working out it's probably about 900 races I've been to over the last 16 years.

"It's interesting knowing as a parent how many hours you put in, supporting them.

"I counted out 350 weekends away and all the races on different weekends.

"It's brilliant. So happy for him."

Anthony Hamilton, another father instrumental in the success of his son - seven-times world champion Lewis - also texted Norris with congratulations.

While Norris was long overdue for a maiden win his wait was not the longest.

World champions Jenson Button needed 113 races before his first win and Nico Rosberg 111.

Red Bull's Sergio Perez holds the record of 190 races before his visit to the top of the podium and it took Ferrari's Carlos Sainz 150 and Mark Webber 130.

Norris was still finalizing plans on how he was going to celebrate his maiden victory, but he was already thinking about a second win.

"This only happens once when you take your first win. Tonight is going to be a good night," said Norris, confirming team boss Zak Brown had delayed the flight home until Monday so there would be a proper celebration. "I would like to say it's the start, and now we're really hungry for more. We'll keep our heads down and keep pushing."


Ten Hag Expects Fernandes to Stay at Man Utd Next Season

Manchester United's Portuguese midfielder #08 Bruno Fernandes reacts as he appeals for a penalty during the English Premier League football match between Manchester United and Burnley at Old Trafford in Manchester, northwest England, on April 27, 2024. (AFP)
Manchester United's Portuguese midfielder #08 Bruno Fernandes reacts as he appeals for a penalty during the English Premier League football match between Manchester United and Burnley at Old Trafford in Manchester, northwest England, on April 27, 2024. (AFP)
TT

Ten Hag Expects Fernandes to Stay at Man Utd Next Season

Manchester United's Portuguese midfielder #08 Bruno Fernandes reacts as he appeals for a penalty during the English Premier League football match between Manchester United and Burnley at Old Trafford in Manchester, northwest England, on April 27, 2024. (AFP)
Manchester United's Portuguese midfielder #08 Bruno Fernandes reacts as he appeals for a penalty during the English Premier League football match between Manchester United and Burnley at Old Trafford in Manchester, northwest England, on April 27, 2024. (AFP)

Bruno Fernandes is happy at Manchester United and will remain at the Premier League club next season, manager Erik Ten Hag said amid speculation over the midfielder's future.

In an interview with DAZN last week, Fernandes said he would consider his future at United after this year's European Championship and that he would only stay in Manchester if both he and the club want him to.

Asked about Fernandes' comments, Ten Hag told reporters: "That was taken out of context. I know he is Manchester United and I think he is very happy to be here."

The Dutch manager said he "definitely" expects Fernandes to see out his contract, which runs until 2026, and highlighted the importance of the Portuguese international as a role model for other players in the team.

"Taking responsibility is one of the biggest assets top footballers have nowadays to show and to deliver," Ten Hag added.

"Bruno is a very good example for many other players. He is a real fighter. Last year when we played Brighton in the (FA Cup) semi-final, he played with an ankle that was so thick. It was unbelievable.

"He couldn't run but he was still on the pitch. He is always available, always delivers and always gives energy to the team. Such assets are necessary to be successful."

United, who are eighth in the standings, travel to face 14th-placed Crystal Palace in a league clash later on Monday.


Rublev to Return to Hospital after Taking Madrid Title

Andrey Rublev of Russia smiles with his winner's trophy after winning his men's single final match against Felix Auger-Aliassime of Canada at the Madrid Open tennis tournament in Madrid, Spain, 05 May 2024. (EPA)
Andrey Rublev of Russia smiles with his winner's trophy after winning his men's single final match against Felix Auger-Aliassime of Canada at the Madrid Open tennis tournament in Madrid, Spain, 05 May 2024. (EPA)
TT

Rublev to Return to Hospital after Taking Madrid Title

Andrey Rublev of Russia smiles with his winner's trophy after winning his men's single final match against Felix Auger-Aliassime of Canada at the Madrid Open tennis tournament in Madrid, Spain, 05 May 2024. (EPA)
Andrey Rublev of Russia smiles with his winner's trophy after winning his men's single final match against Felix Auger-Aliassime of Canada at the Madrid Open tennis tournament in Madrid, Spain, 05 May 2024. (EPA)

Andrey Rublev battled through a suspected virus and an anaesthetized foot to beat Felix Auger-Aliassime 4-6 7-5 7-5 to claim the Madrid Open title on Sunday, but revealed that he will now have to return to hospital to make a full recovery.

