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Aston University Womens »
University Of Aston Rec, Birmingham Rd, Walsall
Adult Female
Aston Villa Disability Womens »
Adult Female
Burnt Round The Edges »
Birmingham
Adult Female
Continental Star Women »
Adult Female
Crusaders Ladies »
Rowheath Playing Fields, Heath Road, Birmingham
Adult Female
Halas Hawks Ladies »
Adult Female
Hopwood Star Ladies »
Eldorado Close, Studley, Warwickshire
Adult Female
Ladies United »
Brunel Road, Oldbury, West Midlands
Adult Female
Newman University College Womens »
Rowheath Playing Fields, Heath Road, Birmingham
Adult Female
On The Ball »
Birmingham, Birmingham
Adult Female
Rea Valley Rovers »
Wheelers Lane, Kings Heath, Birmingham
Adult Female
Redditch Ladies »
Birmingham Road, Redditch, Worcestershire
Adult Female
Redditch United Womens »
Bilsmore Green, Solihull, Birmingham
Adult Female
Studley Womens »
Eldorado Close, Studley, Warwickshire
Adult Female
Team United Bham Futsal Women »
Adult Female
University Of Birmingham Womens »
Birmingham
Adult Female
West Midlands Police Ladies »
Tally Ho! Pershore Road, Edgbaston, Birmingham
Adult Female

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Football News

» 16 players could miss Chelsea vs Man Utd as Enzo Maresca faces major problem in attack
Europa League finalists Manchester United travel to Chelsea for a Premier League meeting on Friday night and both teams will be without some key first-team players
» Arsenal decide against repeating transfer tactic that left rivals furious
Arsenal are in the market for a number of reinforcements after coming up short in the title race and are already closing in on a deal for Real Sociedad midfielder Martin Zubimendi
» Liverpool could offer Florian Wirtz perfect shirt number thanks to Darwin Nunez decision
Liverpool are one of a number of clubs showing interest in signing Florian Wirtz from Bayer Leverkusen, with the Reds able to offer one small sweetener in what's expected to be a tough transfer battle
» Erling Haaland makes feelings clear on 'ridiculous' problem about to hit Man City
Manchester City have endured a very difficult season having passed their Premier League title to Liverpool and things could be set to get worse for them with a huge issue on the horizon
» Managing Arsenal as midfield reunion secured and Viktor Gyokeres decision made
Arsenal are on course to finish at least 15 points shy of last season's tally and manager Mikel Arteta has some important decisions to make going into the summer window
» Man Utd ready to take £60m hit on Marcus Rashford in latest transfer blunder
Manchester United valued Marcus Rashford at £100m last summer but could now see him depart 12 months on for less than half of that with Aston Villa keen on his permanent signing
» Liverpool 'hold transfer talks' over rarely seen Chelsea star and join three-club battle
Arne Slot and Liverpool are not resting on their laurels after winning the Premier League title with work already ongoing behind the scenes ahead of the summer transfer window
» Everton legend admits one regret ahead of Goodison Park farewell
This weekend's clash with Southampton will be the final men's match at the stadium before they move to their new ground
» Incoming Liverpool transfer makes feelings clear over Reds signing Florian Wirtz
Liverpool met Florian Wirtz for talks earlier this week but the Bayer Leverkusen star won't be the only new face at Anfield if he joins in the summer transfer window
» Crystal Palace hero Jason Puncheon on FA Cup final goal and that famous celebration
EXCLUSIVE: Eagles legend Jason Puncheon netted against Manchester United in 2016 FA Cup Final at Wembley to see Alan Pardew do his dad dance on the famous touchline
» Man City legend disagrees with Erling Haaland verdict ahead of FA Cup final
Manchester City forward Erling Haaland claimed lifting the trophy at Wembley on Saturday will not make up for their disappointing campaign
» Chelsea offer biggest hint on transfer plan which will '100 per cent' help struggling star
Chelsea boss Enzo Maresca wants to bring in a striker to provide competition for Nicolas Jackson - and believes that would ultimately make the Colombian a better player
» Crystal Palace can provide crowning glory to forgettable season - and they deserve it
With the Premier League fizzling out, Oliver Glasner's side have the chance to write a thrilling final chapter to the domestic football campaign by beating favourites Manchester City in the FA Cup Final
» Jonathan David hands transfer boost to Man Utd as Lille star confirms summer plans
Lille striker Jonathan David will leave the French club on a free transfer when his contract expires next month, giving Manchester United the opportunity to sign him on the cheap
» David Beckham and Victoria close in on King Charles as net worth soars to new heights
David and Victoria Beckham are now just £140million shy of King Charles III in terms of net worth, after a whirlwind 2024 saw their bank balance grow by a staggering total of at least £45m
» Sir Jim Ratcliffe loses £6.5billion of total wealth in staggering blow for Man Utd
If an utterly dismal campaign from Manchester United wasn't enough to leave Sir Jim Ratcliffe in a gloomy mood, the British billionaire's huge net worth loss certainly would
» Ryan Reynolds's brutal transfer decision as Wrexham star leaves club 'not by choice'
Wrexham have shown how ruthless they're prepared to be with Steven Fletcher allowed to leave following promotion - despite the veteran frontman admitting he wanted to remain
» How to watch Chelsea vs Man Utd: TV channel, live stream, kick-off time
Chelsea play host to Manchester United on Friday evening in the penultimate round of 2024/25 Premier League fixtures - with three points vital for both sides for incredibly differing reasons
» Man Utd and Spurs' rearranged Premier League games break promise made by FA
Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur are in Premier League action on Friday to allow both equal rest before next week's Europa League final but the FA had previously said games would not be scheduled before Cup final
» Crystal Palace have to cash in with FA Cup win before potential summer sales
Crystal Palace have a great chance to win a first ever trophy against Manchester City before the risk of losing stars and their manager this summer
» Crystal Palace have to cash in with FA Cup win before potential summer sales
Crystal Palace have a great chance to win a first ever trophy against Manchester City before the risk of losing stars and their manager this summer
» Transfer news LIVE: Arsenal's two-man striker shortlist, Liverpool's Frimpong move, Man Utd latest
This summer's transfer window will allow Arsenal to finally remedy their striker issues with players identified whilst Liverpool press forward with their plans to land Jeremie Frimpong
» Liverpool transfer news: Jeremie Frimpong clause to be triggered as star gets green light to quit
Liverpool are already stepping up their search for new recruits ahead of the summer transfer window as Arne Slot and Co prepare to toast their title win next weekend
» Arsenal transfer news: Viktor Gyokeres makes preference clear as Martin Zubimendi doubts emerge
Arsenal are preparing for a bumper summer transfer window, with Mikel Arteta desperate to bring in a new striker as the pursuit of Viktor Gyokeres kicks up a gear
From

