
“Real Madrid were launching one desperate last attempt to save Saturday’s Copa del Rey final when referee Ricardo de Burgos Bengoetxea signalled a free kick against forward Kylian Mbappe. With the game well past the 120-minute mark, everyone in Seville’s Estadio Cartuja realised that Barcelona were about to win the game 3-2 and lift the trophy. On the sidelines, Madrid defender Antonio Rudiger, who, a few minutes earlier, had limped off the pitch injured, leapt to his feet and appeared to throw a bag of ice he had been holding against his leg in the direction of the referee. Amid chaotic scenes, De Burgos Bengoetxea showed a red card to Rudiger, and another to Madrid’s Lucas Vazquez, who had entered the pitch to protest despite having also been substituted earlier. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic: Why a Spanish referee breaking down in tears caused a furious reaction from Real Madrid (Video)
NY Times/The Athletic: Barcelona 3 Real Madrid 2 – Jules Kounde the unlikely hero in epic Copa del Rey final
Guardian: Barcelona win thrilling Copa del Rey and drive Madrid to red card fury

Category Archives: Football Manager
Pep Guardiola and Wembley Stadium: A lifelong romance
“Last weekend, Pep Guardiola spent 15 minutes standing on the Goodison Park turf, long before his Manchester City players came out for their pre-game warm-up. ‘I remember when I was a little boy,’ he said later of Goodison, ahead of Everton’s move to their new home at Bramley-Moore Dock this summer. ‘Today, I watched the (stadium big) screen with goals from Gary Lineker and said, ‘Wow, this is English football’.’ In Spanish, Guardiola might be known as a ‘mitomano’ — somebody quick to idolise, generally, a person. In his case, it is footballers, but also stadiums and competitions. He would watch English football on television when he was a youngster in the Catalan town of Santpedor. Not that many games were available on television in the 1970s and 1980s, but he obviously saw enough for some core memories to form. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
The BookKeeper – Exploring Newcastle United’s finances and a takeover that changed everything
“Newcastle United’s long wait for a trophy ended under Wembley’s arch just as evening was descending, the sun disappearing and, with it, 70 years of domestic strife. Mid-March’s victory over Liverpool in the Carabao Cup final marked the end of seven trophyless decades on Tyneside (the 1969 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup excluded) and, with it, perhaps, the beginning of something else. As black-and-whites on the pitch and in the stands celebrated the end of an unwanted era, one emblem of their new era stood front and centre. Yasir Al-Rumayyan, club chairman, made his way onto the pitch and held up the trophy. He is also the governor of Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF), Newcastle’s majority shareholder. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
‘Hup Liverpool!’: How a Premier League title win was forged in the Netherlands
“Liverpool’s Dutch connection has led the club to the brink of glory. Arne Slot is on course to become only the fifth manager to win the title in his debut Premier League season. Virgil van Dijk is close to making history, as the first player from the Netherlands to captain a team to England’s top-flight crown. Ryan Gravenberch has sparkled since being entrusted with the holding midfield role, while Cody Gakpo is second in the scoring stakes, behind Mohamed Salah, with 16 goals in all competitions. The buzz generated by the quartet’s accomplishments at Anfield resonates across their homeland. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
The BookKeeper – Exploring Tottenham Hotspur’s finances and their reduced spending power
“There was a time, not all that long ago, when Tottenham Hotspur were routinely highlighted as the Premier League’s best-run club. And by not that long ago, we mean last August. Fair Game, a campaign group for improved football governance, placed Spurs as the highest-ranking English club in their Fair Game Index last summer, a measure that assesses clubs in terms of financial sustainability, governance, fan engagement and ethics. Daniel Levy, chairman of Spurs since 2001, expressed his delight. Spurs were, Levy said, ‘a club that prides itself on good governance — with a key focus on sustainability and engagement with stakeholders and communities’. Topping the index could be seen as a vindication of Levy’s approach to running the club since he arrived over two decades ago, when the English National Investment Company (ENIC) assumed a controlling stake. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
How an English club’s bid to ‘be the most famous for Arabs’ collapsed in five days
“Just over a week ago, a new part-owner of fifth division team Dagenham & Redbridge appeared on Sky Sports and talked up his ‘dream’ to reach the Premier League. Marwan Serry, an Egyptian YouTuber and entrepreneur, said he wanted Dagenham, with average attendances at their east London home of around 1,700, to ‘be the most famous club for Arabs’. He added: ‘I’m really excited, I feel like a child playing FIFA as a gamer and suddenly it becomes reality.’ …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
W – Dagenham & Redbridge F.C.

