GROUP STAGE — Group HSat, Jun 27, 12:00 AM
Estadio Akron, Guadalajara

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Can Arsenal hold off City? Will Atlético win Copa del Rey?

Ahead of a huge weekend across Europe, with implications at both ends of various tables -- and silverware up for grabs in Spain -- Julien Laurens previews and predicts.

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Match Coverage (1897)

Lamine Yamal feasts on McDonald’s on private jet after Barcelona superstar, 18, wins historic Laureus award

LAMINE YAMAL treated himself to a McDonalds on his private jet after winning his second Laureus award. The Barcelona winger is one of football's biggest stars and his talent was recognised with the inaugural Young Sportsperson of the Year prize. Yamal, 18, was honoured once again at the ceremony after being handed the Breakthrough Sportsperson...

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A major injury concern emerged for Manchester City during their win over Arsenal

Manchester City picked up a huge 2-1 victory over Arsenal at the Etihad Stadium on Sunday to move within three points of Mikel Arteta’s side at the top of the Premier League table. Pep Guardiola’s side do have a game in hand on the Gunners and have built up real momentum for the run-in in […] The post A major injury concern emerged for Manchester City during their win over Arsenal appeared first on Esteemed Kompany.

Analysis: Marcos Llorente is crucial to Spain’s World Cup ambitions

After missing out on the 2024 European Championship, Atletico Madrid defender Marcos Llorente is gearing up to represent Spain at the 2026 World Cup. The 31-year-old should be on the plane to North America with the rest of Luis de la Fuente’s squad as La Roja look to claim their second World Cup title. While […] The post Analysis: Marcos Llorente is crucial to Spain’s World Cup ambitions appeared first on Football España.

Lamine Yamal hails Lionel Messi among greatest athletes in history after Barca star wins second Laureus award

After winning his second Laureus award, FC Barcelona star Lamine Yamal hailed Lionel Messi among the greatest athletes in history. Lamine Yamal‘s performances at the earliest stages of his professional career continue to capture the attention of the sporting world and its most prestigious award ceremonies. Now a two-time Laureus Award winner, the 18-year-old Barcelona star used the occasion to place Lionel Messi among the greatest athletes in the history of sport. The Laureus World Sports Awards, which honor individuals and teams across a wide range of disciplines, held its 2026 edition with Yamal once again among the most prominent names on the night. This time, he was recognized with the Laureus World Young Sportsperson of the Year Award, presented by the Laureus Academy. “I am very happy to be the first to receive this award for best young athlete. It is a source of pride,” Yamal said upon collecting the trophy, taking a moment to thank the Academy, the legends who voted for him, and his family and inner circle. He then turned his attention to the only soccer figure to have claimed the Laureus World Sportsman of the Year award. “When you realize an athlete isn’t just a legend of their sport but of all sports — Messi, who for me is the best player in history, and if he isn’t the greatest athlete ever, he’s definitely in that conversation with all of them,” Yamal said. The Argentine icon first claimed the World Sportsman of the Year in 2020, sharing the honor with Lewis Hamilton, before claiming it again in 2023 following Argentina’s World Cup triumph. Barcelona Player, Lamine Yamal poses with the Laureus World Young Sportsperson of the Year Award. Yamal also spoke to Messi’s status as a figure who transcends soccer altogether. “He’s more than an idol. I think everyone respects him for everything he’s done. He’s been part of the childhood of every kid when we played in the park or at school, and I hope I’ll be able to follow in his footsteps,” the teenager said. Yamal’s second Laureus Award After helping Barcelona claim La Liga, the Spanish Super Cup and the Copa del Rey in 2025 while playing a pivotal role in the club’s UEFA Champions League run, Lamine Yamal earned another nod from the Laureus Academy. It was not his first time on that stage, however, as the Spanish teenager had already made history at the ceremony the year prior. For his starring role in leading Spain to victory at Euro 2024, Yamal was named Laureus World Breakthrough of the Year, an award that reflected the immediacy and magnitude of his impact on soccer and the broader sporting landscape. Since the award’s first edition in 2000, only Jude Bellingham had previously claimed it as a soccer player, in 2024, with Yamal following in his footsteps just one year later. With two Laureus Awards now in his collection, Yamal closed with a forward-looking message about what the recognition means to him. “I am grateful that my contributions to our team in 2025 are being recognized with this Laureus. I believe that sport has the power to change the world. This statuette represents a new generation of athletes who can bring about that change. I am proud to be the first to receive this Laureus,” he concluded.

100,000 fans line the streets to greet Real Sociedad as Copa del Rey champions

A reported 100,000 fans lined the streets to greet Real Sociedad’s victorious players on Monday evening, who paraded the Copa del Rey trophy through the streets of Donostia-San Sebastian. The Txuri-Urdin are celebrating their fourth ever Copa del Rey trophy after beating Atletico Madrid on penalties on Saturday night in Seville, following a 2-2 draw. […] The post 100,000 fans line the streets to greet Real Sociedad as Copa del Rey champions appeared first on Football España.

VIDEO: Pellegrino Matarazzo gives speech in Basque during Real Sociedad Copa del Rey celebrations

Real Sociedad manager Pellegrino Matarazzo has further endeared himself to fans in Donostia-San Sebastian after giving a speech in Basque. The American coach helped deliver a fourth Copa del Rey to Anoeta on Saturday night, and was one of the stars of the show during their celebrations. Matarazzo became the first manager from the United […] The post VIDEO: Pellegrino Matarazzo gives speech in Basque during Real Sociedad Copa del Rey celebrations appeared first on Football España.