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» Infantino’s Trump trip causes Fifa walkouts; FA Cup finals and more: football – live

Scottish Premiership: Celtic forward Daizen Maeda has been recognised as the league’s player of the season. His 33 goals from 49 games in all competitions – including 16 in the league – propelled the club to a double that could yet become a treble. The Hoops face Aberdeen in the Scottish Cup final next Saturday. Maeda, who also has 12 assists, has already won Celtic’s own player of the year award and PFA Scotland’s player of the year.

Before then, it’s Trophy Day at Celtic Park tomorrow (12.30pm KO), as the side celebrate another Premiership title as they host St Mirren.

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» Everton fans on the end of a Goodison era: ‘I’ll be thinking about my dad, my brothers, my son’

As ‘The Grand Old Lady’ prepares to host its last men’s match, Everton fans reveal what the ground means to them

An era lasting 133 years comes to an end this Sunday as Everton’s men’s team play their final game at Goodison Park. In 1892 the team left their former home at Anfield – which Liverpool FC adopted soon after – upping sticks due to an argument over rent, to set up a new home, a short walk across Stanley Park. Goodison Park became the first major football venue built in England and since then no other English football ground has staged more top-level men’s matches.

But it seems the impending bulldozers have performed a welcome U-turn – a deal to have the women’s team playing there has just been announced. Despite the US owners confirming the ground will become the country’s first major stadium to be dedicated to a women’s team, everyone knows it won’t be quite the same place. It seems like there will have to be structural changes including the taking out of seats in the top decks to reduce the capacity. Perhaps Everton will also turn Goodison into some sort of museum, where in 20 or 30 years people will still be wandering in, scratching their heads at the way football used to be watched.

An aerial view of Goodison Park, circa 1965, and flags commemorating the stadium on sale outside the ground in 2025.

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» ‘If it had been a film, we’d have won’: former Palace finalists share Cup memories

Geoff Thomas, Alan Smith and Pape Souaré recall their Wembley experiences and hope Palace finally go one better

Palace 3-3 Manchester United (aet); replay: Palace 0-1 United

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» ‘We want to push for more’: a Chelsea treble would not be enough for Catarina Macario

Winning Sunday’s FA Cup final after an unbeaten WSL season would mean a domestic clean sweep but US international really wants a Champions League

It is a testament to the standard set at Chelsea that an unbeaten Women’s Super League season, a League Cup win and, should they triumph over Manchester United at Wembley in the Women’s FA Cup final on Sunday, a domestic treble will still not leave them satisfied.

“That’s what makes this environment and this team so special,” says Catarina Macario, who was viewed as so prodigious a talent that the London side signed her in June 2023 from Lyon even though she was yet to return from an anterior cruciate ligament injury. “We’re never satisfied with just winning, we want to be dominant in how we play and there’s definitely room for improvement in that. That’s something that we have to take into next season and know that this is what we need to work even harder on to be able to achieve every single one of our goals.”