Four reasons why a Liverpool title win is good for English football
“It feels like there’s a wave of negativity across English football at the moment, not merely concerning the soul of the game — an evergreen concern — but more about the quality and style of what we’re watching. This is despite the Premier League being almost unquestionably the world’s best league, certainly when judged on the average standard of team, if not necessarily on those at the top of the division. Besides, recent seasons have produced record-breaking goals-per-game figures in the Premier League era and while a higher number being scored in itself is not automatically entertaining, it’s surely preferable to the reverse. …”
NY Times/The Athletic – Michael Cox
Premier League all sewn up? This is where to look for drama in the coming weeks…
“You see the bus at the stop. It’s just over there. You can obviously make it. You quicken your step. As you do, you hear the engine start. The doors fold closed. You could sprint for it — you’re fast enough — but the idea is unappealing. The sweat, sure, but also just the indignity of it. You don’t need this bus. There will be others. The doors reopen. Someone else is now getting on. It’s extremely makeable now, you could probably just jog. But something stops you. You have already committed to not going for it, your nonchalance now non-negotiable. It could linger there for 20 or 30 more seconds for all you care. You’re walking slowly, you’re missing that bus and that’s the end of the matter. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Breaking down the 11 minutes of chaos at the end of Manchester United’s 5-4 win over Lyon
“At the end of the first half of extra time against Lyon, the TV cameras caught Ruben Amorim with his tactics board out. You might not be far wrong if you believed that the board merely had one straight line on it, bottom to top, indicating for Manchester United centre-back Harry Maguire to move to centre-forward, and little else. ‘We’re probably short on attackers,’ Maguire said after the game. Rasmus Hojlund and Alejandro Garnacho had been substituted after workhorse performances. Joshua Zirkzee has been ruled out for the season with a hamstring injury, while Amad is still recovering from an ankle issue. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Virgil van Dijk is Liverpool’s defensive GOAT – but his legend extends beyond Merseyside
“When Virgil van Dijk is mentioned in the pantheon of great Premier League defenders, it occasionally comes with a caveat. Yes, he has the trophies, the class and the longevity that are the traditional hallmarks of all-time greats. But has he always been confronted by the very best? Football has changed and even before his emergence at Liverpool it was said that the classic No 9 was disappearing from the game. Van Dijk has not had to deal with an Alan Shearer-type, a human cyclone who would wear his opponent down, going one-to-one, testing them physically as much as technically. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
How Inter’s outswinging corners have become a routine part of their success in 2024-25
“Historically, Bayern Munich have always had the upper hand over Inter at San Siro. In their previous four competitive matches in Milan, the German side were victorious in each one of them. That’s why Harry Kane’s opener in the second leg of their Champions League quarter-final tie gave the impression that history might be repeating itself. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Chelsea await the bad boys of Europe: Why Legia Warsaw have become a headache for UEFA
“Tonight’s trip to Chelsea, in all probability, will be the 16th and final European game of Legia Warsaw’s season. A 3-0 first-leg deficit in the Conference League quarter-finals has left a mountain to climb, and the adventures of Poland’s biggest club will likely end at Stamford Bridge. UEFA is too diplomatic to publicly celebrate any club’s exit, but parting with the perennial bad boys at least rids their disciplinary department of a long, nagging headache. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Forty years of dominance and a 55th title on ice, but Scottish football is more than just Rangers and Celtic

“Glasgow, Scotland: they had the green ribbons out and were about to attach them to the Scottish Premiership trophy early on Sunday afternoon. Celtic were 16 points clear of Rangers who, down to 10 men, were trailing 2-1 at Aberdeen with seven minutes of added time and five games of the season remaining. Aberdeen had just had an 88th-minute goal disallowed. Now, in the seventh of those seven minutes added, Rangers came again. They hit the post. There were gasps across Scotland. From the rebound, the ball was ferried to Ianis Hagi. Hagi’s calm defied the circumstances. He bent in a beauty of an equaliser. Seconds later, the final whistle blew in Aberdeen and, in Glasgow, those green ribbons were put back in their box. They will not be in there long. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

A mural for Davie McParland outside Partick’s Firhill stadium
Why Premier League teams (yes, especially Liverpool) are so dangerous after defending corners
“The cyclical nature of tactical evolution in football means that when something is in vogue, it’s only a matter of time before everyone catches up. The increased focus on attacking corners in the Premier League in the last couple of seasons — accompanied by the rise of set-piece specialists — correlated with a hike in the number of goals scored from corners. However, the defensive aspect of corners is equally important. The recent threat of attacking corners in the Premier League has logically been followed by a focus on defending from corners. Has it worked? …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
How Raphinha became a world-beater for Barcelona – and how he compares to their Brazilian greats

