'It Was Perfect': 25 Years on From the Day Blackburn Won the League

Clockwise from top left: Blackburn with the trophy; Alan Shearer celebrates scoring the opening goal; Rovers fans go wild at Anfield. Composite: Action Images
Clockwise from top left: Blackburn with the trophy; Alan Shearer celebrates scoring the opening goal; Rovers fans go wild at Anfield. Composite: Action Images
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'It Was Perfect': 25 Years on From the Day Blackburn Won the League

Clockwise from top left: Blackburn with the trophy; Alan Shearer celebrates scoring the opening goal; Rovers fans go wild at Anfield. Composite: Action Images
Clockwise from top left: Blackburn with the trophy; Alan Shearer celebrates scoring the opening goal; Rovers fans go wild at Anfield. Composite: Action Images

Blackburn had waited 81 years for another league title and led Manchester United by two points going into the final day of the 1994-95 season. Rovers went to Anfield on 14 May but ended up losing 2-1 against Liverpool. Fans in the away end were left hoping Alex Ferguson’s side would be denied by West Ham.

The game at Upton Park ended in a draw to hand Rovers the title in one of the most dramatic finishes to a season in the English top flight. The triumph completed the transformation, led by Jack Walker – a local businessman who bankrolled the club – and manager Kenny Dalglish, from small-town club to champions of England.

Twenty-five years since the historic triumph we speak to some of those who were at Anfield that historic day and one who wasn’t.

Tim Flowers, Blackburn goalkeeper
Kenny Dalglish was meticulous in everything he did, recruitment, tactics, scouting the opposition. He personally rang about 10 different people about my character and temperament before signing me. He would sometimes join in at training and at 44 he was still sometimes the best player we had!

When I first arrived we used to train at Pleasington, which were basically Sunday League pitches that had dog mess on them, next to a crematorium. Training would often have to stop as the hearses rolled past. On my first day Kenny was on [his assistant] Ray Harford’s shoulders, masking tape to the crossbar. The wind was horrendous so they used some breeze blocks to hold down the net. Some days we just used corner flags for goalposts. We would go back to Ewood for lunch where they would just cook spare ribs and sausages. Everyone just got on with it. But then Jack Walker bought the new training ground for a quid. It used to be an asylum, so we fitted in all right there.

The team spirit was great, if anyone got too big-time they’d be smashed down in the dressing room. We’d stay in London before matches and players would get fire extinguishers through the door. For the 1995 Charity Shield everyone got a new suit and shirt but somebody cut the sleeves off mine and Chris Sutton’s. We got on the bus to go to Wembley, everyone was silent, nobody said a word. I never found out who it was but [David] Batty and Jason [Wilcox] were a couple of wrong ’uns.

At Anfield it was such a weird atmosphere. I remember being at the Kop end when Alan Shearer scored in the first half and all the Liverpool fans cheered as they didn’t want United to win the league. When things went silent in the second half I thought we had blown it. When Jamie Redknapp scored the winner and I landed on the deck I thought we’d lost it. But within a few seconds our fans got news from West Ham. Kenny was so superstitious he didn’t even organize a party. We didn’t want to go out in Manchester so we went to somewhere called “Bistro French” in Preston. They cleared the tables and a band came on playing Buddy Holly tunes.

Jack Walker put on a parade around Blackburn the next day. He was the most down-to-earth geezer. You would never know he was worth anything. I called him Mr Walker the first time I met him and he said: “Don’t call me that. Call me Jack.” He would come in the dressing room every single match, before and after, win, lose or draw to talk to us and would never get the hump. He would play “Penny Up the Wall” with all the players for £20 a pop and would never lose.

Jason Wilcox Blackburn winger, now Manchester City academy director
That Rovers team was full of leaders. There was an edge, all the time, people would get angry if mistakes were made. The training sessions were immensely physical and there was no hiding place. It was sometimes harder than the games, even on a Friday. The winning mentality was there for all to see.

