Monthly Archives: May 2026

This Champions League final really is the clash of Europe’s best

“THE TWO second legs may not have been as captivating as the first, but nobody could complain at the overall quality of the penultimate stage of the 2005-06 UEFA Champions League. For Arsenal and Paris Saint-Germain, their success underlined that they are probably the two best teams in Europe this season. Bayern Munich, arguably, are also in the continent’s top three, but they looked decidedly pedestrian against Luis Enrique’s livewires. PSG’s speed and energy, a feature of their approach these days, was too much for a tired-looking Bayern. They had Harry Kane sorted out, although the England captain finally got a sight of goal in added time, but it was too little, too late. As for Arsenal, they beat Atlético Madrid at their own game, playing them tight and matching them muscle-for-muscle. Arsenal have shown this season they have more savvy than in previous campaigns that have promised much and delivered little. …”
Game of the People
Guardian: PSG v Arsenal: six factors that could decide the Champions League final

The Alternative Premier League Table: No 36 – Big chance conversion

“Welcome to the latest edition of The Alternative Premier League Table, where each week, The Athletic analyses the entire division through a specific lens. Matchday 35 saw teams across the Premier League score 23 of their 46 big chances. That 50 per cent conversion rate is the third best of the season after Matchday 5 (59 per cent) and 20 (55 per cent). Opta defines a big chance as ‘a situation where a player should reasonably be expected to score, usually a one-on-one scenario or a shot from close range with a clear path to goal and low-to-moderate pressure’. So, in this week’s table, we compare how teams fared when it comes to creating and converting big chances across the first 18 games to the last 17, roughly a first half versus second half of the season. …”
NYT/ATH

Exclusive FIFA trading card, sticker license to move from Panini to Fanatics in 2031

“In one of the more monumental shifts in the collectibles world, FIFA and Fanatics have inked a long-term, exclusive licensing deal that will allow Topps — owned by Fanatics — to produce soccer cards, stickers and trading card games for the World Cup and other FIFA events starting in 2031. This will end FIFA and Panini’s long-standing partnership in the space. Panini will have served as the key licensee for FIFA World Cup cards and sticker books for nearly 60 years, starting in 1970 and running through the 2030 tournament, with the exception of the 1994 event. …”
NYT/ATH

With Italian football in crisis, Sassuolo offer a model of how to put things right

“Max Allegri sought refuge in the dug-out at the Mapei Stadium. He bowed his head and pinched the bridge of his nose. Not Sassuolo. Not again. The team with whom he began his rise through the leagues, taking ‘Sasol’ up to Serie B for the first time in their history two decades ago, has a funny way of coming back to haunt him. A 4-3 defeat in 2014 brought an end to his first spell as coach of AC Milan. The scorer of all four of Sassuolo’s goals that day was Domenico Berardi. Now a little longer in the tooth, Berardi struck again at the weekend in a 2-0 win. Historically only Enrico Chiesa and Silvio Piola have been more prolific against Milan than Sassuolo’s No 10. …”
NYT/ATH (Video)

Arsenal 1 Atletico Madrid 0 (2-1 agg) – How did Arteta reach UCL final? Will it be their biggest week ever? Was Gabriel lucky?

“Arsenal will play a first Champions League final in 20 years in what promises to be a grandstand finish to their season after Bukayo Saka’s goal helped the Premier League leaders eliminate Atletico Madrid. Denied a penalty when Leandro Trossard was knocked over by Antoine Griezmann on 34 minutes, Arsenal were ahead 10 minutes later when Saka pounced on a rebound after Trossard’s shot was saved by Jan Oblak. The two sides had drawn the first leg 1-1 in Madrid last week and the Spanish visitors were looking for a spot kick of their own when Giuliano Simeone, Atletico manager Diego’s son, rounded goalkeeper David Raya and tangled with Gabriel. They sought another soon after when Griezmann was caught by Riccardo Calafiori but referee Daniel Siebert had given an earlier foul by Atletico. …”
NYT/ATH
NYT/ATH: Arsenal and a night of mad Champions League beauty (Video)
YouTube: Arsenal vs. Atletico Madrid: Extended Highlights | UCL Semifinals – Leg 2

Bayern Munich 1 PSG 1 (5-6 agg): Can Arsenal stop Kvaratskhelia in final? Why were Bayern denied penalty?