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» Premier League and FA Cup final: 10 things to look out for this weekend

Goodbyes to Goodison and Vardy, Palace and City brace for Wembley and the return of Kai Havertz

Aston Villa could not conceal their anger after their game at home to Tottenham was brought forward 48 hours. Villa’s director of football operations, Damian Vidagany, said shifting the game from Sunday to Friday was “clear prejudice” against the club and Villa objected to Spurs’s request for it to be moved to aid their preparations for Wednesday’s Europa League final. Villa were also privately perplexed at Bournemouth’s game with Manchester City being rearranged for Tuesday, after Saturday’s FA Cup final, which is guaranteed to have implications on whether eighth place qualifies for the Europa Conference League. The flipside to all of this is Villa can get on the front foot, kicking off 45 minutes before Chelsea entertain Manchester United and two days before Nottingham Forest head to West Ham and Arsenal host Newcastle. Victory for Villa could hoist them as high as fourth before a final-day trip to Old Trafford and, psychologically, that could prove a knockout blow. Ben Fisher

Aston Villa v Tottenham, Premier League, Friday 7.30pm (all times BST)

Chelsea v Manchester United, Premier League, Friday 8.15pm

Crystal Palace v Manchester City, FA Cup final, Saturday 4.30pm

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» Barcelona crowned La Liga champions after victory over 10-man Espanyol
  • Barça’s 28th title caps fine debut season for Hansi Flick
  • Lamine Yamal scores stunner in 2-0 win over local rivals

The day the league title race began, Wojciech Szczesny was sitting on the beach in Marbella, lighting up a cigarette, enjoying his retirement; the day it ended nine months on, he was on the pitch at the RCDE Stadium, 1,000km north, celebrating alongside the friends old and new with whom he had just become a champion again. At 35, the Polish goalkeeper had been convinced to come out of retirement for one last job, and what a job it was, a season he hadn’t even expected to play ending with a league and cup double after a 2-0 win at local rivals Espanyol.

He was joined at Barcelona by a stellar cast, a whole new generation that includes a kid 17 years and three months his junior – a teenager at the other end of a career that might yet be one of the best there has ever been.

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» Maresca seeks mood swing and tells Chelsea players to ‘take responsibility’
  • Team fighting for top five and Conference League trophy
  • Maresca: ‘Show desire to bring club where it has to be’

Enzo Maresca has urged Chelsea’s players to take responsibility in the season’s closing weeks, with the club fighting for a top-five finish in the Premier League and preparing for the Conference League final.

Fifth-placed Chelsea meet Manchester United at Stamford Bridge on Friday night in their penultimate league fixture before a trip to Nottingham Forest, another side battling for Champions League qualification, on Sunday week.

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» Hull sack head coach Rubén Sellés despite avoiding drop
  • Club escaped Championship relegation on final day
  • Spaniard won nine of 27 league games in charge

Hull have sacked their head coach, Rubén Sellés, after less than six months in charge.

The club escaped Championship relegation on the final day of the season on goal difference, having been bottom when Sellés was appointed in December. The 41-year-old Spaniard is the third manager sacked by the Hull owner, Acun Ilicali, in the past 12 months and the club now begin their search for a fifth permanent coach since the Turkish media executive took control in early 2022.

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» Fantasy Premier League: a compelling refuge of fatalism and black humour | Paul MacInnes

In a game that now takes itself too seriously, FPL evokes the fun, pain and obsessiveness that once underpinned fan culture

Only two weeks to go. That’s the mantra. Two more weeks to endure the familiar trauma of logging on to the fantasy football app, picking a team, celebrating the wise decisions that have led you to create an unbeatable unit, watching the weekend’s football disabuse you of this notion, then repeating the whole thing again.

It’s supposed to be a game, but Fantasy Premier League (FPL) is more like a lifestyle. Or a second job. Or even exactly like being a professional footballer: the focus, determination and relentless commitment should really be rewarded with a weekly salary, preferably in the five figures. But no, instead we have to make do with a brief appearance of a green arrow next to our team name or, more likely, a red one.

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» ‘Like a piece of a past life’: Shakhtar’s cup final win offers Ukraine hope

Final against Dynamo Kyiv had edge, flares and burning Russian flags but some of the enmity has gone; as one fan says: ‘Aggression must stay in the war zone’

Valeriy Bondar vaults a perfunctory metal fence, is handed a flare from somewhere in the melee and waves it around in the night sky. Shakhtar Donetsk have won the Ukrainian Cup, finally beating Dynamo Kyiv on penalties: light and smoke fill the air in Polissya Stadion’s south-west corner but there is something else, too. A trickle of supporters have been allowed back into many of the country’s arenas since February 2024 but more than 5,000 are packed in this time and the scenes are redolent of a different era. There has been no occasion quite like this on Ukraine’s soil for well over three years.

Fireworks have been a theme all day. Ninety minutes before kick-off in Zhytomyr several dozen Shakhtar ultras from different groups convene on a footbridge that dramatically spans the River Teteriv, towards the outskirts of this neat provincial city, and march towards the ground in a pyrotechnic haze. “It’s the first time in years that we’ve all been together in numbers like this,” says one of them, Taras, whose organisation sends equipment to soldiers at the front. About 70% of those present on the bridge are in active service, he estimates.

