Hummels stuns Mbappe and PSG to take Dortmund to Champions League final

Hummels stuns Mbappe and PSG to take Dortmund to Champions League final
Dortmund's Mats Hummels, center, celebrates at the end of the game. (AP)
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Updated 08 May 2024
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Hummels stuns Mbappe and PSG to take Dortmund to Champions League final

Hummels stuns Mbappe and PSG to take Dortmund to Champions League final
  • Hummels struck five minutes into the second half
  • Dortmund will face Bayern Munich or Real Madrid in the final in London

Paris, May 7, 2024 Agence France Presse: Mats Hummels headed in the only goal as Borussia Dortmund stunned Kylian Mbappe and Paris Saint-Germain in their Champions League semifinal second leg on Tuesday, winning 1-0 on the night and advancing 2-0 on aggregate to next month’s final at Wembley.
Hummels struck five minutes into the second half at the Parc des Princes and PSG were unable to muster a response, the home side all out of luck as they hit the woodwork four times in total.
Dortmund, who sit fifth in the German Bundesliga, were never expected to go so far and will be underdogs in the June 1 showpiece regardless of whether they face their old rivals Bayern Munich or Real Madrid, who meet on Wednesday.
It will be their first final since 2013 when, remarkably, the match was also played at Wembley and Jurgen Klopp’s Dortmund lost to Bayern.
Hummels played in that final and here, 11 years later, he was the hero as Dortmund built on the advantage given to them by Niclas Fuellkrug’s goal in the first leg.
“It’ll take us a bit of time to realize that, but we’re looking forward to it extremely,” Dortmund coach Edin Terzic told broadcaster Amazon Prime of getting to the final.
“We did it somehow, making it to London.”
The story of this semifinal, however, is as much about PSG’s failure in another crunch knockout tie in the competition.
They have still never won the trophy despite all the money invested by their Qatari owners since the 2011 takeover, and there will be no dream send-off for Mbappe.
He will leave when his contract expires after this season and had been hoping to play his last game for the club in the June 1 final.
Instead PSG will be left to reflect on how they failed to get their hands on the biggest trophy of all during Mbappe’s seven years at his hometown team.
“We were not clinical enough. They scored two goals, one from a corner and one from a long ball. We created lots more chances, many more than them, but we didn’t take them,” PSG captain Marquinhos told Canal Plus.
“We got so close and we wanted to get to the final. But we had to win tonight and be more clinical, and we were not.”
PSG’s last two semifinal appearances both came during the pandemic, meaning this was the first time they had hosted a match at this stage of a European competition with fans in 29 years, since losing to AC Milan in 1995.
Luis Enrique’s team had won 2-0 at home against Dortmund in the group stage and were safe in the knowledge that a repeat of that performance would be enough.
The PSG coach made one major selection decision, dropping Bradley Barcola and bringing in Portuguese striker Goncalo Ramos. That meant moving Mbappe from the middle onto the left wing.
Dortmund would have been bracing themselves for an onslaught from kick-off, but that did not transpire.
Mbappe took only seven minutes to produce his first attempt, yet his volley was easily saved by Dortmund goalkeeper Gregor Kobel.
The hosts had most of the possession but struggled to get Mbappe into the game, the France captain often looking isolated on the wing.
In fact it was Dortmund who had the best chance of the first half, when Karim Adeyemi led a counterattack before seeing his shot saved by Gianluigi Donnarumma.
It felt as though the hosts needed to change something or risk going out with a whimper.
They should have been ahead two minutes after the restart, when Ramos touched on a ball driven into the box by Mbappe, but Warren Zaire-Emery contrived to hit the post from close range.
That was to prove crucial as Dortmund struck moments later.
PSG cheaply conceded a corner, and Julian Brandt’s delivery from the Dortmund right was headed in by Hummels.
Ramos swept a shot over on the hour mark before Nuno Mendes became the second PSG player to strike the right-hand post, this time with a powerful shot from distance.
It was starting to look as if it would not be PSG’s night, and Luis Enrique realized he had to act as he sent on Barcola and Marco Asensio for Ramos and Fabian Ruiz, moving Mbappe through the middle.
Dortmund sent on an extra defender in the hulking Niklas Suele and they withstood everything PSG threw at them while also being helped by the frame of the goal.
Kobel turned Mbappe’s shot onto the bar on 86 minutes and Vitinha also rattled the woodwork but Dortmund hung on to book their date in London.