The 26-year-old Russian, who has struggled with health issues throughout the tournament, recovered from the illness and an opening set wobble to clinch his second Masters 1000 title in just under three hours.

"I'm still sick and tomorrow I think I'll go back to the hospital for a full check-up to know exactly what's going on," Rublev told a news conference.

"I've been sick for eight or nine days now, it's not normal, I'm not really getting better, which is strange because usually I get sick for two or three days at the most and maybe a fever, but nothing special. This is the first time in my life that I feel this bad."

The seventh seed added that he needed an anesthetic to play the final.

"They put an anesthetic in the finger on my foot because somehow it got inflamed and started to get bigger and the pressure started to be on the bone and I can't even put my shoe.

"The feeling was similar to when you broke it, so they put an anesthetic so I me to don't feel it and at least I could play without thinking."

Rublev, who came into the Madrid tournament in poor form having lost his previous four matches on the tour, eliminated second seed and home favorite Carlos Alcaraz and also beat American Taylor Fritz to reach the final.

"I think it is normal to have ups and downs, but my focus now is to keep working and trying to improve. I think I showed a great level of tennis from the first match and in the end I was able to win the title.

"Now I think the most important thing is to try and recover and be ready for Rome," he added.


Mbappe Plays His Final CL Game in Paris with PSG, but Defense Is Back in the Spotlight

Football - Champions League - Paris St Germain Training - Paris-Saint-Germain Training Center, Poissy, France - May 6, 2024 Paris St Germain coach Luis Enrique with Kylian Mbappe and Achraf Hakimi during training. (Reuters)
Football - Champions League - Paris St Germain Training - Paris-Saint-Germain Training Center, Poissy, France - May 6, 2024 Paris St Germain coach Luis Enrique with Kylian Mbappe and Achraf Hakimi during training. (Reuters)
TT

Mbappe Plays His Final CL Game in Paris with PSG, but Defense Is Back in the Spotlight

Football - Champions League - Paris St Germain Training - Paris-Saint-Germain Training Center, Poissy, France - May 6, 2024 Paris St Germain coach Luis Enrique with Kylian Mbappe and Achraf Hakimi during training. (Reuters)
Football - Champions League - Paris St Germain Training - Paris-Saint-Germain Training Center, Poissy, France - May 6, 2024 Paris St Germain coach Luis Enrique with Kylian Mbappe and Achraf Hakimi during training. (Reuters)

No doubt Kylian Mbappe will be greeted with loud cheers and applause when he takes to the Parc des Princes pitch on Tuesday night.

It will be his final Champions League match in the French capital in a Paris Saint-Germain shirt.

Mbappe is leaving the club this summer after a seven-season stint, hoping that the journey concludes with a Champions League triumph in Wembley on June 1.

But first things first as Mbappe tries to engineer a fightback in the second leg of their semifinal against Borussia Dortmund, trailing 1-0 from the first leg in Germany last week.

The France striker was a disappointment in the first leg and PSG now expects a strong reaction from the club's all-time leading scorer to overturn the deficit, especially after he failed to score in his last two appearances against Dortmund.

"We’re confident we’ll come back from that score and qualify for the final,” Mbappe said on Sunday, as quoted by French media.

In support of Mbappe, PSG has plenty of firepower upfront, with the likes of Ousmane Dembele, Bradley Barcola, Gonçalo Ramos or Randal Kolo Muani available.

Coach Luis Enrique has more worries in defense after former Bayern Munich defender Lucas Hernandez was ruled out for the remainder of the season with an anterior cruciate ligament rupture that required surgery.

The injury was a tough blow for PSG, which has conceded 14 goals in the competition this season but finally stabilized the heart of its defense with the pairing of Marquinhos and Hernandez.

After Hernandez came off injured last week against Dortmund and was replaced by Lucas Beraldo, the Brazilian substitute's lack of experience was obvious.

Luis Enrique will, however, have to consider giving him a starting role, or put his trust in Milan Skriniar, who is back from injury and lacks both competition and rhythm. Another option would be to pair Danilo Pereira with Marquinhos to add strength and presence in the air, particularly on Dortmund's set pieces.

Solid defending will again be crucial for PSG, which faces a team with great attacking qualities and 11 different scorers on the European stage this season.