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» Bologna’s unlikely Coppa Italia triumph ends long wait for silverware

Dan Ndoye’s goal secures a 1-0 win over Milan and sparks scenes of joy in the Piazza Maggiore once again

Vincenzo Italiano knew there was a little bit of poison in the chalice offered to him last summer but accepted it anyway. The opportunity to manage Bologna was a chance to lead a Champions League team for the first time in his career. It was also an invitation to become the public face of a project that had nowhere to go but backwards.

What could he possibly do to improve on the work of the previous manager, Thiago Motta, who led Bologna back into Europe’s top club competition for the first time in 60 years? Italiano would not even have the same group of players to work with. Joshua Zirkzee, the top scorer, was on his way to Manchester United and the newly capped Italy defender Riccardo Calafiori to Arsenal. Lewis Ferguson would be out for months with a cruciate ligament tear.

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» ‘Bittersweet’: plaque unveiled for black footballer whose England call-up was rescinded

It will be a day of mixed emotions for family of late, great Jack Leslie when ceremony is held in Plymouth

It will be a day of mixed emotions for the family of the late, great Jack Leslie.

There is pride at the unveiling of a plaque on the Devon house in which he lived while becoming the first black player to captain an English football league team. But sadness too, because it takes place 100 years after his call-up for England was rescinded because of his colour.

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» Matty Godden’s late strike fires Charlton past Wycombe and into playoff final

Matty Godden’s late strike sent Charlton through to the League One playoff final after a 1-0 win over Wycombe. Godden scrambled the only goal over the two legs after 171 minutes of attritional football to secure a Wembley date against Leyton Orient on 25 May. The Charlton manager, Nathan Jones, sank to his knees as fans invaded the pitch in emotional scenes after the final whistle.

Lloyd Jones had earlier missed a golden chance for Charlton, while Kayne Ramsay made two stunning blocks to deny Wycombe. But Lloyd Jones made amends by setting up Godden to fire Charlton to within one match of a return to the Championship, five years after they were relegated.

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» Marcus Rashford could make £40m move to one of Aston Villa’s rivals
  • No clause in loan deal that stops other clubs buying him
  • Striker eager to join Champions League side

Marcus Rashford could move for £40m to a team other than Aston Villa should Manchester United receive a bid of this value despite the Midlands club having an option to buy him for that sum.

Rashford signed for Villa on loan in January and it is understood there is no clause in their agreement with United that prevents other clubs from buying him for the same price if the parent club and forward agree to the move.

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» Manchester City and PSG to face no action over alleged breaches of EU competition law
  • La Liga complained about state aid to European Commission
  • Submission reportedly provided insufficient evidence

Manchester City and Paris Saint-Germain will face no action from the European Commission after allegations they breached EU competition law. La Liga’s president, Javier Tebas, had filed complaints about the clubs’ alleged use of state resources under the EU’s foreign subsidies regulation.

Tebas alleged in his submission in July 2023 that City and PSG receive resources under non-market conditions from the governments of Abu Dhabi and Qatar respectively, disrupting markets by enabling them to spend more than their rivals on players and coaches, and that the clubs obtained sponsorship income at levels that did not align with fair market value. The clubs denied the allegations and pointed to their accounts as proof of no wrongdoing. They also claimed Tebas had a history of attacking them owing to envy of their success and financial resources.

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» Liverpool poised to trigger Jeremie Frimpong’s €35m Leverkusen release clause
  • Dutch international came through Manchester City ranks
  • Trent Alexander-Arnold exit leaves right-back gap

Liverpool are set to trigger Jeremie Frimpong’s €35m (£29.5m) release clause after contacting Bayer Leverkusen and holding talks with the defender as they seek a replacement for Trent Alexander-Arnold.

The Netherlands international has been of interest to his compatriot Arne Slot for a lengthy period. Frimpong was born in Amsterdam but spent much of his childhood in Manchester and came through the ranks at Manchester City before moving to Celtic as a teenager. Under Uefa regulations, he would count as a homegrown player in England.

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» International soccer’s battle for talent goes global, even as the world fractures

The talent acquisition strategies of big and small nations alike has changed markedly in a chaotically deglobalizing world

Consider a World Cup qualifier that took place in late March in Sydney. An Australian team coached by the son of Croatian immigrants, with an attack led by a Scottish-born naturalized Australian and a second generation Sri Lankan Tamil-Australian, faced an Indonesian team in which all but one of the starting XI were born and raised in the Netherlands. Nurtured by the Dutch academy system and performing, in many cases, at a high level in club football throughout Europe and the US, these players qualified for Tim Garuda thanks to ancestral links to Indonesia, a former Dutch colony.

