Mbappe bolstering holders Madrid’s Champions League ambitions

Mbappe bolstering holders Madrid’s Champions League ambitions
Real Madrid's Kylian Mbappe celebrates scoring their first goal. (Reuters)
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Updated 18 September 2024
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Mbappe bolstering holders Madrid’s Champions League ambitions

Mbappe bolstering holders Madrid’s Champions League ambitions

MADRID: The format may be new, but few would bet against the winner staying the same.
As if record 15-time winners Real Madrid’s Champions League prospects were not great enough already, superstar striker Kylian Mbappe’s arrival makes Los Blancos the most daunting team in the competition.
German side Stuttgart have the honors of facing the reigning kings of Europe in the opening week of the competition, traveling to the Santiago Bernabeu on Tuesday.
Madrid defeated Borussia Dortmund in last season’s Wembley final to claim the trophy for the sixth time in the last 11 years.
Coach Carlo Ancelotti, the most decorated manager in the history of the tournament with five triumphs, has not yet found the perfect set-up to get Mbappe firing from open play, but few doubt he will.
The 25-year-old had arguably his best game for the club in the 2-0 win over Real Sociedad on Saturday in La Liga, threatening the Basque side with his pace and connecting well with Vinicius Junior in attack.
Mbappe scored, albeit from the penalty spot, and he is looking forward to his Champions League debut in Madrid’s resplendent white.
“It will be very important for me — as I said on the first day, I came to Madrid to live these type of nights,” explained the striker.
“I am very focused on what we have to do, the Champions League has changed a lot, it’s a new competition, and we have to win to start well.”
The new-look structure has thrown up ties for Madrid at home against Dortmund, in a rematch of last season’s showpiece, and away at Liverpool, whom they defeated in the 2022 final.
First come Stuttgart, continuing a streak of German opponents for Los Blancos, after they faced Bayern Munich in the semis before Dortmund in London.
Los Blancos have played one European game already this season, defeating Atalanta to win the UEFA Super Cup in August, with Mbappe scoring on his debut.
Madrid defender Antonio Rudiger came through Stuttgart’s youth system and played in the first team for four seasons.
Ancelotti has problems in midfield with Eduardo Camavinga, Dani Ceballos, Jude Bellingham and Aurelien Tchouameni out injured, although the Italian was hopeful the latter two could take part against the Germans.
While Madrid’s shiny new toy Mbappe is drawing much of the attention, Ancelotti has plenty of stars at his disposal with the talent to turn defeats into draws and draws into victories, something of a penchant for the club, particularly under the lights in Europe.
Bellingham was Madrid’s key player for the first half of last season, making an immediate impact on his arrival from Dortmund.
Brazilian forward Vinicius was vital in the home straight, netting a brace in the semis against Bayern and scoring again in the final.
The forward has struggled to find his best level at the start of the season but his coach will show plenty of patience.
“We love him here because although right now he’s not at his best, nobody can forget that with Vini we have won two Champions Leagues,” pointed out Ancelotti last week.
Mbappe says he is working on his on-pitch relationship with Vinicius, with both netting penalties in the win over La Real.
“We try to find each other in training to create the connection and help the team,” continued Mbappe.
“He’s a great player and I’m happy to play with him in Real Madrid — what’s important is goals, not who takes the penalties.”
Mbappe has three La Liga goals from four games this season, including two penalties, while Vinicius has two, both from the spot.
Once the two forward are firing on all cylinders in open play Madrid’s already sizeable chance of winning the Champions League yet again will grow further still.


Rory McIlroy wins Masters in dramatic fashion, completes career Slam

Rory McIlroy wins Masters in dramatic fashion, completes career Slam
Updated 17 sec ago
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Rory McIlroy wins Masters in dramatic fashion, completes career Slam

Rory McIlroy wins Masters in dramatic fashion, completes career Slam
  • It marked the fifth major championship for McIlroy, and his first since capturing the PGA Championship for the second time in 2014

Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland birdied the first playoff hole with a short putt after missing a chance to win in regulation, capturing the Masters and completing the career Grand Slam on Sunday in Augusta, Georgia
McIlroy’s 1-over-par 73 left him tied with England’s Justin Rose, who posted 66 and waited for McIlroy to finish. They both shot 11-under 277 for the week.
Re-playing the 18th hole at Augusta National Golf Club, McIlroy’s approach shot rolled back toward the hole and inside Rose’s ball. After Rose missed a birdie attempt and notched a par, McIlroy didn’t flub another chance for a victory.
McIlroy needed par at No. 18 to win in regulation, but after blasting from a greenside bunker on the 18th hole he rolled a 5-foot par putt too far to the left.
The new champion recovered from a near-disastrous stretch on the back nine to birdie the 17th hole for a brief one-stroke lead. McIlroy’s bogey on No. 11, double bogey on No. 13 and bogey on No. 14 appeared to send him on track for another final-round collapse at a major.
But instead, McIlroy recovered for a birdie on the par-5 15th hole then stuck his approach on No. 17 and sank the putt to take the lead.
It marked the fifth major championship for McIlroy, and his first since capturing the PGA Championship for the second time in 2014.
Rose, seeking his first Masters title, had six birdies and two bogeys across the last eight holes, finishing with a 20-foot birdie putt.
Patrick Reed (69 on Sunday) was third at 9 under. Defending champion Scottie Scheffler (69) placed fourth at 8 under, giving him four consecutive top-10 finishes at the Masters.
Rose was the leader after the first and second rounds, and after a tough 75 on Saturday he made a major final-round push. He had only four pars on his card — countering four bogeys with 10 birdies.
Bryson DeChambeau, who figured to be McIlroy’s biggest threat and in the final pairing, took the lead after the second hole before stalling with back-to-back bogeys and a string of pars to skid off the path. By the time he double-bogeyed No. 11, he was tied for ninth and seventh strokes back.
DeChambeau’s 75 left him at 7 under, tied for fifth place with South Korea’s Sungjae Im (69).


Saudi Arabia squeeze past Japan in U17 Asian Cup quarter final

Saudi Arabia squeeze past Japan in U17 Asian Cup quarter final
Updated 13 April 2025
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Saudi Arabia squeeze past Japan in U17 Asian Cup quarter final

Saudi Arabia squeeze past Japan in U17 Asian Cup quarter final
  • After 90 minutes of football ended 2-2 in Taif, penalty shootout needed to separate two teams

TAIF: Saudi Arabia beat Japan in a dramatic penalty shootout on Sunday to move into the semi-final of the U-17 Asian Cup for the first time since 1992. After 90 minutes of football ended 2-2 in the city of Taif, the young Green Falcons triumphed from the spot.

The shootout ended 3-2 to leave the teenagers celebrating with their home fans and looking forward to Thursday’s last four clash with either South Korea or Tajikistan.

It was a busy start to the game. In just the third minute, Abdulrahman Sufyani had his close-range shot saved and then, from the rebound, curled an attempt that bounced off the crossbar. 

Soon after, however, Abubaker Saeed handled in the area and, after a check from VAR, Taiga Seguchi scored from the spot in the ninth minute. 

It was a short-lived lead.  In the 15th minute, Abdulaziz Al-Fawaz was bundled over in the area and Saeed stepped up to convert the penalty and send the goalkeeper the wrong way.

For Saudi Arabia it got even better eight minutes before the break. The lively Sufyani ran free down the right, cut inside the area and pulled the ball across goal for Sabri Dahal to fire home from close range.

It was all looking good for the West Asian team until Japan equalised with 18 minutes remaining. Daichi Tani’s through ball from the middle dissected the Saudi defence for Hiroto Asada to sprint through and roll the ball past Abdulrahman Al-Otaibi.

Then it all came down to a penalty shootout. Otaibi almost kept out Asada and then Nasser Al-Fihani made it 1-1.  Yazeed Al-Dosari did the same with his kick and it was 2-2. Then Otaibi got down quickly to save a low strike from Yuito Kamo but then Thari Saeed saw his attempt kept out.

It was still two each but Shota Fujii hit the bar, giving Saudi Arabia another chance and this time it was taken, oh so coolly, by Maher Tawashi. It meant that Japan had to score their last kick but once again, they hit the woodwork to keep the hosts on course for a first continental title since 1988.