“At the end of the 2023-24 season, Raphinha got out his whiteboard and a coloured marker pen. There was plenty to reflect upon. It had been a poor campaign for Barcelona: political and financial turmoil, a sense of drift on the pitch, no trophies. Nor was there much to celebrate on an individual level. He had shown glimpses of quality, but his manager, Xavi, did not view him as a central figure. Raphinha completed 90 minutes on just six occasions all season. At that moment, though, he was thinking about the future. Not about the possibility of leaving Catalonia, although the idea would later cross his mind as speculation swirled during the summer transfer window. No, he was setting targets for himself, plotting a course into the hearts and minds of Barcelona fans. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Aston Villa 3 PSG 2 (4-5 agg) – Comeback win not quite enough for Emery’s side in Champions League classic
“Aston Villa are out of the Champions League after a 3-2 win against Paris Saint-Germain saw them lose 5-4 on aggregate to the Ligue 1 winners. The home side’s energetic start mirrored the heady atmosphere inside Villa Park, but PSG absorbed it and used Villa’s understandable need to attack against them, scoring twice from typically rapid counter-attacks. The first came from Achraf Hakimi after Emi Martinez had spilled a cutback, the second from his fellow full-back Nuno Mendes. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Champions League projections: How Arsenal steadily became 2024-25 tournament favourites
“Time can make fools of us all. Even supercomputers. Barring some sensational results in the quarter-final second legs this week, there are probably only five teams left who can win this season’s Champions League (Arsenal, Barcelona, Paris Saint-Germain, Inter and Bayern Munich). That’s a significant shift from the start of the season when, before a ball was kicked in the new-look format, The Athletic’s Opta-powered projections had Manchester City (25 per cent) and Real Madrid (18 per cent) as the most likely sides to lift the trophy. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Introducing Barcelona’s secret weapon: Robert Lewandowski pointing at space

“Strange as it might be to say about a player who has scored over 700 goals and is on course for his 13th league title, Robert Lewandowski has had a relatively uneventful career. Compared to other greats of this era, there was minimal hype in his youth days, at least outside Poland. There has been no Ballon d’Or, probably only because the event was cancelled in 2020. There has been no standout success with his national side. There have been few controversies, no serious injuries, no crises in confidence, no sudden positional shift. …”
NY Times/The Athletic – Michael Cox

Rayan Cherki has always been special. Now there are goals and assists, too
“It’s been a breathless start to the game. After conceding inside the first two minutes, France Under-21s lead 2-1 against an England side who have just hit the post. Enzo Millot, the France captain, picks up possession midway inside his own half and sweeps a lofted pass out to the right. Only Rayan Cherki knows why he chose to do what he did next. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
Arsenal 3 Real Madrid 0 – Breaking down Declan Rice’s two incredible free kicks
“Declan Rice stunned Real Madrid with two brilliant free-kick goals to help Arsenal build a commanding 3-0 win in the first leg of their Champions League quarter-final tie. Rice stepped up in the 58th minute to whip a fine bending strike past Thibaut Courtois. Then, 12 minutes later, he fired another into the top corner to put Mikel Arteta’s men in full control before the return game at the Bernabeu next Wednesday. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic: Analysing the technique behind Declan Rice’s extraordinary free-kick double against Real Madrid
Bo Henriksen on taking Mainz to the brink of the Champions League: ‘Without fear, anything is possible’

“The first time The Athletic spoke to Bo Henriksen, it was late April 2024 and the Mainz team he had taken charge of two months earlier were staring relegation from Germany’s top flight in the face. Even so, he was full of radiant positivity and the kind of energy that can transform the day of anyone who steps into its bright beam. It has certainly worked for Mainz. Eleven months on, they are within touching distance of Champions League qualification and have the second-best defensive record in the Bundesliga, behind only title-bound Bayern Munich. They are winless in three matches having lost away against Borussia Dortmund a week ago and drawn with visitors Holstein Kiel on Saturday, but with six games left they are still fourth, ahead of — among others — RB Leipzig, Dortmund, Stuttgart and Borussia Monchengladbach. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
W – Bo Henriksen
YouTube: How Mainz SURPRISED The Entire Bundesliga!! | Bo Henriksen Mainz Tactics

How one Ipswich backpass caused two of the craziest minutes in the Premier League this season
“Just when you think you’ve seen everything that football has to offer, along come Ipswich Town. Amid another morale-sapping defeat that all but sealed their relegation from the Premier League, Ipswich, with a little help from their opponents, Wolverhampton Wanderers, served up the maddest two minutes of Premier League action you are likely to see this season. A backpass, a mistake, a save, a free kick, a melee on the goal line, a thudding shot and a point-blank block… there was nothing technically proficient about any of it, but it was memorable. Are you not entertained? For the uninitiated, this was all about the backpass law, introduced to football in 1992 with the aim of making the game less dull. In the main it has been a huge success, and it certainly was at Portman Road on Saturday. …”
NT times/The Athletic
Reader poll results – Discussing Kevin De Bruyne and the most influential midfielders of the Premier League era

