France Beat Portugal in Shootout to Reach Semis and End Ronaldo’s Dream

 Portugal's Cristiano Ronaldo, right, embraces Pepe at the end of a quarter final match against France at the Euro 2024 soccer tournament in Hamburg, Germany, Friday, July 5, 2024. (AP)
Portugal's Cristiano Ronaldo, right, embraces Pepe at the end of a quarter final match against France at the Euro 2024 soccer tournament in Hamburg, Germany, Friday, July 5, 2024. (AP)
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France Beat Portugal in Shootout to Reach Semis and End Ronaldo’s Dream

 Portugal's Cristiano Ronaldo, right, embraces Pepe at the end of a quarter final match against France at the Euro 2024 soccer tournament in Hamburg, Germany, Friday, July 5, 2024. (AP)
Portugal's Cristiano Ronaldo, right, embraces Pepe at the end of a quarter final match against France at the Euro 2024 soccer tournament in Hamburg, Germany, Friday, July 5, 2024. (AP)

France converted all their kicks in a shootout to edge Portugal 5-3 on penalties after a goalless stalemate in their European Championship quarter-final on Friday, likely bringing the curtain down on Cristiano Ronaldo's international career.

Theo Hernandez stroked home the winning kick for a perfect sequence after Joao Felix’s effort, the third for Portugal, hit the post. France will now play Spain in the semi-finals on Tuesday in Munich.

Defeat for Portugal is set to spell the end of the 21-year international career of 39-year-old Ronaldo, who converted their first kick in the shootout but was also responsible for one of the night’s many glaring misses.

Success for France makes up for shootout heartbreak at the last Euros, when they were eliminated by Switzerland in the round of 16, and in the 2022 World Cup final against Argentina.

Ousmane Dembele, Youssouf Fofana, Jules Kounde and Bradley Barcola all netted their spot kicks for victorious France.

A game that was slow in firing up ended with a myriad of missed opportunities at either end, with clear chances for both sides in 90 minutes as well as the half hour of extra time.

France now find themselves in the semis without scoring in open play at the tournament, having benefitted from two own goals and a penalty in their previous four games.

But the French have also not conceded in open play at Euro 2024 with goalkeeper Mike Maignan making two key saves in Friday's match that proved key for his side.

CAUTIOUS START

Both teams started cautiously, intent on keeping possession and avoiding mistakes. The play was therefore often pedestrian with only periodic bursts of action.

It took 16 minutes before the first shot was fired off in anger – Bruno Fernandes’ effort hitting Hernandez and deflecting away for a corner.

Soon after the second half kicked off, the contest rose from its slumber.

A rare contribution from the masked Kylian Mbappe was a clever combination with N'Golo Kante that produced a rapid fire shot, swallowed up by goalkeeper Diogo Costa. France's captain Mbappe had another off night in attack.

Within minutes, Hernandez’s square ball from the left beat the Portuguese defense as it went invitingly across goal, crying out for a tap-in but with no one to meet it.

Maignan then made two crucial saves in the space of three minutes – a stiff arm reaction to deny Fernandes on the hour, followed by a point blank stop from Vitinha after another of Rafael Leao’s probing runs.

MENTAL STRENGTH

"We knew it was going to be a tough game but we were solid in defense and we had a lot of mental strength and kept our cool during the shootout, that's what made the difference," Maignan said.

In the 67th minute, a quick break from Randal Kolo Muani, in tandem with Kounde, had the striker in on goal but Ruben Dias made a goal-saving tackle.

France’s profligacy continued straight afterwards when substitute Dembele’s trickery teed up Eduardo Camavinga but the young midfielder inexplicably spurned the chance from close range.

"You wonder what would have happened if we had scored goals. The opponent wasn't that efficient either," added France coach Didier Deschamps.

"But you're not telling me that we don't deserve our place in the semi-final. But I would prefer to have a team that's more efficient in goalscoring."

The worst miss, however, belonged to Ronaldo three minutes into extra time as Francisco Conceicao’s enterprise saw him cut in on the byline and pull the ball back for his captain to deliver a fairytale finish but the forward fluffed his lines.

Ronaldo's future with Portugal after 212 caps and 130 goals now looks at an end. He was in the Portuguese side that beat France in the Euro 2016 final in Paris, although he went off early with injury and had to urge them on from the sidelines.

Also likely to be over is the international career of 41-year-old center back Pepe, the oldest player to appear at the Euros.

"Football is cruel ... and sadness is part of it. We were aiming to win for our country and bring joy to our people," said Pepe, who made some outstanding tackles. "Five days ago we won on penalties and now we've lost on penalties."