Harvey Barnes brace routs Manchester United as Newcastle rise to fourth place

Harvey Barnes brace routs Manchester United as Newcastle rise to fourth place
Updated 13 April 2025
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Harvey Barnes brace routs Manchester United as Newcastle rise to fourth place

Harvey Barnes brace routs Manchester United as Newcastle rise to fourth place
  • Sandro Tonali put Newcastle ahead before Alejandro Garnacho equalized late in the first half
  • Barnes provided a welcome tonic for Howe as his second-half brace at St. James’ Park

NEWCASTLE: Harvey Barnes struck twice as Newcastle thrashed troubled Manchester United 4-1 to climb into fourth place in the Premier League on Sunday.
Newcastle were without manager Eddie Howe, who was admitted to hospital on Friday after feeling unwell for several days.
But Barnes provided a welcome tonic for Howe as his second-half brace at St. James’ Park boosted Newcastle’s bid to qualify for the Champions League.
With Howe’s assistants Jason Tindall and Graeme Jones in charge of the League Cup winners, Sandro Tonali put Newcastle ahead before Alejandro Garnacho equalized late in the first half.
Barnes stole the spotlight after the interval, becoming the first Newcastle player to score twice in one league game against United since Alan Shearer in 2000.
Bruno Guimaraes punished a blunder from United keeper Altay Bayindir, who started in place of the dropped Andre Onana, to seal Newcastle’s first four-goal haul against United since 2001.
In the race to reach the Champions League via a top five finish, Newcastle are just one point behind third-placed Nottingham Forest.
They have a game in hand on Forest, as well as fifth-placed Manchester City and sixth-placed Chelsea, who are two points adrift of the Magpies.
United have now gone four games without a win in all competitions, leaving them languishing in 14th place with just six games left to avoid their lowest finish since 1973-74, when they came 21st and were relegated.
They are already certain to suffer their worst points total in the Premier League era, with the previous low 58 in 2021-22.
Ruben Amorim made five changes with an eye on Lyon’s visit to Old Trafford for the Europa League quarter-final, second leg next Thursday, but United were blown away with embarrassing ease.
Bayindir had replaced Onana after the Cameroon keeper’s latest error-strewn display in United’s 2-2 draw at Lyon last Thursday.
But the 26-year-old, signed from Fenerbahce in 2023, endured a woeful first Premier League start.
Newcastle’s opening goal arrived at the climax of a flowing move after United midfielder Manuel Ugarte gave the ball way in the 24th minute.
Kieran Trippier surged forward and found Alexander Isak, who astutely lifted his pass over the defense for Tonali to drive a clinical finish into the far corner from an acute angle 10 yards out.
It was the 19th time United had conceded the opening goal in a league game this season — their joint-most in a single campaign in the competition.
With United out of sync once again, Tonali almost doubled the lead as the Italy midfielder curled just wide from distance.
Bayindir looked nervous when he punched Tino Livramento’s cross straight to Isak, but he redeemed himself with a good save from the Swede’s volley.
United equalized completely against the run of play in the 37th minute.
Diogo Dalot was the catalyst with a buccaneering burst that carried him to the edge of the Newcastle area, where he slipped a precise pass to Garnacho and the Argentine winger fired past Nick Pope.
Having scored for just the second time in 2025, Garnacho went close to another when Pope palmed away his blast on the stroke of half-time.
But Newcastle regained the lead four minutes after half-time as United’s leaky defense was breached again.
Livramento’s low cross was alertly kept in by Murphy beyond the far post and his pass into the six-yard box found Barnes unmarked for a clinical finish.
Zirkzee limped off to add to United’s woes after crumpling to the turf with an apparent hamstring injury.
United were in disarray and Barnes delivered the knockout blow in the 64th minute, dispossessing Noussair Mazraoui and racing clear to drill a fierce strike past Bayindir.
In the 77th minute, Bayindir’s wayward pass went straight to Joelinton, who nodded the ball onto Guimaraes for a composed finish that rubbed salt into United’s gaping wounds.


