Barca Hoping Camp Nou Return Can Spark Liga Title Defense

(FILES) Barcelona supporters attend FC Barcelona open training session, the first at the Camp Nou stadium since the beginning of the construction works more than two years ago, on November 7, 2025 in Barcelona. (Photo by Josep LAGO / AFP)
(FILES) Barcelona supporters attend FC Barcelona open training session, the first at the Camp Nou stadium since the beginning of the construction works more than two years ago, on November 7, 2025 in Barcelona. (Photo by Josep LAGO / AFP)
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Barca Hoping Camp Nou Return Can Spark Liga Title Defense

(FILES) Barcelona supporters attend FC Barcelona open training session, the first at the Camp Nou stadium since the beginning of the construction works more than two years ago, on November 7, 2025 in Barcelona. (Photo by Josep LAGO / AFP)
(FILES) Barcelona supporters attend FC Barcelona open training session, the first at the Camp Nou stadium since the beginning of the construction works more than two years ago, on November 7, 2025 in Barcelona. (Photo by Josep LAGO / AFP)

Finally reopening Camp Nou is cause to celebrate for Barcelona but coach Hansi Flick will only be happy if they inaugurate their rebuilt stadium by kickstarting their La Liga title defense on Saturday.

The Catalan giants host Athletic Bilbao while trailing Real Madrid by three points after an inconsistent start to the campaign, below the level they were as they claimed a domestic treble last season.

With three international breaks disrupting the opening months, now Flick has the chance to knuckle down and find solutions to Barca's problems.

They have shipped 15 goals, more than nine of the 10 teams beneath them, while the attack has also struggled to ignite in the way it did in Flick's debut year.

Returning to their home is one of several reasons for Barca to believe the coming weeks will be positive.

They last played at Camp Nou in May 2023, with the stadium shut for two-and-a-half years.

Barca had hoped to reopen it in November 2024 but construction problems and other setbacks led to its delay, with the team playing in exile at the Olympic stadium.

"(Playing there) will definitely help us... for the club's future, it's very important, I congratulate everyone who has worked on it," said Flick.

In Barcelona's prior outing they beat Celta Vigo 4-2 in Galicia, with a wild first half giving way to a far more controlled second, which might indicate the direction his team need to take.

"The second half gives us confidence for the next matches and this is what we need," AFP quoted the coach as saying.

Flick hopes that confidence is what the team needs to be able to execute their high-line defense to perfection, as they did for a long period last term.

"I always think to say something about the experts, former players, former coaches, but I will not do it, (it makes) too much noise for us," said Flick, showing he has heard the criticism regularly aimed at him over Barca's defensive woes.

The club have failed to keep a clean sheet in any of the nine games they have played across all competitions since goalkeeper Joan Garcia was injured.

The stopper is poised to return against Athletic to help end that run.

Striker Robert Lewandowski netted a hat-trick against Celta and following a troubled start to the campaign because of injury his presence is a big boost.

The veteran has a nose for goal which his stand-in Ferran Torres cannot replicate, as well as offering good build-up connections for Barca's wingers.

Teen starlet Lamine Yamal is a doubt after he missed Spain's World Cup qualifiers following treatment on a long-running groin issue, while Raphinha is close to a return on the other flank.

Although Marcus Rashford has impressed during his loan from Manchester United, the Brazilian's intensity and work-rate has been missed in recent weeks.

One problem for Flick against Athletic is Frenkie de Jong's suspension while Pedri is out injured, denying the coach his first-choice pair of central midfielders. Marc Casado and Dani Olmo are likely to step in.

Whoever Flick selects will become part of the stadium's new history, 68 years after the previous iteration was opened in 1957.

Atletico Madrid's star summer signing is still finding his feet after an injury-hit start to the season. The winger's creativity could be key on Sunday to help Diego Simeone's side unlock the defense of a usually stingy Getafe.



Elina Svitolina Stays on Track with Another Win in Auckland

Tennis - Wimbledon - All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, London, Britain - July 11, 2023 Ukraine's Elina Svitolina reacts during her quarter final match against Poland's Iga Swiatek REUTERS/Toby Melville
Tennis - Wimbledon - All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, London, Britain - July 11, 2023 Ukraine's Elina Svitolina reacts during her quarter final match against Poland's Iga Swiatek REUTERS/Toby Melville
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Elina Svitolina Stays on Track with Another Win in Auckland

Tennis - Wimbledon - All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, London, Britain - July 11, 2023 Ukraine's Elina Svitolina reacts during her quarter final match against Poland's Iga Swiatek REUTERS/Toby Melville
Tennis - Wimbledon - All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, London, Britain - July 11, 2023 Ukraine's Elina Svitolina reacts during her quarter final match against Poland's Iga Swiatek REUTERS/Toby Melville

Top-seeded Elina Svitolina again relied on her “fighting spirit” Thursday, beating wild-card entry Katie Boulter 7-5, 6-4 to reach the quarterfinals of the WTA tournament in Auckland, New Zealand.

Both players struggled on serve in windy conditions on center court. There were nine service breaks in the match, which the No. 13-ranked Svitolina clinched on her third match point.

“Katie is a great fighter so I was expecting a tough match,” The Associated Press quoted Svitolina as saying. “She can strike the ball very well, as she did today, and it was not an easy match for us with the wind swirling around.”

Svitolina dropped her serve in the third game, immediately broke back but was broken again in the ninth. She won some exceptional clutch points to break Boulter again and take the first set.

Svitolina broke Boulter in the fourth game on the second set but immediately dropped serve. Both players had to work hard to hold in the sixth and seventh games before a series of three consecutive breaks which ended with Svitolina's second singles win in 2026.