Real Madrid up and running in Women’s Champions League with Celtic thumping

Real Madrid up and running in Women’s Champions League with Celtic thumping
Updated 22 sec ago
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Real Madrid up and running in Women’s Champions League with Celtic thumping

Real Madrid up and running in Women’s Champions League with Celtic thumping

PARIS: Real Madrid bounced back from their opening loss to Chelsea by thrashing Celtic 4-0 in the Women’s Champions League on Thursday, while Roma made it successive wins by putting six past Galatasaray.
Scotland international Caroline Weir curled home a brilliant left-footed strike from outside the box into the top corner to give Real Madrid a seventh-minute lead.
The hosts had to wait until the 72nd minute to double their advantage against a stubborn Celtic through Signe Bruun’s header.
Caroline Moller came off the bench and added a wonderful third with a 30-yard lob, before Colombian star Linda Caicedo rounded off the scoring with a penalty.
Real Madrid, bidding to avoid a third straight group-stage exit, moved level on three points after two matches with Chelsea and Twente, who meet later Thursday, in Group B.
Six different players scored as Roma continued their flying start to Group A with a 6-1 rout of tournament debutants Galatasaray in Istanbul.
Wolfsburg, who lost to Roma in their first game, host record eight-time champions Lyon later.


Monaco aiming to last in Ligue 1 title fight with PSG

Monaco aiming to last in Ligue 1 title fight with PSG
Updated 17 October 2024
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Monaco aiming to last in Ligue 1 title fight with PSG

Monaco aiming to last in Ligue 1 title fight with PSG
  • The principality club were thrilling champions in 2017 with a teenage Kylian Mbappe in their ranks
  • They were runners-up to Paris Saint-Germain in Ligue 1 last season

PARIS: Monaco have had a fine start to the season at home and in Europe, and are hoping to last the pace in the Ligue 1 title race ahead of a stiff test of their credentials against Lille this weekend.
The principality club were thrilling champions in 2017 with a teenage Kylian Mbappe in their ranks but have not managed to repeat those heroics despite four podium finishes in the seven seasons since.
However, they were runners-up to Paris Saint-Germain in Ligue 1 last season and went into the recent international break top of the table, two points clear of the reigning champions.
Under Austrian coach Adi Huetter, Monaco have won six of their seven Ligue 1 matches so far, the sole exception being a 1-1 draw at home to Lens, when they were denied victory by a stoppage-time penalty.
They have also got off to a good start in their first Champions League campaign in six seasons, beating Barcelona 2-1 at the Stade Louis II before coming from two goals down to draw at Dinamo Zagreb.
Monaco have been helped by some sound close-season recruitment, in particular the arrival of young Senegal star Lamine Camara in midfield to make up for the sale of French international Youssouf Fofana to AC Milan.
The emergence of exciting young talents Eliesse Ben Seghir and Maghnes Akliouche is significant too, while the departure of prolific captain Wissam Ben Yedder may ultimately be beneficial.
Ben Yedder, who scored 98 Ligue 1 goals in five seasons, is currently on trial for sexual assault and is battling alcoholism.
The next week will say much about Monaco’s long-term prospects however, with Lille’s visit on Friday followed by a Champions League meeting with Red Star Belgrade and then a derby against Nice.
“It is a fact that we have started the season very well but it was the same situation at this point last year,” Huetter pointed out. Monaco were top after seven games last season.
“We have some big opponents coming up and for me Lille are one of the best teams in the league.”
Eight-time champions Monaco have also been dealt a blow with the news that United States striker Folarin Balogun will be out for two months after suffering a dislocated shoulder in the team’s last game, a 2-1 win at Rennes.
This weekend’s opponents Lille, champions in 2021, are fifth and recently beat Real Madrid in the Champions League.
The trip to the Mediterranean for them will be followed by a journey to Spain to play Atletico Madrid in the Champions League.