My cruciate injury in April was devastating. Now the recovery is routine but back then these injuries were finishing careers. I was 23 and in a knee brace at Anfield but had traveled on the team bus and was in the dressing room beforehand. I watched the game from the dugout, which is really tight at Liverpool and my leg was all squashed. All the Liverpool fans were keeping us updated on the United score. We tried to block it all out but it was impossible. When the final whistle finally blew it took forever for me to get on the pitch but I threw my crutches away and managed it.

With Kenny as manager, being the legend he was, winning it at Anfield was surreal. The way the Liverpool fans were was special but it was a mixed day for me because of the injury: I felt angry, sorry for myself but also delighted and proud. I nearly didn’t pick up a medal as I didn’t think I deserved one but Kenny and Tim Sherwood gave me a bit of a rollicking and made me pick one up.

Tim was fundamental to us winning it, especially after David Batty’s injury. He was a hard guy, a brutally honest, understated, undervalued player, despite being captain. But he also had real courage on the ball in tight situations,was a tough tackler and got into the box, often got beyond the strikers. Him and Mark Atkins were superb in central midfield, another player who never gets mentioned but scored some really important goals.

Matt Smith, actor and lifelong Rovers fan
My dad is from Darwen and the reason I support Rovers. I have loads of family who still live up on Blackburn Road. We went to Wembley to watch them beat Leicester to get promoted to the Premier League in 1992 but this was on a different level. I’ll never, ever forget watching on TV. I was in the lounge with my best friend, my dad and another friend, who was a United fan. I remember watching Kenny Dalglish looking completely lost on the sidelines, like he was standing on the side of a motorway. We all felt the same.

At the final whistle my dad went absolutely nuts. He threw and smashed the Sky remote against the wall in excitement. My mum stormed in to tell him off because my other mate was upset, the United fan. But he wasn’t having it and screamed: “Lynne, I don’t fucking care. Rovers have won the league!” That is etched into my memory and will be until the day I die. Football has been the greatest thing I share with my dad and our team winning the league is one of the high points of my life.

Martin Tyler, Sky Sports lead commentator
The last day of that season was a huge day for Sky Sports. It was the first time we had two games broadcast simultaneously but our Anfield buildup was completely ruined by the live FA Trophy final overrunning by about 45 minutes, with extra time causing chaos. It was my team, Woking, that scored the winner, so I was hopping around on the gantry when the Liverpool and Blackburn teams were readout.

It was a massive day for Blackburn and for Dalglish, who had only left Liverpool in 1991. When Redknapp scored I hadn’t heard about the United result but the Blackburn supporters’ reaction told us something. I had a moment to ponder the consequences and Andy Gray took the lead. He was always spot-on in those situations.

Our reporter Nick Collins spoke to Kenny after the match. All season, Kenny had given Nick cautious answers about taking it one game at a time. So after the match they swapped roles and Kenny played the interviewer to Nick, who gave him drab answers, even though both were laughing. It was a lovely moment. I can’t imagine what the whole day must have meant to Kenny, the only Premier League title ceremony there has been at Anfield.

Bob Mason, Rovers season-ticket holder
I went with a friend. Everyone in the town wanted a ticket and we managed to get some tickets off a brewery that was a sponsor. We parked off Stanley Park and walked over to the stadium an hour before kick-off and the atmosphere was electric. There were Liverpool fans with Rovers scarves on and everyone wanted us to win. There were balloons everywhere, it was party time. A carnival day. Lots of Rovers fans had transistor radios and the whole ground erupted when news came that West Ham had scored and again when the final whistle went [at Upton Park]. Liverpool won the day and we won the league. It was perfect.

I’m 83 and first started going to watch Rovers in 1946. I’ve been a season-ticket holder for decades. We believed Jack Walker was putting Blackburn back where they should be. Shearer was magic, wasn’t he? And Sherwood held the thing together. We’ve been down a bit since Jack died but we’re on the up again and don’t need too much more to get us back in the Premier League.