Steven Gerrard – Liverpool 1998-2015
“… Pep Guardiola of Kevin De Bruyne’s impending exit from Manchester City. De Bruyne’s impact at City since joining from Wolfsburg in 2015 has been huge, with the Belgian scoring 106 goals in 413 appearances, contributing to 187 Premier League goals (scoring or assisting), equalling the assist record for a single season and winning 19 trophies. While Guardiola was careful about discussing where he stands in the greatest player debate, the City coach praised his ‘influence in our success in the last decade’. Which had us asking, who are the most influential midfielders of the Premier League era? …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Nottingham Forest 1 Man Utd 0 – How Elanga’s seven touches in nine seconds cut Amorim’s team apart
“Anthony Elanga scored a thrilling solo goal to tighten Nottingham Forest’s grip on a surprise Champions League place next season and leave Ruben Amorim’s Manchester United side languishing in 13th in the Premier League. The former United forward covered 85 metres of the City Ground pitch in nine seconds, taking seven touches, the last of which was a shot past Andre Onana to give Forest the lead after five minutes. United, like many teams against Forest this season, had plenty of possession but Diogo Dalot hit the crossbar and Ryan Yates blocked well from Alejandro Garnacho and they could not find a way to level the scores, with Murillo also clearing the ball off the line from Harry Maguire at the death and celebrating in style. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Southampton and the unwanted Premier League lowest points record: ‘It would be a stain’
“There has been little to cheer about for supporters of Southampton Football Club this season. Southampton were promoted back to the Premier League last summer at the first time of asking via victory over Leeds United in the Championship’s play-off final, but it has not been a happy first campaign on their return to the English top flight. They’ve only managed two league wins in their 29 games, sacked the manager who brought them up, Russell Martin, in December, are on a nine-match losing streak at home and have conceded 70 goals, which, unsurprisingly, is more than any other top-flight team. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
How Hansi Flick fixed Barcelona’s season and put them firmly in the hunt for three trophies

“Hansi Flick turned 60 in February, when his Barcelona team were 13 games unbeaten. He celebrated his birthday by inviting his backroom staff and the club’s sporting director, Deco, to lunch at Ikibana Sarria, a well-known Japanese restaurant in the Spanish city. It was meant to be a low-key event, but in Barcelona even the walls seem to whisper. As he walked towards the front door, the German bumped into several local reporters and camera crews who, somehow, had found out about the meal. They filmed the arrival of each member of the Barcelona staff. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
W – Hansi Flick
Inside Scandinavia’s VAR revolt – featuring walkouts, silences and fishcakes
“… It is the first weekend of Norway’s football season and, inside the stadium of Oslo’s biggest club, the stand where Valerenga’s most boisterous supporters congregate is completely empty as the game kicks off. Thousands remain outside, refusing to enter until the 15-minute mark as part of a series of co-ordinated protests involving fans from every club in Norway’s top flight, the Eliteserien, as well as others from the division below. It is a different scene in the away end, where the supporters of Viking are using another tactic to signal their hostility towards the video assistant referee system (VAR), which uses an official watching television replays away from the stadium to review significant on-field decisions. Viking fans take their seats but remain completely silent for the first 15 minutes. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Real Union: The club Aston Villa manager Unai Emery and his family saved from ruin
“Early morning Basque sunshine is threatening to break through. Take the first turning off the main road and you will come across Real Union’s bar, tucked into the corner of their stadium. Inside, gentle music is playing as a couple of locals enjoy a coffee. The artificial pitch used for training is opposite and Real Union’s first-team players have started to trickle out for today’s session. It is here, in the province of Gipuzkoa, where Aston Villa manager Unai Emery’s footballing foundations were formed. Real Union play in Irun, a sovereign community of just over 60,000 in the Basque Country, about a 25-minute drive east of San Sebastian, Gipuzkoa’s capital, and four kilometres from Emery’s family home in Hondarribia. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
The Premier League is back – and it’s all about the race for a top-five finish
“With the Premier League title race and relegation battle seemingly wrapped up before April, you might think there is little peril remaining in the final weeks of 2024-25. Fear not. Any thrill-seekers need only look as far as the race for Champions League spots, with as many as seven teams still fighting to dine at Europe’s top table next season. Liverpool, Arsenal, and Nottingham Forest have separated themselves from the remaining pack at the top of the table but based on the latest UEFA coefficient standings, fifth is enough for a place in the 2025-26 Champions League. One more win for any of the five English sides remaining in a European competition this season should confirm that additional spot in the continent’s top tournament. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
How Italy won the 1934 World Cup: A solid defence, the class of Giuseppe Meazza and help from the officials