Indonesian footballing authorities have, for the past year or so, pursued an aggressive naturalization policy in a bid to qualify for the 2026 World Cup – a curious reversal of the extraction that the Dutch inflicted on Indonesia, a major source of agricultural and mineral wealth, through the 19th and 20th centuries. This policy of strength through Dutchification wasn’t much help on that night against Australia: Indonesia eventually lost 5-1. But the heavy defeat did nothing to dim the spirits of a boisterous majority-Indonesian crowd.

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» Going back to Guernsey: the quiet start that helped Maya Le Tissier make a noise

Manchester United’s captain, her dad and a youth team coach reminisce about the first steps of her career before Sunday’s FA Cup final against Chelsea at Wembley

Black and white jerseys hang from a washing line tied to a shipping container and, inside the adjacent clubhouse, a group of lads are sipping cold beers on a bank holiday Monday afternoon. This is St Martin’s AC, a quintessential community club hidden down the narrowest of side roads on the island of Guernsey. Hanging proudly in a frame above the club’s bar is a No 4 shirt bearing the name: “Le Tiss”.

As the Manchester United captain enters her old clubhouse to greet former teammates, they immediately exchange banter. Maya Le Tissier is back home among those who saw her grow up from a toddler kicking a ball around to a 23-year-old who will, on Sunday, lead her team out at Wembley.

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» Ismaïla Sarr: the bargain buy who has become Crystal Palace’s unsung hero

Senegal forward’s signing last summer was years in the making and his double helped fire Palace to the FA Cup final

Ismaïla Sarr hasn’t had many more memorable weeks. But most remarkable about his match-winning performance for Crystal Palace in the FA Cup semi-final against Aston Villa is that it came after his wife, Fatou, had given birth to twins a few days earlier. “It was a surprise – nobody knew,” said the manager Oliver Glasner after Palace’s thrilling victory at Wembley thanks to two goals from the Senegal forward.

Eberechi Eze said the BBC pundit Alan Shearer had awarded him player of the match “a bit prematurely” before Sarr’s second. “I’ll be giving this to him inside – he’s a top player and he’s helped us so much this season,” the England forward said.

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» Riots, royals and legends: Goodison Park firsts and memorable moments

Everton won the first derby they hosted, Dixie Dean set his goals record there and Pelé made World Cup history

Goodison Park is officially opened by Lord Kinnaird, president of the Football Association and the only man to have played in nine FA Cup finals. Everton directors had purchased Mere Green Field, as it was known, after a rent dispute with John Houlding, the club’s former president and landlord of their previous home of nine years – Anfield. The new stadium was built in three months by the Walton building company Kelly Brothers, and at a cost of about £3,500, with stands on three sides and a bank of cinders on the Goodison Road side. The turf came from Aintree.

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» Matt Ritchie: ‘My dream is coming to an end. You have to reinvent yourself’

The former Newcastle stalwart on his admiration for Eddie Howe, a brutal pre-season with Paolo Di Canio and a fairytale finish to his career captaining Portsmouth

It is not the first time Matt Ritchie has heard the line suggesting he should have been driving Newcastle’s open-top bus when the squad paraded the Carabao Cup before 300,000 supporters between St James’ Park and the Town Moor. “I’m not sure I could because I think it’s a different licence for commercial use,” he says, smiling, alluding to the LGV Category C one he obtained in the last of his eight seasons at the club.

There is no haulage sideline but rather he and his wife, Emma, who enjoys equestrian and showjumping, took the tests so they could drive a horsebox. “It is easy … you just have to take the corners a bit wider. I loved doing it because it was out of my comfort zone. The theory test was the hardest, hazard perception … there are tricks in there. It was like being a kid again: ‘I want to get this right.’”

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» ‘I don’t know why I got the trophy’: football’s unusual player-of-the-match awards | The Knowledge

Plus: hat-trick heroes who didn’t get a medal, shot-shy matchwinners and Jimmy Hill being caught off guard

  • Mail us with your questions and answers

“The Inter keeper Yann Sommer was named player of the match against Barcelona despite conceding three goals. He made some great saves so it wasn’t undeserved, but I wondered if there were other unusual PotM awards,” says John Barrow.

This season’s Champions League tie between Real Madrid and Atlético will be remembered for Julián Alvarez’s two-touch penalty being ruled out. Before that Alvarez had inspired Atlético to a 1-0 victory on the night that took the tie to a penalty shootout; he was Uefa’s player of the match. Nick Berry could have written a song about it.

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» Bicycle kick winner for Club Atlético Independiente against Independiente Rivadavia – video

Santiago Montiel scored a dramatic goal from outside of the area to seal a 1-0 win for Club Atlético Independiente against Independiente Rivadavia.