(The Guardian)



No Mbappe, No Chance? Real Madrid on Ropes Against Man City

 Real Madrid's Spanish coach Alvaro Arbeloa looks on during the Spanish league football match between Celta Vigo and Real Madrid CF at the Balaidos Stadium in Vigo on March 6, 2026. (AFP)
Real Madrid's Spanish coach Alvaro Arbeloa looks on during the Spanish league football match between Celta Vigo and Real Madrid CF at the Balaidos Stadium in Vigo on March 6, 2026. (AFP)
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No Mbappe, No Chance? Real Madrid on Ropes Against Man City

 Real Madrid's Spanish coach Alvaro Arbeloa looks on during the Spanish league football match between Celta Vigo and Real Madrid CF at the Balaidos Stadium in Vigo on March 6, 2026. (AFP)
Real Madrid's Spanish coach Alvaro Arbeloa looks on during the Spanish league football match between Celta Vigo and Real Madrid CF at the Balaidos Stadium in Vigo on March 6, 2026. (AFP)

Rarely do record 15-time winners Real Madrid enter a Champions League clash as underdogs, but this is the situation when Manchester City visit the Santiago Bernabeu on Wednesday.

With key attackers Kylian Mbappe, Jude Bellingham and Rodrygo Goes set to miss the game injured and Alvaro Arbeloa's team in inconsistent form, the Premier League side are firm favorites in the last 16 tie.

Man City beat Madrid in the league phase in the Spanish capital and have strengthened since then, with Antoine Semenyo and Marc Guehi arriving, while midfielder Rodri is fit after missing that match during a long-term injury absence.

Xabi Alonso was at Madrid's helm then. But his successor Arbeloa has not got the team playing with more quality or consistency.

Perhaps his biggest success has been helping winger Vinicius Junior back to form, and the Brazilian represents Real Madrid's best hope of success against City.

The winger was key in Madrid's triumph over Jose Mourinho's Benfica in the play-off round, despite allegedly being racially abused in the first leg by Benfica's Gianluca Prestianni, who denies it.

Vinicius said he had felt "a little tired" after beating Celta Vigo in La Liga on Friday, with the team leaning on him over the past few matches. By contrast Man City coach Pep Guardiola rested Manchester City striker Erling Haaland for his team's FA Cup win over Newcastle at the weekend.

In the past Madrid have shown grit to get through Champions League ties when they have been outplayed and they will likely need to find that resolve again.

They needed a deflected 95th-minute goal from Fede Valverde to scrape their 2-1 win over Celta.

Arbeloa was asked what his team's approach was, as it was not particularly clear from their flat performance.

"To win the game, which is what Real Madrid plays for," responded the coach. "That's what we want and the objective we had today."

The same will be true on Wednesday, by any means necessary.

Arbeloa called on Madrid's supporters, who have been critical of their own players at times this season, to inspire the team against City.

"We need them, we need them on Wednesday, and they know it better than anyone," said Arbeloa.

"It's a Champions League night against a very tough opponent, one of the biggest clubs in the world of football right now.

"Playing at home, we know we're much stronger when the Madrid fans are on our side."

- Injury plague -

There has been some speculation that Madrid's top scorer Mbappe, who hit a hat-trick last season against City in the play-off round, could make a surprise return on Wednesday.

However, Spanish newspaper AS reports both he and Bellingham are targeting a potential return in the second leg.

Madrid have problems elsewhere with defenders Eder Militao and Alvaro Carreras and midfielder Dani Ceballos sidelined, and David Alaba also doubtful.

Guardiola may look to exploit Trent Alexander-Arnold's defensive frailty now the England international has begun to start more regularly. Celta got in behind the former Liverpool right-back to open the scoring last week.

Another positive for Arbeloa, of which there have been few since his arrival in January, has been the solid displays of Aurelien Tchouameni and Valverde.

They can offer the steel which Madrid need to withstand the might of Haaland and company.

In the 15 encounters between the two teams, they have each won five and also drawn five. Including the two upcoming matches, the fixture becomes the third most-played in the history of the competition.

This may well be the least confident Madrid have been in approaching any of the previous knock-out ties, even if they would never admit it.

"Real Madrid is about fighting until the end, believing, battling," said Arbeloa after beating Celta.

"Yes, we could do a lot of things better but with the personality and character we showed, I hope this can be a turning point and from here, everything goes much better."