“Italy had wanted to host World Cup 1930, and refused to participate when it was instead awarded to Uruguay. So when Italy were granted the right to host World Cup 1934, Uruguay pulled the same trick and didn’t travel to Europe. Leaving aside the politics of it all, in a way you can’t blame them. This 16-team tournament was contested as a straight knockout competition, meaning Brazil and Argentina made extraordinarily long journeys by sea, only to play a single game in Italy. Uruguay’s victory four years earlier was heavily dependent upon home advantage, but Italy took that home advantage to a completely different level. They replicated Uruguay’s intense training camp in the period leading up to the tournament, but more significantly, this World Cup was blatantly used by fascist dictator Benito Mussolini as propaganda tool, and coach Vittorio Pozzo later claimed that ‘Il Duce’ had personally asked him to select only Fascist Party members for Italy’s squad, although the players claimed they were only really interested in football and had little choice but to ‘support’ the nationalistic cause. …”
NY Times/The Athletic – Michael Cox

The Italian team performing a fascist salute at the 1934 World Cup
The FA Cup began in 1871 and has had 44 different winners. Is now the time for a 45th?
“Kevin Day is talking about trophy cabinets and silver allergies. ‘We’ve only got two FA Cup finals to our name,’ the writer, comedian and lifelong Crystal Palace fan says. ‘That’s one of the things about Steve Parish insisting we were founded in 1861 and not 1905 — it just adds another 44 years to the amount of time we haven’t won anything.’ Parish, the Palace chairman, likes his history, and opportunity knocks right now for his club to create some. Palace are one of the four out of this weekend’s FA Cup quarter-finalists who have never won a major trophy — Fulham, Brighton & Hove Albion and Bournemouth are the others — opening the door to the possibility of a first-time winner and a 45th different name being engraved on one of football’s most famous pieces of silverware. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
W – FA Cup Final
Analysing Jamal Musiala’s bizarre corner goal for Germany against Italy
“On average, about one in every 30 corners leads to a goal. The success rate tends to go up dramatically, however, when the goalkeeper and their entire defence are standing outside their six-yard box when a corner is taken. That was the remarkable scene during the UEFA Nations League quarter-final in Dortmund on Sunday. Germany’s Jamal Musiala turned the ball into an empty net against an Italy team who acted like they thought the game would stop for them to hold a debrief into where everything had been going wrong for them during the first half. Joshua Kimmich had other ideas and the combination of his brilliant quick-thinking and Musiala’s goal-hanging — allied to a ball boy who was, well, on the ball — led to Germany doubling their 1-0 lead from a highly unusual corner on 36 minutes, and making fools out of Italy in the process. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Thomas Tuchel’s England were not radically different – but that’s not a big problem
“Football fans love the idea of the clean break, the fresh start, and the new era that is unlike anything that has come before. When Thomas Tuchel got the England job, it felt like he could deliver exactly that. An unquestionably world-class manager, coaching this English generation, clearly focusing on winning next year’s World Cup. Why shouldn’t they improve overnight? But Friday’s opening 2-0 win over Albania was a reminder that maybe football is not that simple. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Mexico swings Concacaf’s pendulum back its way with Nations League title
“It was referred to as the darkest period in Mexican football history. Following Mexico’s exit in the group stage at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, Mexico lost to the U.S. 2-0 in the semifinals of the Concacaf Nations League in 2023. Before that, El Tri had lost to the Americans in the 2019 Nations League final, and also suffered a defeat in Cincinnati in 2021 during the World Cup qualifiers prior to Qatar. Shortly before the 2022 World Cup, then-Mexico federation president Yon de Luisa fired his entire sporting department in what was viewed as a last-gasp effort to change the national team’s direction prior to the tournament. Yet Mexico crashed out, snapping a streak of seven straight knockout-stage berths, while the U.S. escaped its group. El Tri were no longer the Kings of Concacaf. Instead, they were forced to look up at their most bitter rivals, as the U.S. celebrated an unprecedented run of success against their neighbors to the south. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic: USMNT frustrations boiling over as World Cup clock keeps on ticking
Panama deals USMNT another deflating, exposing defeat in Nations League stunner