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» Raphinha, the man who almost left, leads Barcelona to verge of dream title | Sid Lowe

Captain has swapped rejection for affection and added to a season of unbelievable highs in thrilling clásico

Barcelona couldn’t get the player they wanted so they just had to settle for the best. At the end of another wild, joyous and exhausting afternoon, another clásico won their way, the captain called them all into the middle of Montjuïc. And where Raphael Dias Belloli calls, his teammates follow, all the way to the title. Which was why, an arm raised, a wrist wrapped in a blue bandage lifted above the crowd like a symbol of strength, the Brazilian who has been better than anyone anywhere, now gathered them round and led them into a lap of honour together. It was time to give thanks; time to get thanks, too.

They had earned it. Real Madrid, who were supposed to be invincible, had been beaten again. Sunday was the fourth time time this season, a record unmatched in 125 years: four victories in as many cities, Barcelona scoring four goals to go with the three, five and four in the previous clásicos, a circle closed. The first was the statement that started it all, a declaration of intent at the Bernabéu; the second won the Super Cup in Saudi Arabia; the third brought the Copa del Rey back from Seville; now they had virtually secured the league, a 4-3 win taking them seven points clear with nine left, double almost done.

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» Napoli fail to make ‘bonus’ game pay as uncertainty swirls at top of Serie A | Nicky Bandini

An astonishing array of outcomes remain possible with two games left in tantalisingly unpredictable end to season

Antonio Conte characterised it as Napoli’s “bonus” game, a free swing, the mistake they could yet afford. A 2-2 draw at home to Genoa left a bitter taste, after having taken the lead in both halves, but this was no time to panic. “Before this we needed seven points to win the Scudetto,” said Conte. “We took one, so now we must win our last two games.”

It sounded so simple, put like that, but we had just been reminded of why it will not be. Genoa at home was supposed to be the most straightforward of Napoli’s remaining fixtures, against opponents with no objectives left to play for.

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» Still no Sam Kerr as Matildas name under-strength squad for Argentina friendlies
  • Australia skipper not included among 23 players to face world No 33
  • New-look team to play two matches in Melbourne and Canberra

The long wait for Sam Kerr’s return to competitive football continues with the Matildas skipper missing from Australia’s squad for upcoming friendlies against Argentina.

Kerr is into a 16th month of recuperation after undergoing surgery on a ruptured anterior cruciate ligament sustained in January 2024, and while she tentatively returned to the training field at her club Chelsea towards the end of the Women’s Super League season, she is not yet deemed ready for a recall to the national set up.

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» Awoniyi’s injury should lead to a rethink over flawed offside protocol | Jacob Steinberg

Assistant referees need more scope to use their common sense as opposed to simply relying on VAR

It was an accident waiting to happen. Anyone with an ounce of common sense could see the potential for the International Football Association Board’s offside protocols in the era of the video assistant referee (VAR) system to cause serious injury. Needless collisions are inexcusable. It should not have been allowed to reach the point where we are wondering whether Nottingham Forest’s Taiwo Awoniyi being placed in an induced coma will act as a red flag for the authorities.

Injuries happen. What is not acceptable is the safety of players being compromised as a result of technology warping the game and officials being instructed not to flag for offside if a goalscoring opportunity is on the cards. Thankfully, he was reported to have woken from his coma on Wednesday evening.

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» Dropping Alexander-Arnold following boos may be most palatable option for Slot | Andy Hunter

Stormy Anfield reaction to news of full-back’s exit on a free gives Liverpool coach a choice to make as trophy lift nears

A large portion of Liverpool’s match‑going support delivered a damning verdict on Trent Alexander-Arnold’s career choice on Sunday and, in one short sentence, Virgil van Dijk explained perfectly why there is no need for an encore when the champions return to Anfield to collect the Premier League trophy on 25 May. “There’s a lot more players that also deserve an amazing day,” the Liverpool captain said. There is no division or dissent on that score.

Arsenal’s visit to Anfield should also have been one long celebration, as well as an opportunity to demonstrate the gulf between the Premier League’s first and second-placed teams this season. The first half played out exactly that way. Arsenal may have produced a reaction that increased Mikel Arteta’s anger before Alexander‑Arnold’s introduction – “I hate reaction, I like action” – but the party was over as soon as the Real Madrid‑bound defender replaced Conor Bradley in the 67th minute.

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» Antonio Conte is a title machine but the Awkward One leaves Napoli’s fans cold | Jonathan Wilson

Murals of McTominay in Naples? Don’t rule that out with the volatile manager who never stays long despite serial success

There’s always a Tottenham exception. Since leaving Siena in 2011, since he got his first break with a club that had a realistic chance of winning trophies, Antonio Conte has won league titles with Juventus, Chelsea and Inter. Going into Sunday’s matches, with three games remaining, his Napoli lead Inter by three points. In a decade and a half he has won a trophy with every club he has managed, apart from Tottenham.

Maybe Tottenham simply aren’t a club that had a realistic chance of winning trophies. Certainly it’s not as familiar to them as it is to Juventus, Chelsea and Inter. Napoli were Serie A title winners the season before last. Conte led Tottenham for 17 months and although he has the fifth-best win record of any Spurs manager, although he took them to fourth in his first season, having replaced Nuno Espírito Santo in the November, and although they were fourth when he left in March 2023, by the end the situation was so toxic as to be unsustainable.