The winner will play Real Madrid or Bayern Munich in the final in London. The old rivals drew 2-2 in their semifinal first leg in Germany.

PSG, which enjoyed a rest day over the weekend after wrapping up the French league title, has never won Europe's top club competition. Dortmund claimed the 1997 title.


Salah Scores as Liverpool Beats Tottenham 4-2 in Premier League

Soccer Football - Premier League - Liverpool v Tottenham Hotspur - Anfield, Liverpool, Britain - May 5, 2024 Liverpool's Mohamed Salah in action REUTERS/Carl Recine
Soccer Football - Premier League - Liverpool v Tottenham Hotspur - Anfield, Liverpool, Britain - May 5, 2024 Liverpool's Mohamed Salah in action REUTERS/Carl Recine
TT

Salah Scores as Liverpool Beats Tottenham 4-2 in Premier League

Soccer Football - Premier League - Liverpool v Tottenham Hotspur - Anfield, Liverpool, Britain - May 5, 2024 Liverpool's Mohamed Salah in action REUTERS/Carl Recine
Soccer Football - Premier League - Liverpool v Tottenham Hotspur - Anfield, Liverpool, Britain - May 5, 2024 Liverpool's Mohamed Salah in action REUTERS/Carl Recine

Mohamed Salah quickly put last week's sideline spat with Jurgen Klopp behind him by scoring first in Liverpool's 4-2 win against Tottenham in the Premier League on Sunday.
The sight of Salah arguing with his departing manager late on in Liverpool's 2-2 draw at West Ham last week dominated debate in the following days.
But the Egyptian was back in the starting lineup and back on the score sheet to set his team on course for victory against Spurs at Anfield, The Associated Press reported.
Salah had already come close to scoring by the time he rose at the far post in the 16th minute to head in Cody Gakpo's cross from the left.
Tottenham had been given hope in its pursuit of Champions League qualification after fourth-place Aston Villa had a surprise 1-0 loss at Brighton. But Ange Postecoglou's team never looked capable of taking advantage of that result after being outclassed by Liverpool.
The home team went 2-0 up in the 45th after Salah's shot was saved by Spurs goalkeeper Guglielmo Vicario and Andy Robertson converted from the rebound.
It was the least Liverpool deserved after dominating the chances in the first half and forcing Vicario into a host of desperate saves.
The title may be all but beyond Klopp's team, but Liverpool still looks intent on ending the season on a high for the German, who is stepping down as manager.
Gakpo scored Liverpool's third goal five minutes after the break when heading low at the far post following Harvey Elliott's curling left-foot cross.
Nine minutes later it was Elliott's turn to score with a moment of individual brilliance that brought the home fans to their feet and a beaming grin to Klopp's face.
Collecting the ball on the right, Elliott needed one touch to get away from Rodrigo Bentancur. Then, from around 20 yards (meters), he curled an unstoppable left-foot shot into the top corner and beyond the dive of Vicario.
Postecoglou sent on Richarlison in the hope of salvaging something and the Brazil international quickly made an impact by turning home Brennan Johnson's cross in the 72nd.
He then turned provider to tee up Son Heung-min to fire in from close range five minutes later.
Richarlison forced Alisson into a low save when racing through late on, which led to Joe Gomez producing a flying clearance to stop Johnson from converting the rebound.


Champions League: Bayern and Dortmund Could Stop Mbappe's Showdown with Real Madrid

Paris Saint-Germain's French forward #07 Kylian Mbappe reacts during the UEFA Champions League quarter final first leg football match between Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) and FC Barcelona at the Parc des Princes stadium in Paris on April 10, 2024. (AFP)
Paris Saint-Germain's French forward #07 Kylian Mbappe reacts during the UEFA Champions League quarter final first leg football match between Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) and FC Barcelona at the Parc des Princes stadium in Paris on April 10, 2024. (AFP)
TT

Champions League: Bayern and Dortmund Could Stop Mbappe's Showdown with Real Madrid

Paris Saint-Germain's French forward #07 Kylian Mbappe reacts during the UEFA Champions League quarter final first leg football match between Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) and FC Barcelona at the Parc des Princes stadium in Paris on April 10, 2024. (AFP)
Paris Saint-Germain's French forward #07 Kylian Mbappe reacts during the UEFA Champions League quarter final first leg football match between Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) and FC Barcelona at the Parc des Princes stadium in Paris on April 10, 2024. (AFP)

Real Madrid needs fortress Bernabeu to live up to its reputation.