“The goal came seemingly out of nowhere. The U.S. had actually shown a bit of life in what had been a mostly lifeless Concacaf Nations League semifinal. Patrick Agyemang, the substitute forward, had a couple of good looks at goal. Weston McKennie had just unleashed a shot from the top of the box. But Panama, which had been so disciplined defensively, pushed the ball down the field in stoppage time. On the counter, the ball found its way to the right side of the box to Panamanian forward Cecilio Waterman. He took control and picked out the far post, beating the outstretched hand of Matt Turner in the 94th minute. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Raúl Jiménez and a tested Mexico crush Canada’s Nations League hopes
“In the end, experience mattered. Raúl Jiménez, playing for the 109th time for Mexico, sunk an up-and-coming Canada team trying to prove it belonged in a Concacaf final. The 33-year-old Fulham forward’s two goals propelled Mexico to its third Nations League final with a 2-0 win Thursday night. Mexico has yet to win the competition, but either way a new champion will be crowned after Panama’s surprise 1-0 triumph over the U.S., the only previous winner. Jesse Marsch’s Canada came into the game brimming with confidence, eager to prove it belonged. Jacob Shaffelburg said he was never more “excited” in a Canada camp. Alistair Johnston claimed this Canada team was never more “prepared” than it was on the eve of the semifinal. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

The BookKeeper: Exploring Liverpool’s finances, England’s most profitable club
“At the beginning of March, Liverpool were surging under Arne Slot. Less than a fortnight ago, Slot’s first season at Anfield was geared up to be one of the greatest in club history. The Premier League was a procession. A Carabao Cup final awaited. The Champions League was theirs to snaffle up, too, after topping the revamped league stage. Not so now. In the space of six days, Liverpool’s lofty season has tumbled. From looking so imperious during the Dutchman’s first six months at the helm, now Slot’s side are left with just the Premier League to play for — though it would take quite the implosion for that to fall out of their grasp. The Carabao Cup and Champions League are gone. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Hansi Flick has turned Barcelona into an unusually complete football team
“On Sunday evening, for the first time since 2007 — long before Diego Simeone took charge — Atletico Madrid lost a match having held a two-goal lead. And when a team comes back from 2-0 down to win 4-2 in a match with major significance in the title race, the instinct is to ask precisely what changed in the tactical battle, particularly when two managers with wildly different philosophies, Simeone and Hansi Flick, were involved. …”
NY Times/The Athletic – Michael Cox
The BookKeeper – Exploring Arsenal’s finances, transfer funds, owner debts and soaring revenues
“Arsenal’s return to the top table of English football has been a long time coming. Two decades have passed since they last won the Premier League title — few who watched their famed ‘Invincibles’ team of 2003-04 would have predicted that would be the last of Arsene Wenger’s league successes. Yet football, and perhaps English football more than anywhere else, has changed dramatically since those days of Thierry Henry, Dennis Bergkamp and Robert Pires. Financially, Arsenal have had to deal with the seemingly bottomless wealth of first Chelsea and then Manchester City, two rivals whose various periods of domestic dominance were at least in some part built on the back of Arsenal’s hard work, given they raided Wenger for many of his best players. …”
NY Times./The Athletic
Liverpool 1 Newcastle 2: Isak and Burn end 70 years of hurt as Slot’s side fall flat

Burn towers over Mac Allister to do what he hadn’t been doing in training: score
“Newcastle United had waited 70 years for a moment like this. It was 1955 when the north-east club last won a piece of major domestic silverware but that drought is over after a 2-1 win over Liverpool in Sunday’s Carabao Cup final. Nobody could argue it was not deserved, either. Newcastle were hungrier and carried more thrust throughout and could have been leading by more than just the goals scored by Dan Burn and Alexander Isak before Federico Chiesa ensured a nervy finale with a late strike. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
NY Times/The Athletic – Inside Newcastle United’s Carabao Cup glory – Shearer’s text, Howe’s banner and tactics, and a half-time slideshow (Video)
Guardian: Liverpool have been utterly dominant. But cracks are starting to emerge – Jonathan Wilson

The Arne Slot story: From Dutch Bible Belt to Liverpool – and why ‘it all comes back to his father’