“It definitely was very important to me to fight for every point and try to find my way through,” Svitolina said. "I was just pleased with the way I could handle the tough games.”

Svitolina ended her 2025 season in September when she took a break from the tour for mental health reasons.

The Ukrainian star won her opening match in Auckland 6-3, 6-1 over Varvara Gracheva.

“My fighting spirit, I would say it's back,” Svitolina said after that match. "And I would say it's nice to be refreshed and hungry again, to work hard, to face these tough moments.

“So the period of time at the end of the season that I took off, it really helped me to find again this spirit and fighting experience that I've been having for many years.”

The tournament in Auckland is an important tuneup event for the Australian Open, the season-opening major that starts in Melbourne on Jan. 18.


Sabalenka to Skip Events in 2026 to Prioritize her Health

Sabalenka to Skip Events in 2026 to Prioritize her Health
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Sabalenka to Skip Events in 2026 to Prioritize her Health

Sabalenka to Skip Events in 2026 to Prioritize her Health

Aryna Sabalenka expects to skip events again this year rather than put her health at risk over the course of an "insane" season, even though she knows she is likely to be sanctioned by the WTA Tour for doing so, the world number one said.

Top players are obliged to compete in all four Grand Slams, 10 WTA 1000 tournaments and six WTA 500 events under WTA rules, with the punishment for missing them ranging from rankings points deductions to fines, Reuters reported.

In 2025, Sabalenka competed in just three WTA 500 events - Brisbane, Stuttgart and Berlin - making her one of a number of high-ranked ⁠players, including world number two Iga Swiatek, to be docked ranking points.

Asked if she would change her plans for 2026, the four-times Grand Slam champion told reporters: "The season is definitely insane, and that's not good for all of us, as you see so many players getting injured ...

"The rules are quite tricky with mandatory events, but I'm still ⁠skipping a couple events in order to protect my body, because I struggled a lot last season," the Belarusian said after beating Sorana Cirstea at the Brisbane International.

"Even though the results were really consistent, some of the tournaments I had been playing completely sick or I've been really exhausted from overplaying. This season we will try to manage it a little bit better, even though they are going to fine me by the end of the season.

"But it's tricky to do that. You cannot skip 1000 events. It's ⁠really tricky, and I think that's insane what they do. I think they just follow their interests, but they're not focusing on protecting all of us."

The men's and women's circuits have faced criticism due to their 11-month seasons, and both tours came under fresh scrutiny during the "Asian swing" towards the end of last year with injuries piling up.

In September, the WTA told Reuters that athlete welfare is a top priority and that it had listened to views on the calendar, both through the players' council and their representatives on the WTA board, to improve the circuit structure in 2024 and boost compensation.


Tougher Test Awaits Anxious Hosts Morocco at Cup of Nations

 Morocco's Brahim Abdelkader Diaz, right, celebrates after scoring the opening goal during the Africa Cup of Nations round of 16 soccer match between Morocco and Tanzania in Rabat, Morocco, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026. (AP)
Morocco's Brahim Abdelkader Diaz, right, celebrates after scoring the opening goal during the Africa Cup of Nations round of 16 soccer match between Morocco and Tanzania in Rabat, Morocco, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026. (AP)
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Tougher Test Awaits Anxious Hosts Morocco at Cup of Nations

 Morocco's Brahim Abdelkader Diaz, right, celebrates after scoring the opening goal during the Africa Cup of Nations round of 16 soccer match between Morocco and Tanzania in Rabat, Morocco, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026. (AP)
Morocco's Brahim Abdelkader Diaz, right, celebrates after scoring the opening goal during the Africa Cup of Nations round of 16 soccer match between Morocco and Tanzania in Rabat, Morocco, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026. (AP)

Hosts Morocco can expect the first proper examination of their ability to go on and win the Africa Cup of Nations when they take on a feisty Cameroon in the quarter-finals at the weekend.

The top-ranked Moroccans were not stretched in the group phase of the tournament, where they finished top of the standings, nor in their last-16 clash against Tanzania on Sunday.

Yet they delivered only one convincing performance when they beat Zambia in their last of their group matches and against Cameroon in Rabat on Friday there will need to be a marked improvement if they are to advance towards ‌the target ‌of a first continental title in 50 years.

The ‌home ⁠side were ‌heavy pre-tournament favorites but have looked anxious and nervy at times, feeling the intense pressure and will be cautious of the threat that Cameroon pose.

"We will try to disrupt them," said Cameroon coach David Pagou, promising a physical battle.

The game will be one of the highlights of a blockbuster set of last-eight ties, with Algeria meeting Nigeria on Saturday and Egypt's clash ⁠against defending champions Ivory Coast later on the same day also eagerly anticipated.

Only Senegal, who ‌take on Mali in the first quarter-final in ‍Tangier on Friday, are expected to ‍ease through to the semi-finals, up against opponents who have made ‍it to the latter stages of the tournament without winning a game.

Mali have drawn four successive matches in Morocco, advancing on post-match penalties over Tunisia in the last 16 despite being down to 10 men for most of the match. Their fighting spirit is not expected to be enough to hold out against Senegal's attack, which has scored 10 ⁠goals at the tournament.

Algeria and Nigeria are the only teams to have won all four of their matches in Morocco and both have given strong indicators of their ability to take the title.

Ivory Coast were also in impressive form in the last 16 as they brushed aside Burkina Faso 3-0 on Tuesday and are set to reignite a Cup of Nations rivalry with Egypt, who are looking to give talisman Mohamed Salah international success to go along with his numerous achievements at club level with Liverpool.

"We'll simply try to impose our rhythm (of play) on Egypt," said Ivorian ‌coach Emerse Fae.

The quarter-final winners advance to the last four to be played in Rabat and Tangier on January 14.