The midfielder, 31, was so impressive on Brest’s run to a surprise third-place finish last season that he was named in Ligue 1’s team of the year.
An untimely injury — a stress fracture of the fibula — prevented him from leaving the Brittany club during the close season when a lucrative move to a more glamorous name seemed on the cards.
He then played no part in Brest’s first eight games of this campaign but returned as a substitute in their last match, against Le Havre two weeks ago.
Now he is in line to feature in Saturday’s Brittany derby against Rennes — a club he might have joined last season — and will hope to start in Wednesday’s Champions League clash against German champions Bayer Leverkusen.

21 — Leaders PSG have scored 21 goals in Ligue 1 so far this season, an average of three per game, suggesting Kylian Mbappe’s departure is not being too keenly felt.
6 — PSG’s Bradley Barcola is Ligue 1’s top scorer with six goals. He also scored for France in this month’s Nations League action, netting in a 4-1 win over Israel.
4 — Mason Greenwood has gone four games without scoring after netting five goals in his first three appearances for Marseille.

Fixtures (times GMT)
Friday
Monaco v Lille (1845)
Saturday
Brest v Rennes (1500), Saint-Etienne v Lens (1700), Paris Saint-Germain v Strasbourg (1900)
Sunday
Le Havre v Lyon (1300), Auxerre v Reims, Nantes v Nice, Toulouse v Angers (all 1500), Montpellier v Marseille (1845)


Klopp ‘aura’ will boost Red Bull, says Leipzig coach Rose

Klopp ‘aura’ will boost Red Bull, says Leipzig coach Rose
Updated 17 October 2024
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Klopp ‘aura’ will boost Red Bull, says Leipzig coach Rose

Klopp ‘aura’ will boost Red Bull, says Leipzig coach Rose
  • Rose said his addition was “a real bonus and a great signing“
  • “His aura and expertise will benefit and help us”

BERLIN: RB Leipzig coach Marco Rose said Jurgen Klopp, who has been appointed head of football at parent company Red Bull, had the “expertise and aura” to boost the club.
Former Liverpool, Borussia Dortmund and Mainz boss Klopp is set to start a new role as head of football operations at Red Bull, which owns the RB Leipzig, Salzburg and New York clubs, from 2025.
Rose, who played under Klopp at Mainz for six years and has previously spoken about his influence on his coaching career, said his addition was “a real bonus and a great signing.”
“His aura and expertise will benefit and help us,” Rose told the Bundesliga website. “He didn’t just win titles but also went through tough times.
“We were relegated at Mainz. He didn’t win the title in his first or second year at Dortmund.
“Even at Liverpool he had to go about working on developing things, putting together a squad that suited him. And that paid off in the end.”
Klopp won back-to-back Bundesliga titles with Dortmund before moving to Liverpool. At the Reds, Klopp won several major trophies, including the Champions League and Premier League.
Leipzig host Klopp’s former side Liverpool, now managed by Arne Slot, in the Champions League on Wednesday.
“I think everyone knows who Kloppo is,” added Rose. “I’ve got a good feeling about it.”
Klopp’s appointment has however caused controversy, particularly in Germany where some fans are critical of the energy drink brand’s ownership of Leipzig, as well as multi-club models in general.