Ousmane Dembélé fires the ball past Manuel Neuer for the early breakthrough for PSG.
“How do you follow one of the greatest Champions League games of all time? Well, an early goal should help. After last week’s 5-4 thriller in the first leg between Bayern Munich and Paris Saint-Germain, the return leg of the Champions League semi-final began with Ousmane Dembele extending the French club’s lead to 6-4 on aggregate. The rest of the first half was quite open, with PSG winger Khvicha Kvaratskhelia again showing why he is so feared. Controversy surrounded two first-half decisions, where Bayern felt they could have had a penalty and PSG could have received a red card, but both appeals were dismissed by the referee. …”
NYT/ATH
Guardian: Dembélé ends Bayern hopes to send PSG into final showdown with Arsenal
YouTube: Bayern Munich vs. PSG: Extended Highlights | UCL Semifinals – Leg 2

Champions League semi-final second legs: The numbers to know

“We were served up an all-timer of a game at the Parc des Princes last week, and the second leg promises more of the same. For Paris Saint-Germain and Bayern Munich, the 2025-26 season will be measured by the Champions League. The contest resumes at the Allianz Arena on Wednesday, with PSG holding a one-goal lead. Twenty-four hours after the fireworks in Paris came a different sort of game. Diego Simeone’s Atletico Madrid and Mikel Arteta’s Arsenal, two coaches who have built reputations on defensive identity, played out a tense, attritional first leg that finished 1-1. Two ties, two shades of intensity. A reminder that the same sport can grip you in entirely different ways. The second legs will decide who walks out at the Puskas Arena in Budapest on May 30. But who will be in the final? Here are the numbers and trends that may give us a clue. …”
NYT/ATH (Video)

Cristian Chivu found empathy in his darkest moment. It has turned ‘crumbling’ Inter into Serie A champions

“It was a celebration in the style of Jose Mourinho. Supposedly about the players and never about him. But undeniably genuine this time. Cristian Chivu hung back. The smoke of the fireworks making him crave a cigarette. Federico Dimarco pushed him forward, so hard he almost tripped over, entangled in the blue, black, and gold streamers that had fallen from the sky. Chivu faced the Curva Nord, accepted the ultras’ applause and then turned, pointing to his team as if to say: Inter’s 21st Scudetto was down to them. He then retired to the dressing room, his face suddenly aglow from the flick of a lighter and had a smoke. …”
NYT/ATH (Video)
YouTube: CHAMPIONS OF ITALY FOR THE TWENTY-FIRST TIME 🏆🇮🇹 | INTER 2-0 PARMA | SERIE A 25/26 HIGHLIGHTS, INTER Are Serie A Champions | Serie A 2025/26

A history of Diego Simeone’s touchline antics

“Nobody in football works the touchline quite like Atletico Madrid head coach Diego Simeone. The Argentinian’s actions are often as absorbing and compelling as what happens on the pitch. The latest installment came during the Champions League semi-final first leg against Arsenal last Wednesday, particularly after the away side were awarded a second penalty of the game in the 80th minute, when Eberechi Eze went down under a challenge by David Hancko. As Danny Makkelie waited for instructions from the video assistant referee (VAR) Dennis Higler, Simeone could be seen trying to grab the Dutch referee’s attention by waving his arms in the air and imitating the ‘TV screen’ VAR signal. …”
NYT/ATH (Video)

Greatest Of All Time: World Cup Goals – Carlos Alberto, Diego Maradona, Dennis Bergkamp and more

“There have been 2,548 goals scored at men’s World Cups since the first tournament in 1930. Trying to select five as the greatest in the history of the competition is perhaps a foolish task. But the nice thing about great goals in football is that there are so many different types. Some are individual dribbles, some are one-off strikes out of nowhere, some are flowing team moves, some are about outrageous close control, and some are largely about emotion. Here, then, is an attempt at working out the World Cup’s greatest goal in each of those categories. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video) – Michael Cox

Dennis Bergkamp v Argentina, 1998: skill

The openness of Manchester United and Liverpool’s midfields show how they must improve

“Who remembers the holding midfielder? The no-nonsense anchorman who sat in front of the defence, protected that space, and contributed little in attack? The current trend in the Premier League is for players in that mould to push up, to press, to make runs into attack, and to provide goalscoring qualities too. The flip side, of course, is that the defence goes unprotected. And in Manchester United’s 3-2 win over Liverpool, the story of the game was all about both sides being exposed between the lines. …”
NY Times/The Athletic – Michael Cox

In the 128 years of their existence, this tiny Swiss club had never won a trophy — until now

“FC Thun are not used to making headlines, but the newly crowned champions of Switzerland are arguably this season’s greatest European football story. Home to fewer than 45,000 people and 16 miles (26 kilometres) south-east of Bern, Thun is not among the 10 biggest Swiss cities by population. Its football club, which marked its 128th anniversary on Friday, had never previously won a major trophy, were outside the top division for the previous five years, and had come close to bankruptcy. Yet Thun, operating with one of the Swiss Super League’s lower budgets, sealed a historic title on Sunday. They lost 3-1 to Basel on Saturday night, but second-placed St Gallen lost 3-0 at home to Sion today — putting Thun an unassailable 10 points clear at the top of the table with three matches to go. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
W – FC Thun

Barcelona one point from La Liga title ahead of El Clasico after Real Madrid beat Espanyol

