“As Arne Slot closes in on the second league title of his career, he may reflect ruefully on how it could easily have been his third. It is five years to the day that AZ’s season was effectively ended by Covid-19 after Slot’s in-form team had beaten ADO Den Haag to draw level on points with Ajax, the team they had beaten the week before, at the top of the Dutch Eredivisie. AZ had the look of champions-in-waiting, Slot having instilled such fearlessness and aggression in their football that their belief was growing with every passing week. What made this fairytale even more incredible was that Slot, in his first season as a top-flight coach, was outsmarting his rivals with a team largely made up of academy graduates. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Daily Archives: March 7, 2025
What it’s like for a goalkeeper to play behind a ‘radical’ high line
“Wojciech Szczesny returns to the Estadio da Luz on Wednesday — the place where, only five weeks ago, his short Barcelona career must have flashed before his eyes. His first Champions League start of the season, in a league phase meeting with Benfica in January, was at risk of being defined by an atrocious attempt at sweeping up a pass played in-behind Barcelona’s high defensive line. Instead of clearing the ball, he collided with team-mate Alejandro Balde, giving away an easy opportunity to Benfica’s Vangelis Pavlidis, who put the hosts 2-1 up after 22 minutes. Pavlidis would make it 3-1 with a penalty eight minutes later. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
PSG are back: Press-splitting passes, penetrative dribbling and Joao Neves playing quarterback
“… Those are the big three iconic Parisian landmarks. On Wednesday night at the Parc des Princes, Luis Enrique’s Paris Saint-Germain showed their restoration project is nearly complete. Results matter more than performances in football’s European competitions, and a smash-and-grab 1-0 Liverpool win means PSG must beat them at Anfield on Tuesday to advance to the Champions League quarter-finals. Still, this was a match-up of teams who had finished 15th and first in the league phase, with Liverpool topping the table. And if you were asked to say which had been where based on last night’s performances, you would have put them the other way around. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
What is a ‘smash and grab’ win in soccer – and which ones did our writers most enjoy?

“The ‘smash and grab’ win. It is one of soccer’s most exhilarating — and agonising — results, a point underlined by Liverpool’s improbable 1-0 win over Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League last night. But what precisely is a ‘smash and grab’ and which ones rank as their most memorable? Here, The Athletic‘s Adam Hurrey offers his definition, and our writers choose their favourites — please add your own in the comments below. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
Mousa Dembélé, the Alkmaar years: The one-in-three forward who became a unique midfielder
“Mousa Dembele was a players’ player: a rare talent whose quality is best articulated by his team-mates. Kyle Walker, who played alongside Dembele at Tottenham Hotspur for five seasons before joining Manchester City in 2017, said he was ‘probably the best player I have ever seen play football’, and he has lined up with and against some of the greatest of his generation. One is those is City’s Kevin De Bruyne, who incidentally described his former Belgium team-mate as ‘the best player in the world’ at five-a-side. Former Spurs manager Mauricio Pochettino ranked him in the ‘genius’ bracket of those he had worked with, alongside Diego Maradona and Ronaldinho. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
W – Mousa Dembélé (Belgian footballer)
Time is ticking: The Premier League player contracts to watch out for at each club
“Premier League clubs will already be planning who they want to bring in this summer when the transfer market reopens, but making sure they hold on to key players is also a major part of successful squad building. As Liverpool have found out with Trent Alexander-Arnold, Mohamed Salah and Virgil van Dijk, it can be challenging for clubs if contracts drift into the final year, or even the final two years. Here, we look at which Premier League players are entering a crucial period in their deals. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
How to produce 1,698 matches in a season – inside the EFL’s global broadcast hub
“More than 20 games in the English Football League are underway and a cry of ‘it’s gone’ bellows from Pod J. Panic sets in. Peter Walker dashes in to check what has happened, fearing a camera has gone down in Stevenage’s home game against Huddersfield Town in League One. After a brief exchange, the panic is over. It was a false alarm. A player appeared to have an injury and the match director feared their hamstring had gone as opposed to losing a camera feed. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