Rosenior Back in France as Chelsea Face PSG Champions League Challenge

Football - FA Cup - Fifth Round - Wrexham v Chelsea - SToK Racecourse, Wrexham, Britain - March 7, 2026 Chelsea manager Liam Rosenior before the match. (Reuters)
Football - FA Cup - Fifth Round - Wrexham v Chelsea - SToK Racecourse, Wrexham, Britain - March 7, 2026 Chelsea manager Liam Rosenior before the match. (Reuters)
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Rosenior Back in France as Chelsea Face PSG Champions League Challenge

Football - FA Cup - Fifth Round - Wrexham v Chelsea - SToK Racecourse, Wrexham, Britain - March 7, 2026 Chelsea manager Liam Rosenior before the match. (Reuters)
Football - FA Cup - Fifth Round - Wrexham v Chelsea - SToK Racecourse, Wrexham, Britain - March 7, 2026 Chelsea manager Liam Rosenior before the match. (Reuters)

The renewal of Chelsea's rivalry with Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League this week sees Liam Rosenior make a quick return to France, just two months after he left Strasbourg for Stamford Bridge.

Rosenior, 41, was appointed by Chelsea in early January on a six-year deal on the back of a solid body of work over 18 months at Strasbourg, as well as the close links between the two clubs run by the BlueCo consortium.

It is hard to imagine the former Fulham, Hull City and Brighton right-back would have been hired by one of the biggest sides in the Premier League without that controversial relationship, but Rosenior still made a major impression in Alsace.

He led Strasbourg to European qualification last season and laid foundations that have been built on by his successor Gary O'Neil, who has taken the team to the French Cup semi-finals while they are one of the leading contenders to win the Conference League.

Rosenior got a young side -- in which almost the entire squad is aged 23 or under -- playing a sophisticated brand of football, with high pressing, man-to-man marking and players very comfortable in possession.

Strasbourg were one of just two teams to beat PSG in Ligue 1 last season, with a 2-1 victory in May that admittedly came after Luis Enrique's side had been confirmed as champions.

And Rosenior's last visit to the Parc des Princes in October ended in Strasbourg claiming a 3-3 draw -- they had been 3-1 up at one point.

"We were playing against the best team in the world, full stop. I think they are a credit to this league," was how the Wandsworth-born coach described PSG.

This fixture became a genuine rivalry for a time in the last decade, when the clubs met in the Champions League knockout phase in three straight seasons, from 2014 to 2016.

The first was a quarter-final won by Chelsea, but PSG triumphed in the last 16 in the two years that followed.

The most recent encounter was in the Club World Cup final last July, when Chelsea won 3-0 against a tired PSG in sapping conditions at the MetLife Stadium in New Jersey. Now they meet in the last 16 once again.

"These are the games you live for, games that you come into football for," Rosenior said after the draw was made late last month.

- Holders on verge of crisis? -

Rosenior has so far lost three games out of 15 in charge of Chelsea, all of them against Arsenal.

A 4-1 win at Aston Villa last Wednesday left the Blues fifth in the Premier League, and Saturday's extra-time victory at Wrexham took them through to the FA Cup quarter-finals.

A much-changed team for that game is likely to have little in common with the side that takes to the field in Paris, as Chelsea look to oust the reigning European champions.

PSG currently look more vulnerable than they have in a long time, with their performance in a 3-1 home defeat by Monaco on Friday being heavily criticized.

"The champions have stopped responding", was the headline in sports daily L'Equipe, which described Luis Enrique's team as being "on the verge of a crisis".

That might sound like an exaggeration, but Rosenior's description does not really hold right now with PSG having been beaten four times already in 2026.

Their lead over Lens at the top of Ligue 1 is just one point, and in Europe they appear a level below the likes of Arsenal and Bayern Munich.

Fitness has been an issue all season, off the back of a marathon last campaign, with Ballon d'Or winner Ousmane Dembele making his latest comeback at the weekend after a lay-off with a calf injury.

Key midfielders Fabian Ruiz and Joao Neves have been absent, while Gianluigi Donnarumma has never been adequately replaced in goal.

"We are clearly in difficulty at the moment but we need to maintain hope that will change," said Luis Enrique on Friday. "Confidence is not just something you buy at the supermarket."