“Over the years, the newspaper cutting has started to yellow with age. It has a rip down one side and, almost four decades since it was printed, its owner cannot be sure how the damage occurred. Bert Snippe has just pulled up a chair and introduced himself as a former team-mate of Arne Slot’s father, Arend, from the village team, VV Bergentheim, whose story is intrinsically linked to Liverpool’s modern-day success. Arend never played professionally but he was called up for the Dutch national amateur team. Mention his name in Bergentheim and the people who have seen him play all seem to be in agreement: he was the best footballer VV Bergentheim ever had. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Arne Slot (third from left), aged nine, in a Dutch newspaper
Martin Odegaard, the ‘scoop’ pass and why it’s so hard to pull off
“It is a problem dominant football teams are experiencing across the world: with so many opposing sides deploying a low block, meaning they sit deep on their 18-yard line for the majority of the game, how do you find a way to goal? With space behind the defence strangled and the centre of the pitch condensed, plotting a course requires precise combination play. Most teams have to go around the block but that usually means crossing the ball, and statistically those do not translate into goals very often. In light of those convoluted routes, Arsenal captain Martin Odegaard has made the executive decision that going over all those bodies is the best policy. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
English football is besotted with second balls – but how important are they?
“It is a staple of English football. Despite the progression in modern football tactics, it is remarkable how many managers point to a specific part of the game in their pre- and post-match interviews. The second ball. With the influx of overseas coaches over recent decades, it feels like a rite of passage to note the importance of second balls when striving to win a game of Premier League football. Most notably, early in Pep Guardiola’s first season with Manchester City, he recalled how former Liverpool midfielder Xabi Alonso had flagged their significance when the pair worked together at Bayern Munich. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
How Uruguay won the 1930 World Cup: Home advantage, breathing exercises and a final of two halves

Uruguay captain Jose Nasazzi: ‘The Grand Marshal’
“When Uruguay won the right to host the inaugural World Cup — partly based around the fact they were celebrating their centenary as a nation, and partly because they were considered the strongest side around after winning the 1924 and 1928 Olympic football tournaments — it was both a blessing and a curse. The curse was that they were handed only a year to put together a tournament of unprecedented size for a single sport. The inevitably-named Estadio Centenario, where Uruguay would play all their matches, was only declared ready five days into the tournament after three teams of workers constantly rotated around the clock on eight-hour shifts, so the hosts started later than everyone else. The 100,000-capacity arena was temporarily capped at 80,000, with scaffolding around the outside showing how recently the project had been finished. …”
NY Times/Athletic – Michael Cox

The French team pictured on their way to the tournament in Uruguay.
Joao Neves: How Portugal’s little prince stole Parisian hearts
“Watch the video without sound, without context, and you will be forgiven for wondering what exactly is going on. It is a television news report from 2019. It shows Portugal’s under-15 squad in training. The session is dynamic and intense. Players shove each other off the ball, crunch into challenges. These are only kids but they exhibit a physicality far beyond their years. All, that is, except one. Darting about in the forest of limbs is a little cotton-tailed rabbit. He looks like he hasn’t even heard of puberty. He’s not wearing the No 10 jersey; it’s wearing him. Look closer, though. He’s running rings around those other boys. The footage cuts away to an interview. It’s him, the mini maestro, Joao Neves, 14 going on eight, hair bobbing up and down, eyes lit up like candles. He looks like a porcelain doll come to life. Then he starts to speak. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Premier League one-touch passing is in decline – unless your name is Bruno Fernandes
“One-touch passes are hard. As the great Johan Cruyff once said, ‘Technique is passing the ball with one touch, with the right speed, at the right foot of your team-mate.’ The truth is first-time passes are dying out, with Premier League sides increasingly prioritising controlled possession. Manchester United playmaker Bruno Fernandes, though, has never been one to follow convention. His one-touch, no-look assist in last season’s FA Cup final win against Manchester City would surely have earned Cruyff’s seal of approval. From the edge of the box, Fernandes slid a first-time ball between John Stones and a recovering Kyle Walker, teeing up Kobbie Mainoo for the side-footed finish, as United ran out 2-1 winners, denying City a second successive league-and-cup double. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Adam Wharton and a perfect pass that must have impressed Thomas Tuchel
“As Adam Wharton turned and played a perfect through ball to Eddie Nketiah, Thomas Tuchel must have raised an eyebrow. The England head coach watched Crystal Palace from the stands for the second successive match with several players on his radar. But if there was a pass which by itself warranted an England call-up then this was it. Wharton received the ball 10 yards inside Palace’s half, surveyed the surroundings and advanced forward. He spotted Nketiah, who was through a crowd. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Man United 1 Arsenal 1: Rice rescue act, Fernandes’ brilliance and fan protests
“Manchester United’s wait for back-to-back Premier League wins this season goes on after Declan Rice’s fine second-half strike earned Arsenal a point at a raucous Old Trafford. This game lacked the quality that was once associated with this fixture, with Bruno Fernandes’ goal shortly before half-time — a precise free kick from 25 yards — the outstanding moment in a poor first half. Arsenal improved after the break and levelled with Rice’s powerful long-range effort, their first goal in 257 minutes of Premier League action. And despite that shortage of quality, the closing stages had plenty of drama as both sides pushed for a win, Fernandes coming closest in the dying seconds. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Arne Slot’s ‘lost’ title at AZ: ‘It still hurts us every day’
“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
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)
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
Liverpool drawing PSG highlights major flaw in the revamped Champions League
“If Liverpool’s loosely-defined ‘luck’ in the Premier League is a real thing then consider the not-so-compelling narrative in the Champions League. Domestically, Arne Slot’s side have certainly benefited from Manchester City’s collapse since losing the Ballon d’Or winner, Rodri, while Arsenal have struggled amid a crippling injury crisis. The absence of key players for opposing clubs in fixtures against Liverpool — City’s Erling Haaland and Newcastle United’s Alexander Isak, for example — have also been cited as proof that this was the season the stars aligned at Anfield. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Champions League round of 16: Eight under-the-radar players to watch
“The Champions League gets serious this week as the round of 16 begins. To get to this point, 160 games have been completed — now there are just 29 left to play. But those 29 are the most consequential matches of the competition, the moments when each team’s key players must step up and perform. But who should we be keeping an eye on? The superstars, sure, but you can’t land the European Cup with stellar names alone. Who are the key figures who have been excellent in the 2024-25 season without generating as many headlines as they should have? (And yes, let’s acknowledge that if you play in probably the most prestigious club football competition in the world, you are hardly obscure.) …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Explained: Shocking challenge on Jean-Philippe Mateta that Crystal Palace chairman says ‘endangered’ his life
“Jean-Philippe Mateta had his ‘life endangered’ in a challenge from Millwall goalkeeper Liam Roberts that left the Crystal Palace striker with a head injury, his club’s chairman Steve Parish said. Mateta was given oxygen on the pitch following the challenge in Saturday’s FA Cup fifth-round tie, before being taken off on a stretcher from the field of play in a neck brace and being directly taken to an ambulance, with play stopped for over 10 minutes. Millwall’s Roberts was shown a straight red card after the video assistant referee (VAR) recommended on-field referee Michael Oliver to review the decision, after the goalkeeper was initially not punished for the incident. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Bayern Munich at 125: The past, the present and the future of a German powerhouse