Prosecutors reopen investigation into PSG over alleged discrimination in recruiting

Prosecutors reopen investigation into PSG over alleged discrimination in recruiting
Updated 17 October 2024
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Prosecutors reopen investigation into PSG over alleged discrimination in recruiting

Prosecutors reopen investigation into PSG over alleged discrimination in recruiting
  • The office said it received a new complaint “for discrimination on the grounds of origin, and computerised storage of data revealing racial or ethnic origins”
  • PSG have previously acknowledged that forms with illegal content were used from 2013-18

PARIS: The Paris prosecutor’s office is investigating alleged discrimination by Paris Saint-Germain years ago, following a complaint that the club’s scouts illegally profiled potential recruits based on their origins.
Prosecutors told AP the investigation was reopened in May. The case is related to events which happened several years ago and was the subject of an initial investigation that was ended in August 2022.
The office said it received a new complaint “for discrimination on the grounds of origin, and computerised storage of data revealing racial or ethnic origins.”
French law prohibits the collection of personal data that shows the racial or ethnic origins of individuals.
PSG have previously acknowledged that forms with illegal content were used from 2013-18. But they declined responsibility for implementing the policy after the Mediapart news website reported that scouts were asked by PSG to mention the origin of possible recruits according to four categories: “Francais” (French), “Maghrebin” (North African), “Antillais” (West Indian), and “Afrique noire” (Black African).
The previous investigation was started following a complaint by France’s League of Human Rights after PSG said an internal investigation found “no proven case of discrimination.”
The French Football Federation ethics council also looked into the matter and the league’s disciplinary commission later fined PSG 100,000 euros ($109,000).
The league also handed a 10,000-euro suspended fine to former PSG academy director Bertrand Reuzeau. Marc Westerloppe and Pierre Reynaud, who were in charge of PSG’s recruiting, received suspended fines of 5,000 euros.
Mediapart and French TV program “Envoyé Special” said a young black player was overlooked by PSG because of his color. Following an investigation based on the “Football Leaks” documents, Mediapart said 17-year-old midfielder Yann Gboho, who plays for France Under-18s, was disregarded by PSG when he was 13, and the club management decided to cover up “those implicated in the scandal.”
In a separate racism case in 2011, the country’s soccer scene was rocked by revelations from Mediapart that then-national coach Laurent Blanc and others discussed informal quotas limiting black and Arab youth players’ involvement in the national squad.


Pogba ‘willing to give up money’ to stay at Juventus

Pogba ‘willing to give up money’ to stay at Juventus
Updated 17 October 2024
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Pogba ‘willing to give up money’ to stay at Juventus

Pogba ‘willing to give up money’ to stay at Juventus
  • Pogba: I’m willing to give up money to be able to play again with Juve, I want to come back with this club
  • Pogba’s contract with the Italian giants expires in June 2026 and is currently worth €8 million($8.684 million) a year

ROME: Paul Pogba is adamant that he wishes to return from his reduced doping ban with Juventus even if it means accepting a pay cut, the French World Cup winner told La Gazzetta dello Sport in an interview Wednesday.

“I’m willing to give up money to be able to play again with Juve, I want to come back with this club,” said Pogba in an interview published on the Italian sports daily’s website.

“The reality is that I am a Juve player and I am preparing to play for Juve.”

Pogba’s contract with the Italian giants expires in June 2026 and is currently worth €8 million($8.684 million) a year.

During his ongoing suspension, the midfielder receives only the minimum salary stipulated in the Serie A collective agreement — just over €2,000 a month.

However, since Pogba’s ban was reduced, Italian press have reported that Juventus are nonetheless seeking to terminate his contract.

“It will be a new Pogba, a hungrier, wiser and stronger one... I just want to play football,” added the former Manchester United star.

“I want to be ready to train and play for Juve, I’m a Juve player, in my mind, that’s all there is at the moment.”

Pogba had his four-year ban for doping reduced to 18 months earlier in October by the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) and can return to action from March 11 next year, four days before his 32nd birthday.

Pogba tested positive for testosterone in August 2023 after a match between Juventus and Udinese in Italy.

He was provisionally suspended in September of the same year, and then banned for four years by the Italian National Anti-Doping Tribunal the following February.

Pogba’s representatives said the testosterone came from a food supplement prescribed by a doctor he consulted in the US.