Man City’s Path to the Champions League Final Against Inter Milan 

June 8, 2023 - A giant replica of Champions League trophy is placed at Istanbul’s Taksim Square ahead of the final on Saturday between Manchester City and Inter Milan. (Reuters)
June 8, 2023 - A giant replica of Champions League trophy is placed at Istanbul’s Taksim Square ahead of the final on Saturday between Manchester City and Inter Milan. (Reuters)
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Man City’s Path to the Champions League Final Against Inter Milan 

June 8, 2023 - A giant replica of Champions League trophy is placed at Istanbul’s Taksim Square ahead of the final on Saturday between Manchester City and Inter Milan. (Reuters)
June 8, 2023 - A giant replica of Champions League trophy is placed at Istanbul’s Taksim Square ahead of the final on Saturday between Manchester City and Inter Milan. (Reuters)

Manchester City will be playing in its second Champions League final in three years when the English team meets Inter Milan in Istanbul on Saturday.

Here's look at City's path to the final:

Group stage

City was handed a rather benign group containing Borussia Dortmund, a Sevilla team that had a poor start to the season, and Danish outsider FC Copenhagen. City coasted through it, winning its first three games — 4-0 at Sevilla, 2-1 at home to Dortmund and 5-0 at home to Copenhagen — before a 0-0 draw in Denmark secured a place in the round of 16 with two games to spare. That marked the first time City failed to score in a match this season, though the team did play more than an hour with 10 men after Sergio Gomez's red card and saw Riyad Mahrez have a penalty saved. City finished with a 0-0 draw at Dortmund and beat Sevilla 3-1 at home. The highlight of the group stage for City was Erling Haaland's flying volley for the winner against Dortmund, his former club.

Last 16

The second leg against Leipzig was Haaland's most prolific match in a City shirt. The striker scored five goals before the hour mark in a 7-0 win to complete an 8-1 aggregate victory. Only two players — Argentina great Lionel Messi and Brazilian forward Luiz Adriano — had previously scored five goals in a single Champions League game. It was Leipzig's heaviest European loss and a shock given the way the German team troubled City at times in their 1-1 draw in the first leg, when Mahrez scored the opener. Leipzig was far too open in the return match, playing right into City's hands, with Ilkay Gundogan and Kevin De Bruyne also scoring.

Quarterfinals

City's 4-1 aggregate win over Bayern Munich wasn't as convincing as the score suggests — as manager Pep Guardiola later said. City was clinical in a 3-0 victory in the first leg at Etihad Stadium, with Rodri's left-foot curler from outside the area breaking the deadlock in a high-quality first half before goals from Bernardo Silva and Haaland pressed home City's advantage in the final 20 minutes. City was wobbling early in the second leg but held on and managed to take the lead through Haaland following a length-of-the-field counterattack led by De Bruyne. By then, Haaland had already skied a penalty over the crossbar and Joshua Kimmich grabbed a late consolation for Bayern, also from the spot.

Semifinals

City avenged last season's painful semifinal exit at the hands of Real Madrid, drawing 1-1 in the Spanish capital before producing arguably its best display under Guardiola to win the second leg 4-0 at home. De Bruyne's long-range second-half equalizer at the Santiago Bernabeu canceled out Vinicius Junior's equally sublime opener and gave City the platform to overpower Madrid a week later. Silva scored two first-half goals and there were more after halftime for Manuel Akanji and Julian Alvarez in a City performance brimming with power and confidence. “We feel unstoppable,” City winger Jack Grealish said.



Golf in the Olympics is Starting to Catch on. For Americans, the Hard Part is Getting There.

Defending gold medalist Xander Schauffele  - The AP
Defending gold medalist Xander Schauffele - The AP
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Golf in the Olympics is Starting to Catch on. For Americans, the Hard Part is Getting There.

Defending gold medalist Xander Schauffele  - The AP
Defending gold medalist Xander Schauffele - The AP

One of the best indications that golf was starting to catch on as an Olympic sport came from a player who never even made it to the podium.

Rory McIlroy was part of a seven-man playoff for the bronze medal at the Tokyo Games, eliminated on the third of four extra holes. He said when it was over, “I never tried so hard to finish third.”

McIlroy was among those who skipped the Olympics when golf returned to the program in 2016 at Rio de Janeiro. He said then he wouldn't be watching golf, only “the stuff that matters.” The next time around, he was all in.

And he's not alone. Only two eligible players are sitting out the men's competition when it begins Aug. 1 at Le Golf National outside Paris.

One is Bernd Wiesberger of Austria, who withdrew from the Tokyo Games right after he moved into position to make it. The other is Cristobal del Solar of Chile, who plays on the Korn Ferry Tour and doesn't want to miss a week if it jeopardizes his chance to get a PGA Tour card.

In most cases, the competition was fierce just to get to the Paris Games, The Associated Press reported.

“Qualifying was my first goal this year,” defending gold medalist Xander Schauffele said. “It's a very hard team to qualify for on the US side.”

The Americans have two players in the top 10 who won't be going, including US Open champion Bryson DeChambeau.

Of course, there are no excuses for skipping this year. Rio de Janeiro carried the threat of the Zika virus. The Tokyo Games were postponed one year because of the COVID-19 pandemic, meaning no spectators, no opportunity for athletes to attend other events and daily coronavirus testing.

Still to be determined is the value of gold, silver and bronze.

Given the endless golf schedule, the silver claret jug from the British Open will be awarded just 11 days before the pursuit of a gold medal.

“For track and field, gymnastics, winning a gold medal from when you were a kid was the top of the top,” said Schauffele, who won his first major this year at the PGA Championship. "People ask me now about a major and a gold medal. Growing up, it was about watching the majors. Maybe in 50 years it will be different.

“But there's added emphasis on trying to win one,” he said of an Olympic gold. “It's starting to pull some of its own weight. And I imagine it will be pulling more and more.”

The gold medalists from Rio de Janeiro (Justin Rose and Inbee Park) and Tokyo (Schauffele and Nelly Korda) all have major championship hardware at home.

Schauffele and Korda will be among the contenders to give golf back-to-back gold medalists, a difficult task in golf regardless of the brand of trophy.

Scottie Scheffler remains the clear favorite everywhere he goes, already a six-time winner against the best fields in golf, including the Masters and The Players Championship. The gap between Scheffler and the rest of golf in the world ranking is a size not seen since the peak years of Tiger Woods.

“Playing for your country is always extremely exciting. Especially I think it will be extra special doing it on the Olympic stage,” Scheffler said. “It's also good bragging rights for people when they tell me golf's not a sport. I can say it's an Olympic sport.”

Korda is more of a mystery.

The American, who will be 26 when the women's competition begins, was unbeatable in March and April as she tied an LPGA record with five consecutive victories, including her second major at the Chevron Championship.

But then she took a 10 on one hole in the US Women's Open and shot 80, missing the cut. She missed another cut in Michigan, and then shot 81 in the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship and missed another cut in a major.

The Olympic ranking is based on the world ranking, and countries get a maximum of four players provided they are among the top 15 in the world.