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» Wenger wants to fix VAR offsides but broken handball rule is the real problem | Max Rushden

While Fifa’s chief of global development focuses on offside toes and noses, VAR needs a helping hand somewhere else

Five years ago, Fifa’s chief of global development, Arsène Wenger, outlined his bold plans to change the offside law.

“The most difficult [issue] that people have [with VAR] is the offside rule,” he said. “You have had offsides by a fraction of a centimetre, literally by a nose. It is the time to do this quickly.

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» David Squires on … the many memories of Everton’s Goodison Park

Our cartoonist details some notable moments from the 133-year history of one of Britain’s most iconic stadiums

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» Colin Harvey: ‘How do you go from being a kid watching Everton to having a statue?’

Elegant player and legendary coach looks back on some of his finest moments at ‘iconic’ Goodison Park

Standing outside a pawnbrokers on Goodison Road, waiting for his dad to emerge through the crowd after the match, a young Colin Harvey could not have imagined what lay in front of him. Standing in the same place today, the great Evertonian would face a statue of himself immortalised alongside fellow members of “The Holy Trinity”, Howard Kendall and Alan Ball. Time has not diminished the 80-year-old’s wonder at his life and legacy at Goodison Park.

“How do you go from being a kid watching Everton from the Boys’ Pen to having a statue on Goodison Road?” he says, with genuine astonishment. “If someone had presented me back then with a history of my life in football I’d have said: ‘Don’t be silly, nothing like that is ever going to happen to me.’ But it did. When I was told the statue was going to be made it was one of my proudest moments. I’ve had a fantastic football life and it amazes me when I look back on it.”

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» Harry Kane: ‘It’s nice to be on the other side … I’ve seen my fair share of other teams lifting trophies’

Having waited so long to win his first title, England striker reflects on his journey amid beer-soaked revelry in Munich

It is late in Munich, approaching midnight, when Harry Kane appears. The nondescript, windowless TV interview room below the Allianz Arena could not be more of a contrast to the giddy, beer-soaked, firework-lit riot of celebration going on outside as Bayern Munich savour a 34th league title. There’s also something different about Kane, and it’s not just the gold medal.

The Kane visage that usually accompanies him at the end of a cup final, that little-boy-lost look of overwhelming disappointment, is gone. You cannot help but notice the broad grin, the relaxed body language and the tactile ease in the greeting, a man intoxicated by euphoria. “It’s been a long night,” he says, beaming. “And it’s just the beginning.”

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» ‘Proving people wrong’: how Central Coast Mariners reached A-League Women grand final

Emily Husband, one of only two female coaches in the league, can create history against Melbourne Victory on Sunday

The Central Coast Mariners weren’t supposed to crash the A-League Women grand final, but they face Melbourne Victory at AAMI Park on Sunday.

Two years ago they didn’t even exist. The Mariners’ women’s programme was in its 13th year of inactivity after being mothballed for financial reasons (serious concerns over the ever-impecunious club’s viability still linger). On the field, they made a celebrated return for the 2023–24 season, riding the wave of momentum born from Australia hosting the 2023 Women’s World Cup to stun Victory in an elimination final, before running into the eventual champions Sydney FC in the semi-finals.

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» Two decades of the Glazers: a debt of morals at United with football paying the bill

Fans protested against the leveraged takeover but were offered little support and the toxicity has had a lasting impact

The first time the Glazer family visited Old Trafford, in June 2005, they paid a visit to the megastore. Outside, hundreds of furious Manchester United fans turned up with banners and placards, shouted slogans such as “Die Glazer die”, and a few clashed with police. Inside, the Glazers were doing a spot of – and here we must stretch the word to its broadest possible definition – shopping.

For Joel, Avram and Bryan had no intention of doing anything quite as undignified as parting with their own cash. Instead they swarmed the aisles, scooped up armfuls of replica shirts and merchandise, which shop staff dutifully ran through the tills and bagged up. When the time came to leave, the Glazers simply took the bags and left. This was, after all, all their own property, theirs to take and use as they pleased. And as a metaphor for how they intended to run Manchester United over the next 20 years, it is about as good as any.

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» Football Daily | Ajax and a potential title choke of apocalyptic proportions

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Denied a nail-biting denouement by the Best League In The World™, where the champions and relegated sides were all but mathematically confirmed about 15 matches ago, more than a few Premier League observers have spent the past couple of weeks glancing towards the Netherlands while exhibiting hitherto unprecedented symptoms of a malaise Football Daily is diagnosing as Eredivisie Envy. For so long the neglected cousin of Europe’s Big Five, the Dutch top flight is largely left to its own devices while its English, Spanish, German, Italian and French relatives chew the fat at European football’s Big Boy table, only diverting their attention towards the low countries when it comes to hoovering up emerging talent. On Wednesday, however, the pancake-flat land of tulips, wooden footwear and uncomfortably forthright conversation stole continental headlines as European heavyweights Ajax completed their latest pratfall en route to what could be one of the most apocalyptic chokes in football history.