Rosenior will be hoping to exploit PSG's weaknesses and repeat the achievements of Roberto Di Matteo and Thomas Tuchel, who both led Chelsea to Champions League glory having been appointed mid-season.


Five Iran Women Footballers Take Asylum in Australia

Iran team captain Zahra Ghanbari (2-L), Mona Hamoudi (C) and Atefeh Ramazanzadeh (R) react from the bench during the AFC Women’s Asian Cup Group A match between Iran and Philippines at Gold Coast Stadium on the Gold Coast, Australia, 08 March 2026. (EPA)
Iran team captain Zahra Ghanbari (2-L), Mona Hamoudi (C) and Atefeh Ramazanzadeh (R) react from the bench during the AFC Women’s Asian Cup Group A match between Iran and Philippines at Gold Coast Stadium on the Gold Coast, Australia, 08 March 2026. (EPA)
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Five Iran Women Footballers Take Asylum in Australia

Iran team captain Zahra Ghanbari (2-L), Mona Hamoudi (C) and Atefeh Ramazanzadeh (R) react from the bench during the AFC Women’s Asian Cup Group A match between Iran and Philippines at Gold Coast Stadium on the Gold Coast, Australia, 08 March 2026. (EPA)
Iran team captain Zahra Ghanbari (2-L), Mona Hamoudi (C) and Atefeh Ramazanzadeh (R) react from the bench during the AFC Women’s Asian Cup Group A match between Iran and Philippines at Gold Coast Stadium on the Gold Coast, Australia, 08 March 2026. (EPA)

Five players from Iran's visiting women's football team claimed asylum in Australia on Tuesday, seeking protection after they were branded "traitors" at home for refusing to sing the national anthem.

Iranian players fell silent as the anthem played ahead of a tournament match in Australia last week, an act seen as a symbol of defiance against the country.

US President Donald Trump was among those urging Australia to offer the players asylum, citing grave fears for their safety if they were forced to board a plane home.

Five players, including captain Zahra Ghanbari, slipped away from the team hotel under the cover of darkness to claim sanctuary from Australian officials.

"We've been preparing for this for some time," Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said.

"Australians have been moved by the plight of these brave women. They're safe here and they should feel at home here."

Albanese thanked Australian media for their "restraint", hinting that news of the asylum bid had been held back until they were safe.

Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said the government had spent days in secret talks with the players, who were whisked to a safe house after leaving their hotel on the Gold Coast.

Pictures showed the players huddled around a table as Burke signed paper work granting them special visas to stay in Australia on humanitarian grounds.

The players broke out into chants of "Aussie, Aussie, Aussie", Burke said, adding that the rest of the team would also be welcome to stay in the country if they wished.

It was not clear if the remaining players in the Iranian squad would fly home -- or when they might leave Australia.

US President Trump was among the first to confirm five players were safely in the care of Australian officials, following a late-night call with Prime Minister Albanese.

He had hours earlier urged Australia to do the right thing, saying it would be a "terrible humanitarian mistake" if the players were forced back to Iran.

- 'Wartime traitors' -

A presenter on Iranian state TV branded the players "wartime traitors" after they stood motionless during the anthem before a match against South Korea last week.

Although they sang the anthem -- an ode to the glory of the republic -- in later matches, human rights activists warned the damage was done.

"The members of the Iranian Women's National Football Team are under significant pressure and ongoing threat from the Islamic Republic," said Reza Pahlavi, the son of the late shah of Iran.

"I call on the Australian government to ensure their safety and give them any and all needed support," he said on social media.

Pahlavi has billed himself as the man to lead a democratic transition to a secular Iran as the theocratic regime fights to survive.

The US and Israel bombarded Iran with heavy missile fire on February 28, killing supreme leader Ali Khamenei with the opening salvos of a war that now threatens to engulf the Middle East.

Politicians, human rights activists and even "Harry Potter" author J.K. Rowling had called for Australia to offer the side protection.

Crowds gathered outside the Gold Coast stadium where the side played their last match over the weekend, banging drums and shouting "regime change for Iran".

Supporters surrounded the Iranian team bus, chanting "let them go" and "save our girls". On Monday, an AFP journalist saw members of the team speaking on phones from their hotel room balconies.