“A few streets from Munich’s Odeonsplatz, away from the marble lions guarding the steps of the Feldherrnhalle and under the shadow of the Theatinerkirche’s sunshine-yellow towers, there is a monument to a place that no longer exists. Much of Munich was damaged during the Second World War. Many of the street names have changed and the buildings that could not be restored have been forgotten, along with whatever took place inside them. Cafe Gisela is long gone. From the few drawings that exist, Gisela was grand, with white tablecloths and high, patterned ceilings. And on the place where it once stood, there is now a bronze plaque mounted on a marble obelisk. It bears the Bayern Munich crest and displays the club’s founding document, signed by the first 17 members on February 27, 1900. On this day 125 years ago, 11 members of Manner-Turn-Verein 1878 (MTV) left a club meeting and headed out into the city night. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Bayern fans pay tribute to Landauer on the terraces in 2014
Preston v Burnley, a bog-standard English fixture or… football’s ultimate heritage match?

“On the face of it, Preston North End versus Burnley seems like a bog-standard Championship fixture. Since the start of the 21st century, the clubs have met 26 times in the second tier of English football, making it one of the division’s most regular encounters. Such a sense of routine was supported by the outcomes in two league fixtures this season, with meetings at Turf Moor in October and Deepdale earlier this month finishing in goalless draws. The BBC wrote of ‘a typically frantic and feisty Lancashire derby’ in February — that game has subsequently led to an investigation by the Football Association following claims of an alleged racist comment by the Preston forward Milutin Osmajic (Osmajic ‘strongly refuted’ the claims, Preston said) — but it was otherwise only notable because the visiting team extended their remarkable record of consecutive clean sheets to 11. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Our picture archives do not stretch back to the 1880s, but this image shows Preston scoring a penalty against Burnley in 1953.
Ange Postecoglou thinks that the assist is a ‘useless statistic’ – is he right?

“Football can be a divisive sport, but one thing most can agree on is the value of setting up a team-mate for a goal. Not so for Tottenham boss Ange Postecoglou. When asked about Dane Scarlett’s assist against Ipswich Town this week, he initially praised the young forward’s character, before launching into a dismissive speech about the metric. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
Work ethic, flexibility and tactical smarts: Slot’s potent Liverpool recipe
Alexis Mac Allister of Liverpool (bottom right) slides in to challenge Manchester City’s Omar Marmoush, resulting in bruising to the Argentinian’s face.
“Alexis Mac Allister’s face was a picture and it told part of the story. It was an hour or so after the whistle had blown on Liverpool’s 2-0 win at Manchester City on Sunday and the war wounds were visible, the signs of sacrifice. There were shades of yellow and green on Mac Allister’s left eyelid, angry red above that – just beneath the eyebrow; more red around the cheekbone. The damage was done in the 30th minute when the Liverpool midfielder flung himself into a sliding challenge on Omar Marmoush. …”
Guardian