How do you go from being a kid watching Everton from the Boys’ Pen to having a statue on Goodison Road? If someone had presented me back then with a history of my life, I’d have said: ‘Don’t be silly, nothing like that is ever going to happen to me.’ But it did. When I was told the statue was going to be made it was one of my proudest moments. I’ve had a fantastic football life and it amazes me when I look back on it” – Colin Harvey gets his chat on with Andy Hunter in an interview so heartwarming even your Daily was glowing inside.

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» Arsenal’s statistical victories only hide some very obvious flaws | Jonathan Wilson

Mikel Arteta has explanations for his team’s shortcomings that may hold water, but ultimately the Gunners simply couldn’t get it done when needed

The problem is that when the game doesn’t matter, other elements begin to take over. In other circumstances, Arsenal’s 2-2 draw at Liverpool on Sunday would have been an intriguing minor classic; but then, in other circumstances, it might not have gone like that. As it was, with the title won and Arsenal secure in the Champions League qualification slots, a clash between the top two became the stage for discussion of the booing of Trent Alexander-Arnold and a weird confected online fury about whether Myles Lewis-Skelly had applauded Liverpool with sufficient gusto in the guard of honour.

At least, from Arsenal’s point of view, the game followed the opposite pattern to the one with which we’ve become familiar. Arsenal have dropped 21 points from winning positions this season (Liverpool just 13), while Liverpool have gained 22 (Arsenal just 13). If they’d matched each other in those respects, Arsenal would be two points clear at the top of the league; that essentially is the difference between them.

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» How can a country that is hosting the World Cup have no sponsor for its top flight?

The Copa do Brasil is back after a nine-year break but there are concerns about Brazil’s top flight before a first World Cup in South America

After a nine-year hiatus, fans of Brazilian women’s football will once again be able to support their clubs in the Copa do Brasil. The cup will bring together 65 clubs from the three divisions of the national women’s football league, starting with a preliminary round on 21 May and concluding with the final in November. It is a return that has long been requested by the women’s football community in Brazil in order to expand the calendar for lower-division clubs and gives high-profile teams such as Flamengo, Corinthians and Santos another opportunity to compete for silverware.

However, all is not rosy on the Brazilian club scene only two years before Brazil are to host the Women’s World Cup for the first time. There have been a few years of growing sponsorship and visibility in the top tier, the Brasileirão A1, but this season has exposed the challenges facing the game.

This is an extract from our free weekly email, Moving the Goalposts. To get the full edition, visit this page and follow the instructions. Moving the Goalposts is back in to its twice-weekly format, delivered to your inboxes every Tuesday and Thursday.

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» ‘It means everything’: how Union Berlin Women completed epic journey to the top

Union captain Lisa Heiseler, who has been at the club since she was 13, talks about promotion to the Frauen-Bundesliga

“I can’t describe how I feel,” Lisa Heiseler says as she reflects on a momentous weekend for Union Berlin Women. Just three days after her side secured a historic promotion to the Frauen-Bundesliga, the captain is clearly still processing everything that has happened to her and her teammates.

27 April 2025 will be a date for ever etched in the memories of Union Berlin’s women’s team and their supporters. A 6-1 victory over Borussia Mönchengladbach in front of more than 14,000 jubilant fans at the Stadion An der Alte Försterei saw Ailien Poese’s side secure promotion with three games to spare, one that will see them play in the top echelon of German football for the first time and at the first time of asking.

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» Chelsea’s Invincibles and the big WSL report card – Women’s Football Weekly podcast

Faye Carruthers is joined by Suzy Wrack, Tom Garry and Chris Paouros to dissect a dramatic final WSL day

On the final Women’s Football Weekly of the WSL season, Chelsea cap off an unbeaten campaign with a last-gasp win, Arsenal edge Manchester United in a 4–3 thriller, and the final league table is locked in after 27 goals fly in across six games.

The panel assesses every team’s performance in the season, and Chris Paouros delivers her assessment in true school report style, covering everything from Chelsea’s relentless excellence, Arsenal’s attacking flair, Manchester City missing out on Europe, to Crystal Palace's relegation and Spurs and West Ham's underwhelming campaigns.

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» WSL 2024-25 season review: our writers’ best and worst

In a campaign notable for exciting imports and spectacular goals, there was consensus on the outstanding manager

Phallon Tullis-Joyce looked assured for Manchester United all season, unfazed by the Mary Earps-sized gloves she had to fill. Her command of the goal and her ability to make crucial saves propelled Manchester United up the table. With 13 clean sheets she shares the Golden Glove with Hannah Hampton. Xaymaca Awoyungbo

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» Champions League review: a journeyman hero, a crucial miss and a stone-cold classic

PSG and Inter will play for the crown at the end of the month but there were plenty of twists and turns before the finalists were decided

Inter

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