Napoli Keep Pace in Title Race After Defeating Lazio in Stormy Contest

 Napoli's Italian defender #37 Leonardo Spinazzola (R) celebrates with Napoli's Scottish midfielder #08 Scott McTominay (C) after scoring his team first goal during the Italian Serie A football match between Lazio and Napoli at the Olympic Stadium in Rome on January 4, 2026. (AFP)
Napoli's Italian defender #37 Leonardo Spinazzola (R) celebrates with Napoli's Scottish midfielder #08 Scott McTominay (C) after scoring his team first goal during the Italian Serie A football match between Lazio and Napoli at the Olympic Stadium in Rome on January 4, 2026. (AFP)
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Napoli Keep Pace in Title Race After Defeating Lazio in Stormy Contest

 Napoli's Italian defender #37 Leonardo Spinazzola (R) celebrates with Napoli's Scottish midfielder #08 Scott McTominay (C) after scoring his team first goal during the Italian Serie A football match between Lazio and Napoli at the Olympic Stadium in Rome on January 4, 2026. (AFP)
Napoli's Italian defender #37 Leonardo Spinazzola (R) celebrates with Napoli's Scottish midfielder #08 Scott McTominay (C) after scoring his team first goal during the Italian Serie A football match between Lazio and Napoli at the Olympic Stadium in Rome on January 4, 2026. (AFP)

First-half goals from Leonardo Spinazzola and Amir Rrahmani helped Napoli claim a 2-0 victory at Lazio on Sunday in a heated contest that featured three red cards.

The result left Napoli one point adrift of leaders AC Milan, who are on 38 points, while Inter sit third on 36 ahead of their ‌match against Bologna ‌later on Sunday.

Despite being hampered ‌by ⁠the absence ‌of a number of injured players, including Kevin De Bruyne, Romelu Lukaku and Billy Gilmour, Napoli appeared largely in control as they patiently built their attacks.

Napoli seized control in the 14th minute when a teasing cross drifted to the back post, where an unmarked Spinazzola ⁠fired a volley home to give the visitors the lead.

Antonio Conte's ‌side underlined their dominance in the ‍32nd minute when a ‍free kick was floated into the box and ‍Rrahmani headed into the bottom corner to double the visitors' lead.

Napoli came close to stretching their advantage just minutes later when Eljif Elmas rose to meet a delivery but his header crashed against the crossbar.

Napoli's injury concerns deepened in the second half when David ⁠Neres was seen limping off. The stoppage sparked a brief flashpoint between the two sides, ending with yellow cards for Rrahmani and Lazio’s Tijjani Noslin.

Lazio’s afternoon unraveled further in the 81st minute when Noslin was sent off for a clumsy challenge on Alessandro Buongiorno.

Tempers flared again minutes before full time as Lazio’s Adam Marusic and Napoli’s Pasquale Mazzocchi became embroiled in a heated confrontation, prompting Napoli coach Antonio Conte to intervene ‌in an attempt to separate the pair. Both players were subsequently shown red cards.


Cunha Strikes as Man Utd Snatch Point in 1-1 Draw at Leeds

 Football - Premier League - Leeds United v Manchester United - Elland Road, Leeds, Britain - January 4, 2026 Manchester United's Matheus Cunha celebrates scoring their first goal. (Reuters)
Football - Premier League - Leeds United v Manchester United - Elland Road, Leeds, Britain - January 4, 2026 Manchester United's Matheus Cunha celebrates scoring their first goal. (Reuters)
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Cunha Strikes as Man Utd Snatch Point in 1-1 Draw at Leeds

 Football - Premier League - Leeds United v Manchester United - Elland Road, Leeds, Britain - January 4, 2026 Manchester United's Matheus Cunha celebrates scoring their first goal. (Reuters)
Football - Premier League - Leeds United v Manchester United - Elland Road, Leeds, Britain - January 4, 2026 Manchester United's Matheus Cunha celebrates scoring their first goal. (Reuters)

Manchester United snatched a 1-1 draw at Leeds United on Sunday after Matheus Cunha cancelled out Brenden Aaronson's opener in a frantic three-minute spell that epitomized a chaotic Premier League encounter.

The Brazilian forward shouldered the creative burden for United with several key players missing, proving a constant menace before silencing the raucous Elland Road crowd with his second-half equalizer. The draw between the two age-old rivals lifted the visitors provisionally to fifth place with 31 points while Leeds remain 16th on 22 points.

"We know how big this game is for everyone. But it's good to have a point here also," Cunha told TNT Sports.

"It was so hard. We know what to expect, what to bring to the ‌game. They try ‌to do everything to win."

SCRAPPY FIRST HALF

Leeds set an aggressive ‌tone ⁠early in a ‌scrappy first half that produced few clear chances despite the intensity.

United thought they had drawn first blood when Cunha volleyed home from range, only for the goal to be chalked off for offside in the build-up.