Paris Saint-Germain could do with some magic from the departing Kylian Mbappé.

Otherwise we could be set for a repeat of the 2013 Champions League final between Bayern Munich and Borussia Dortmund, who both showed in the first legs of the semifinals that they could yet block a Madrid vs. Mbappé showdown at Wembley Stadium, according to The AP.

That has felt like an ideal finale with Mbappé widely expected to move to the Spanish giant when he leaves PSG as a free agent at the end of the season.

But based on the first legs, Bayern and Dortmund haven’t read that script.

Bayern dominated Madrid for long periods at the Allianz Arena on Tuesday before Vinicius Junior’s late penalty secured a 2-2 draw for the record 14-time European Cup winner.

A day later, Germany striker Niclas Füllkrug struck the only goal of the game at the Westfalenstadion to give Dortmund a 1-0 advantage over PSG.

With such fine margins, there is all to play for in the second legs when Madrid and PSG will both have home advantage.

Madrid is unbeaten at home all season and targeting a record-extending 18th European Cup final - and a ninth in the Champions League era, which is also a record.

While six-time winner Bayern showed its credentials in the first leg, it has endured a troubled season in which its 11-year reign as German champion was ended by Bayer Leverkusen.

PSG’s dominance in France shows no sign of stopping after winning a record-extending 12th league title. But it has not been able to transfer that form to the Champions League despite signing some of the world’s greatest players — including Lionel Messi, Neymar and Mbappé.

Messi and Neymar have departed and Mbappé is set to leave. Which is why it would be the perfect send-off for the forward to finally end the Qatar-backed club’s search for European club soccer’s elite trophy.

Defeat at Dortmund has cast doubt over that, but PSG already produced a comeback to beat Barcelona in the second leg of the quarterfinals and Mbappé will be desperate to avoid an anticlimactic end to the season.

- PSG vs. DORTMUND (TUESDAY)

PSG coach Luis Enrique has to rethink his plans in defense with Lucas Hernandez facing a long spell out after rupturing his left knee ACL in the first leg. He successfully underwent an operation on Saturday.

Hernandez was in good form and had also formed a solid central defensive partnership with Marquinhos, helping the Brazilian recapture his best form recently.

Enrique must decide who to select between Lucas Beraldo, utility player Danilo or Milan Skriniar.

The 20-year-old is Beraldo is inexperienced at the highest level, Danilo is reliable and good in the air but lacks pace and mobility, while Skriniar has only recently returned from a three-month injury layoff following ankle surgery.

Skriniar has played only one full game since then and Enrique may not risk him against a physical striker like Füllkrug, who poses a threat with his strong running and direct style of play.

Losing a player of Hernandez’s quaity is a headache Enrique really didn’t need, especially with his side having to score and more likely exposed to counter-attacks.

Enrique will also look for an improved performance from Kylian Mbappé, who failed to impress last week.

Dortmund counterpart Edin Terzić was able to rest his entire team with the exception of goalkeeper Gregor Kobel as his B-side ran out 5-1 winners over Augsburg on Saturday.

- MADRID vs. BAYERN (WEDNESDAY)

Madrid will face Bayern as the newly crowned Spanish league champions after clinching the title on Saturday. With the domestic title all but assured, Carlo Ancelotti rotated his lineup. Defender Nacho Fernández was the only player to start both at Bayern and in its 3-0 win over Cadiz on Saturday.

The club is delaying the traditional celebration of its 36th league title with players and fans in downtown Madrid until Saturday to keep its focus on the Bayern game.

Madrid arrives to the second leg without any critical injuries and with all its scorers clicking. Jude Bellingham scored his 22nd goal overall in the win over Cadiz, while backups Brahim Díaz and Joselu Mato also found the net. Thibaut Courtois is expected to be in the squad, while Ancelotti has said that Andriy Lunin will again be in goal.

Bayern’s preparations were far from ideal with a 3-1 loss at Stuttgart and injury to Raphaël Guerreiro, who had made a good impact after coming on at half time in the first leg against Madrid. Bayern confirmed Sunday he will miss Wednesday’s match.