Oscar Piastri celebrates 50th race with win from pole in Bahrain

Oscar Piastri celebrates 50th race with win from pole in Bahrain
Updated 13 April 2025
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Oscar Piastri celebrates 50th race with win from pole in Bahrain

Oscar Piastri celebrates 50th race with win from pole in Bahrain
  • Piastri wins for McLaren with Norris third
  • Australian now second overall and three points off lead
  • Russell second for Mercedes

SAKHIR: McLaren’s Oscar Piastri celebrated his 50th Formula One race with a pole-to-flag win in Bahrain on Sunday that sent him second overall and three points behind championship leading teammate Lando Norris.
The Australian also became the season’s first repeat winner in four races and ended reigning champions McLaren’s long wait for victory at their Bahraini owners’ home Sakhir circuit.
Norris finished third, after lining up sixth on the grid and then having to fight back from a five-second penalty for a jumped start under the floodlights.
Mercedes’ George Russell held off his fellow Briton for second in a tense battle over the closing laps but faced a stewards’ enquiry for allegedly using the drag reduction system outside the defined zone.
“It’s been an incredible weekend starting with qualifying yesterday and finishing the job today in style is nice,” said Piastri, who won by 15.499 seconds despite a safety car period wiping out his initial lead.
“It’s very important given our owners. It’s never been a track that’s been kind to us, so it’s nice to have our first win here.”
Norris now has 77 points to Piastri’s 74, with McLaren on 151 in the constructors’ standings and Mercedes second on 93.
Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton were fourth and fifth, with the Italian team’s former boss Luca di Montezemolo the guest of honor waving the chequered flag.
Red Bull’s four-times world champion Max Verstappen, who had been only a point behind Norris after winning in Japan last weekend, finished sixth with Pierre Gasly scoring Alpine’s first points of the campaign in seventh.
Esteban Ocon, who crashed heavily in qualifying, redeemed himself with eighth for Haas and Yuki Tsunoda delivered Red Bull’s first double points finish of the year in ninth.
The final point was secured for Haas by British rookie Oliver Bearman, who started last.


UAE’s National MMA Championship 3 underway in Dubai

UAE’s National MMA Championship 3 underway in Dubai
Updated 13 April 2025
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UAE’s National MMA Championship 3 underway in Dubai

UAE’s National MMA Championship 3 underway in Dubai
  • Tournament for country’s rising talents taking place at Shabab Al-Ahli Club over 2 days

DUBAI: The UAE’s National MMA Championship 3, organized by the UAE’s Jiu-Jitsu and Mixed Martial Arts Federation, began on Saturday at Shabab Al-Ahli Club in Dubai in front of a large crowd, and featured young talent representing clubs and academies nationwide.

The opening day included bouts in the Youth D (10-11 years), Youth C (12-13) and Youth B (14-15) categories, while Sunday sees the tournament’s conclusion with competitions in Youth A (16-17) and Adult (18+) categories.

Mohamed Salem Al-Dhaheri, vice chairman of the UAE’s Jiu-Jitsu and Mixed Martial Arts Federation, said: “We are proud of the strong performances we saw today and the impressive participation of our sons and daughters, especially those who are just starting their journey.

“These categories are the foundation for the future of the sport and show that the federation’s efforts to develop talent are paying off.”

Al-Dhaheri added that the high level of public engagement, organization, and quality of the fights reflected the growing importance of the championship locally, and continued efforts to provide the ideal environment for developing a generation of athletes capable of succeeding.

Zakaria Bichi, coach of Primal Gym Abu Dhabi, said: “We’re taking part in this edition with seven athletes, and several of them have won gold medals thanks to strong preparation and serious commitment during training.

“This championship is a key milestone in their careers, especially when it comes to building confidence and gaining experience. We’ve seen how mixed martial arts in the country continues to grow every year. This is a result of the federation’s ongoing commitment to organising high-level events that help shape a new generation of champions.”

Suhair Almarzooqi, the mother of 14-year-old Hamad Alsaboori from ADMA Academy, said: “We’re proud to see our children take part in a tournament at this level as it helps them improve their athletic skills, build character, and boosts their confidence.

“Sports today are more than just physical activity: They are a powerful way to teach discipline, responsibility, and the importance of working towards goals.

“We’re grateful to the federation for organizing this championship, which gives our children the right environment to explore their potential and make the most of their free time in a way that benefits them and supports their future.”

Emirati Hamda Ali Khalfan Almutwa, of Shabab Al-Ahli Dubai, who won gold in her division at the event, said: “Since I began my career in martial arts I have dreamed of this moment. Winning the gold medal today makes me feel proud and gives me even more motivation to train and improve. Thank you to everyone who supported me. I hope to be a role model for all girls who dream of reaching the podium.”