The home side nearly broke the deadlock in the 35th minute when in-form striker Dominic Calvert-Lewin's glancing header from a cross struck the far post with United keeper Senne Lammens beaten.

At the other end, Leny Yoro's header forced a fine reflex save from Leeds keeper Lucas Perri as ⁠the teams went into the break goalless.

Leeds finally found their breakthrough just after the hour mark when Pascal Struijk played Aaronson ‌through behind United's defense.

The American sprinted past an unsuspecting Ayden ‍Heaven before beating Lammens to send Elland Road ‍into raptures, but their celebrations were short-lived.

ZIRKZEE MAKES INSTANT IMPACT

United substitute Joshua Zirkzee made an ‍instant impact moments after entering the fray, setting Cunha through on goal and the Brazilian slipped his shot past Perri to level the score, silencing the home crowd in the 65th minute.

The drama continued as both sides pressed for a winner. Noah Okafor nearly restored Leeds' lead with an acrobatic overhead kick from a set-piece, but Lammens produced a fine save to deny the Swiss forward.

Cunha himself hit the post when he tried to curl home what would ⁠have been the winner while Zirkzee nearly set up another goal, only for Benjamin Sesko to fire it wide.

"Overall, if you see the game we had more control. We created more chances, we controlled well," United manager Ruben Amorim told BBC.

"So, if you look at the game you feel the frustration that we had the chance to win. It is a tough match in tough conditions."

Leeds substitute Joel Piroe nearly snatched victory for the home side when put through on goal, but the Dutchman's first-time curling effort sailed over the bar as both teams settled for a point in an entertaining Yorkshire thriller.

"If you play Manchester United as a newly-promoted side it's always a good point," Leeds boss Daniel Farke said.

"We were a bit tired today, nevertheless we found a way. We forced ‌an opener and would have taken all three points, so for that I'm a bit disappointed. But if I calm down I have to say it's a fair point."


Barca Boss Flick Hails Garcia After Goalkeeper Stars Against Former Club

 Barcelona's Spanish goalkeeper #13 Joan Garcia jumps to make a save during the Spanish League football match between RCD Espanyol and FC Barcelona at RCDE Stadium in Cornella de Llobregat on January 3, 2026. (AFP)
Barcelona's Spanish goalkeeper #13 Joan Garcia jumps to make a save during the Spanish League football match between RCD Espanyol and FC Barcelona at RCDE Stadium in Cornella de Llobregat on January 3, 2026. (AFP)
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Barca Boss Flick Hails Garcia After Goalkeeper Stars Against Former Club

 Barcelona's Spanish goalkeeper #13 Joan Garcia jumps to make a save during the Spanish League football match between RCD Espanyol and FC Barcelona at RCDE Stadium in Cornella de Llobregat on January 3, 2026. (AFP)
Barcelona's Spanish goalkeeper #13 Joan Garcia jumps to make a save during the Spanish League football match between RCD Espanyol and FC Barcelona at RCDE Stadium in Cornella de Llobregat on January 3, 2026. (AFP)

Barcelona coach Hansi Flick hailed Joan Garcia as one of the best goalkeepers in the world after the former Espanyol player delivered a decisive performance against his old club in a Catalan derby on Saturday.

Garcia was instrumental in Barcelona's 2-0 victory, producing a series of outstanding saves, with the league leaders extending their lead at the top of the LaLiga standings to 49 points.

"The first thing I have to do is thank Joan Garcia," Flick told reporters. "He is one of the best goalkeepers in the world. We suffered, ‌but we ‌took the three points and that is ‌the ⁠message we ‌send to LaLiga."

Flick praised the goalkeeper's composure, particularly given the hostile reception he faced on his return to the RCDE Stadium, where he had previously come through the ranks.

"Fantastic," the German manager said when asked about Garcia's mental strength. "I think he will not forget what he lived here, because he played for Espanyol ⁠and they gave him his opportunity. Now he plays for us, and he ‌was one of the reasons for the ‍win."

Garcia was jeered from the ‍warm-up, with banners aimed at him displayed in the ‍stands, including images of rats and mock banknotes bearing his face. Flick said the 24-year-old appeared unaffected before kickoff.

"Of course I spoke with him," Flick said. "I saw him calm, as always. Focused, convinced. The great teams have the best goalkeepers, and he is one of them."

Espanyol coach Manolo Gonzalez, whose side ⁠created several clear chances but failed to score, declined to discuss Garcia's performance.

"I'm not going to talk about Joan," he said. "Whatever I say will be twisted. I don't want to go into that.

"We were very close to winning and it slipped away... today we should have won."

Turning his attention to the Super Cup, Flick added that the victory would give his side a morale boost ahead of Wednesday's clash with Athletic Bilbao.

"It's not easy after the Christmas break to play this match and go ‌straight into the Super Cup," the German said. "But this victory will give us confidence."