Bayern defender Matthijs de Ligt missed the first leg with injury but rejoined team training on Sunday.


Messi Has Record-Setting Game With a Goal, 5 Assists in Inter Miami’s 6-2 Win Over Red Bulls

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
TT

Messi Has Record-Setting Game With a Goal, 5 Assists in Inter Miami’s 6-2 Win Over Red Bulls

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 had a record-setting night for Inter Miami. He scored a goal and had five assists as Inter Miami trounced the New York Red Bulls 6-2— with the Argentine great and eight-time Ballon d’Or winner as the game’s best player setting no fewer than three Major League Soccer records.

The six goal contributions, five assists and five assists in a half were all MLS records.

Messi, who earned the MLS Player of the Month Award for April, has now scored and assisted in six consecutive league matches.

“It has become redundant but it appears that he is always making history,” Inter Miami coach Gerardo “Tata” Martino said. “If something was missing, it was this — to contribute in six goals.”

Luis Suárez had three goals and Matias Rojas scored twice as Inter Miami got six unanswered goals to come back from a 1-0 halftime deficit. Messi and Suárez now have a league-leading 10 goals each, helping keep Inter Miami (7-2-3, 24 points) atop the Eastern Conference.

The win extended Miami’s unbeaten string to six. The streak began after a 4-0 loss at New York on April 20, in which Messi did not play because of an injury, according to The AP.

“When he is not available, obviously, the team feels it,” Martino said.

Miami began the rout with Rojas’ equalizer in the 48th minute. Messi centered a pass to Rojas whose left-footed shot landed under the crossbar.

Suárez then fed a charging Messi with a touch pass and he beat New York goalkeeper Carlos Coronel with a shot from 15 yards.

Rojas made it 3-1 with his second goal in the 62nd minute on an assist from Messi. The 28-year-old Rojas joined Inter Miami on April 23 and entered the match to start the second half.

“This is the ultimate satisfaction for a goal scorer,” Rojas said. “It makes it even more special because we accomplished it at home.”

Messi then contributed on former Barcelona teammate Suárez’s first goal in the 69th minute.

“Leo makes it easier for all of us,” Suárez said. “We know each other long enough. When we are on the pitch, we know how to spot each other without looking.”

Suárez also struck in the 75th and 81st minutes before the Red Bulls (4-2-5, 17 points) closed the scoring on Emil Forsberg’s penalty kick in stoppage time.

“We have many players that are capable of scoring,” Martino said. “At some points in the match we are going to find favorable moments. The issue is how we limit the unfavorable moments.”

New York controlled possession early and eventually capitalized on a Miami defensive breakdown that resulted in Dante Vanzeir’s goal in the 30th minute. José Carmona ran deep into the right wing of the large area and blasted a shot that bounced off the far post. An unmarked Vanzeir retrieved the deflection and converted from 15 yards.

Messi had his only scoring opportunity of the first half in the 24th minute, when Coronel stopped his shot from the edge of the penalty area.

Messi’s former Barcelona teammate Jordi Alba missed his third straight game because of a hamstring injury.

Both clubs will continue MLS play next Saturday. Inter Miami visits CF Montreal while the Red Bulls play host to New England.


Enhanced Games Chief: '50 to 100' Paris Olympians Ready to Sign Up

The headquarters of the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) in Montreal, Canada. AFP
The headquarters of the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) in Montreal, Canada. AFP
TT

Enhanced Games Chief: '50 to 100' Paris Olympians Ready to Sign Up

The headquarters of the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) in Montreal, Canada. AFP
The headquarters of the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) in Montreal, Canada. AFP

Between 50 and 100 athletes set to compete at the Paris Olympics are "in the sign-up process" for the inaugural Enhanced Games, where doping will be allowed, the event's chief claims.

Aron D'Souza, who founded the Enhanced Games in 2023 to boost athletes' incomes, made the declaration to News Corp newspapers in Australia on Sunday.

"We have a great many who are in the sign-up process at the moment, who are competing at (the) Paris (Olympics)," said D'Souza of his maiden Games, which are slated for 2025 with venue and broadcast negotiations "well-advanced".

"I would hope 50-100 is (the number) of Paris Olympic alumni who would be competing at the first Games," he added, without specifying whether the sign-up process was a written contract or simply verbal interest.

"You will see at the Paris Olympics, some athletes are going to be very open about the Enhanced Games concept. We have quite a plan for the Paris Olympics."