“Barcelona will be crowned La Liga champions if they avoid defeat against Real Madrid in the upcoming El Clasico. Hansi Flick’s side require just one point to take an unassailable lead over second-place Madrid, who defeated Espanyol 2-0 on Sunday. Vinicius Junior scored twice in 11 minutes in the second half of the fixture to keep Barca from taking the title this weekend. Barca are 11 points clear of Alvaro Arbeloa’s side with four rounds of matches remaining, with the visitors needing to win at Camp Nou if they are to keep alive the mathematic possibility of catching their rivals. If Barca were to win, it would be the first time that a La Liga title was decided in a Clasico. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
YouTube: RCD ESPANYOL 0 – 2 REAL MADRID | HIGHLIGHTS LALIGA EA SPORTS

Man Utd 3 Liverpool 2: Should Carrick get the head coach job? How bad was this for Slot?

“A remarkable match at Old Trafford, and a precious win for Manchester United. This 3-2 triumph not only ensured United claimed a first league double over Liverpool for the first time since the 2015-16 season but sealed qualification for next season’s Champions League, after two campaigns away. First-half goals from Matheus Cunha and, more controversially, Benjamin Sesko put United in control against a depleted Liverpool side who looked timid and disjointed for long spells. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
YouTube: Manchester United v. Liverpool | PREMIER LEAGUE HIGHLIGHTS

The Premier League mid-table’s race for Europe: How much do each club need to qualify?

Bournemouth’s matchday revenue is limited by the size of their ground
“The Premier League title race promises drama in the 2025-26 season’s final four rounds, much like the anxious battle to avoid relegation. For those sitting more comfortably between those extremes, there is still the tantalising prize of European qualification to chase. Seven clubs, mainly comprising an unlikely gaggle of hopefuls, face a scrap for spots in the three UEFA competitions next season, with a surprise Champions League place potentially up for grabs. For the second season in a row, the Premier League’s top five will qualify for Europe’s elite club tournament, but finishing sixth could be enough this time, too. Aston Villa kicking on from their semi-finals place and winning the Europa League while also finishing in fifth would see a Champions League slot handed to the team who come sixth, based on UEFA’s European performance spot (EPS) system. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Analysing the goal-difference shootout that could decide the Premier League

“Manchester City are the only team to win the Premier League on goal difference, and this season they might need to repeat the trick. For those uninitiated in the competition’s most storied moment, Sergio Aguero’s last-minute goal for City in a 3-2 final-day victory at home against Queens Park Rangers in May 2012 meant they pipped Manchester United to the title by virtue of their superior goal difference, which was eight better than their crosstown rivals. The margins at the top could be even finer in the current campaign. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Scotland’s remarkable three-way title race – and the 41-year wait that could end

“Jeopardy has returned to Scottish football. It is an integral part of any sporting competition but, for 41 years, the title has been shared between only two clubs, Glasgow’s dominant duo of Celtic and Rangers. This season, the usual two-horse race finally has a third runner. Hearts, short for their full name Heart of Midlothian, hailing from the capital Edinburgh and without a league triumph in 65 years, are top of the Premiership with four games to go. They are three points clear of Celtic and four ahead of Rangers, on the verge of upending the duopoly known as the ‘Old Firm’. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Inside the mind of John W. Henry, Liverpool’s ‘semi-detached’ owner

“Across the sporting institutions with which he is most associated, there was a sense of John W. Henry being everywhere and nowhere last weekend. On Saturday afternoon at Anfield, before Liverpool’s victory over Crystal Palace, the stadium was decorated with yellow cards and an image of him sticking his fingers in his ears. It was a protest at a potential 13 per cent rise in ticket prices over the next three years, depending on inflation, but Henry was not on Merseyside to see it. At the same time that protest was taking place, around 3,000 miles away in Boston, Henry and his executives at the Red Sox, the other crown jewel in the Fenway Sports Group (FSG) sporting empire, were deciding to fire the team’s manager, Alex Cora, along with five coaches. Later that day, Henry, the franchise’s chief baseball officer, Craig Breslow, and CEO Sam Kennedy flew on Henry’s private plane to give Cora and his staff the bad news. But at a press conference the following morning, it was Breslow and Kennedy who confirmed the news to the media. According to The Athletic’s reporting, Henry was present when players were told, but said nothing. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

World Cup, Lego style!

“The San Diego, Calif. area is a major soccer hotbed in the United States, but will not be hosting any 2026 World Cup matches due to its lack of an NFL stadium. But that’s not stopping nearby Legoland California from getting in on the action! The amusement park in nearby Carlsbad, Calif., run by and themed after the famed Danish toy company, will provide several World Cup experiences from June 11-19. Visitors can play soccer mini-games and challenges against Lego minifigures, meet soccer legends like Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo in life-size Lego brick form, design custom World Cup jerseys and even get the chance to lift the Lego version of the World Cup trophy! The experience will also be available at Legoland resorts in Florida, New York, the UK and Germany. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
FIFA® World Cup 2026 Experience