Agence France Presse said the Olympians would come from across the Enhanced Games' five core disciplines -- swimming and diving, track and field, weightlifting, combat sports and gymnastics.

Under its model, athletes would get a base salary with million-dollar bounties for world records.

They would not be subject to World Anti-Doping Agency rules with competitors able to use performance-enhancing drugs to achieve the feat -- a concept met with disdain by the Olympic movement.

WADA has dubbed the Games "dangerous and irresponsible" while World Athletics president Sebastian Coe said anyone "moronic enough" to take part faced being banned "for a long time".

Former Australian champion swimmer James Magnussen, who won 100m freestyle world titles in 2011 and 2013, is the highest profile athlete so far to publically voice support.

D'Souza said he was not at liberty to name any of the 50 to 100 Olympic competitors, but claimed 1,500 athletes had formally applied to take part in the Enhanced Games since he first put the call out.

He said there had been "great traction" among swimmers and strength sports like powerlifting, but admitted to finding it "a bit more challenging in sprint distance track and field".

"Our perfect candidate is not the 19-year-old who is going to their Olympics for the first time," added the London-based Australian businessman, who has backing from some high-profile venture capitalists including American billionaire Peter Thiel.

"It's the 28-year-old who has gone to the Olympics twice and won a silver medal and they're like, 'I don't want to become a personal trainer'.

"They feel like they have got a little bit more in them before their 'retirement' and put out to pasture at age 30 in elite sports."


Real Madrid Wins its Record-extending 36th Spanish League

Real Madrid supporters celebrate in Cibeles Square in Madrid after their team clinched the La Liga title, Saturday, May 4, 2024. (AP Photo/Manu Fernandez)
Real Madrid supporters celebrate in Cibeles Square in Madrid after their team clinched the La Liga title, Saturday, May 4, 2024. (AP Photo/Manu Fernandez)
TT

Real Madrid Wins its Record-extending 36th Spanish League

Real Madrid supporters celebrate in Cibeles Square in Madrid after their team clinched the La Liga title, Saturday, May 4, 2024. (AP Photo/Manu Fernandez)
Real Madrid supporters celebrate in Cibeles Square in Madrid after their team clinched the La Liga title, Saturday, May 4, 2024. (AP Photo/Manu Fernandez)

Real Madrid put its Spanish rivals out of their misery by clinching the league title on Saturday with four games remaining, just in time to turn its full focus to its Champions League semifinal with Bayern Munich.
Madrid did the expected and beat relegation-threatened Cadiz 3-0 even though it was mostly with bench players. Barcelona then lost 4-2 at Girona with a collapse that coach Xavi Hernández admitted was typical of his team's trophyless season.
That combination of results secured Madrid its record-extending 36th Spanish league title with Girona, which leapfrogged Barcelona into second place, facing an insurmountable 13-point deficit with only a maximum 12 points left in play.
Only a victory by Barcelona at Girona would have stopped Madrid from celebrating the title on Saturday, The Associated Press reported.
Madrid now has a chance to add to its unequaled 14 European Cups. Madrid hosts Bayern on Wednesday with their Champions League semifinal evenly balanced after a 2-2 first-leg draw in Germany. Either Paris Saint-Germain or Borussia Dortmund will await the winner in the June 1 final.
The club said that it will hold off on the traditional celebration of titles in downtown Madrid until next Saturday with its important game against Bayern coming first.
“We deserved this league title in every way," Madrid coach Carlo Ancelotti said after guiding his team to the second league title and 12th trophy overall in his two stints with Madrid.
“We would like to celebrate with all the fans, but they understand because on Wednesday we have a very important challenge. We want to prepare well to make the fans happy and we will celebrate the title together on Saturday.”
At the start of the season, Madrid appeared set to again play chaser to defending champion Barcelona after Karim Benzema left in the summer and goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois and defenders David Alaba and Eder Militao sustained serious leg injuries.
But Jude Bellingham blossomed into a scorer on arrival from Borussia Dortmund. His goals, and leadership in midfield, combined with the dribbling, speed and goals of Vinícius Júnior. put Madrid well ahead of the rest.
Madrid has only lost once in 34 rounds so far, beat Barcelona in both league “clasico” matches, and dealt Girona a pair of lopsided losses in their two meetings.