The Good, the Bad and the Beautiful: Simeone’s vindication undone by unblinking Real Sociedad

A round-up of some of La Liga’s most intriguing storylines across the week, traversing through the good, the bad and something beautiful. The Good: Pellegrino Matarazzo’s stubborn Real Sociedad In Pellegrino Matarazzo’s first game in charge, Real Sociedad were performing well when Atletico Madrid struck against the run of play through Alexander Sorloth. Five minutes later, […] The post The Good, the Bad and the Beautiful: Simeone’s vindication undone by unblinking Real Sociedad appeared first on Football España.

Gustavo Poyet exclusive: ‘Always playing offensive football, that started with me’ at Brighton

Uruguayan legend Gus Poyet talks exclusively to World Soccer Talk about his career at Chelsea and Spurs, creating the modern identity of Brighton, and his readiness to return to the dugout after winning titles in South Korea. He may have been born into basketball patrimony, but Gustavo Augusto Poyet Domínguez has made his name in football. The son of Washington Poyet, who played basketball for Uruguay in the 1960 and 1964 Summer Olympics, and the brother of Marcelo, who played the sport professionally in South America, Gustavo was enamored with football from the start. Born on November 15, 1967, Poyet started off at the academy of Club Atlético River Plate before heading across the Atlantic and joining Ligue 2 outfit Grenoble Foot 38 in 1988. Poyet scored eight goals in 39 appearances before returning to his hometown of Montevideo and plying his trade with River Plate, only to head back to Europe after a few months and join LaLiga outfit Real Zaragoza in 1990. “When you are young in Uruguay, playing football, there are two main objectives. One is to play for one of the two biggest teams in Uruguay, and if you cannot, to go abroad, because obviously, the career of a football player is very short. In Uruguay, it’s one thing to be a professional footballer, and it’s another thing to earn good money,” stated Poyet in an exclusive World Soccer Talk interview. “As I wasn’t playing for Peñarol or Nacional, I received the opportunity to go to France. My idea was to go to Nice in the first division, who had two foreigners from Yugoslavia—one was supposed to leave but ended up staying—and in the last few days of the window, Grenoble appeared with a bigger offer for me and for my club, River Plate. Having been in France for three weeks already, I loved the way that their professional football looked, and I signed for Grenoble, which, in terms of personal experience, was fantastic. But I didn’t play well, I didn’t perform, and I didn’t adapt to that particular team at that moment in time in my career. I was very young, I spent too much time alone, and it was very difficult for me, but I grew up as a person.” Poyet emerged as an indispensable figure for Zaragoza, leading them to safety before spurring them to back-to-back Copa del Rey Finals, winning the second vs. Celta de Vigo, before engineering famous wins against Feyenoord, Chelsea, and Arsenal en route to the UEFA Cup Winners’ Cup title, their first European trophy in 31 years. Similarly to other players like Jesper Karlström, Poyet’s mix of industrious work-rate and goal-scoring instincts made him a crucial figure in midfield. And just a few weeks after becoming a European champion, Poyet became a South American champion after leading Uruguay to the 1995 Copa América on home soil. All things considered, Poyet scored three goals in 21 appearances for Uruguay between 1993 and 2000. He then called it quits on his time in Spain after 74 goals and two assists in 276 appearances, departing as Zaragoza’s longest-serving foreign player, and making the move to Chelsea in 1997. After his stellar start was interrupted by an ACL injury, Poyet returned to form and led the Blues to glory in the UEFA Cup Winners’ Cup and FA Cup, before being pushed out by new manager Claudio Ranieri. He then moved to Tottenham Hotspur in May 2001 for £2.2 million, spending three years in North London before hanging up his boots and stepping into management. After following ex-Chelsea teammate Dennis Wise from Swindon Town to Leeds United, Poyet returned to Tottenham as an assistant coach to Juande Ramos. Six years after losing the League Cup Final in Cardiff as a Tottenham player, Poyet helped Spurs prevail 2-1 in extra time against Chelsea at Wembley. But deep down, he always knew that he wanted to branch out from assistant management and try his luck in coaching. It’s why he decided to make the move to Brighton & Hove Albion, leading them to promotion to the EFL Championship and setting the foundations for their golden era over the past decade. “I think, apart from one or two difficult times with coaches, the idea of Brighton chairman Tony Bloom, from the moment I left, was to bring coaches who will play a similar style. After me, it was Óscar García, Roberto De Zerbi, and Graham Potter, who was playing such a nice kind of football at Swansea City, and Fabian Hürzeler is now a tremendous coach. The idea behind bringing certain coaches was always based on what we created as an identity. “It took us a while to change the mentality of the fans, because they wanted long-ball English play, but then we started… there is a moment in my career at Brighton which is fundamental, and it’s two games away from home in my second season, in League One. It’s away at Peterborough, and away at Charlton; we’re playing them off the park, and the fans started singing and embracing the style. It was like, ‘This is Brighton, you know?’ After that, they knew they would be that style forever, and I think now it would be very difficult for Brighton to play a different way. That doesn’t mean that we are the same; we are not the same. All the coaches, we are different. But the idea of expecting the ball, playing from the back, keeping possession, trying to be creative, always playing offensive football, that started with me in 2009/10.” After a four-year magnum opus at the Amex, Poyet then became the first Uruguayan to coach in the Premier League after taking charge of Sunderland in October 2013. Poyet quickly made an impression by leading them to the EFL Cup Final and steering them to a last-gasp escape from relegation, only to be sacked in March 2015. He then departed England for a Mediterranean tour featuring Greek side AEK Athens and Spanish outfit Real Betis, before trying his luck in Asia for the first time ever. After a brief sojourn with Chinese side Shanghai Shenhua, Poyet took charge of French side Girondins de Bordeaux and developed future stars like Aurélien Tchouaméni and Jules Koundé before making the move to Chilean side Universidad Católica. Poyet then transitioned into international management and became the manager of the Greek national team, taking four wins from his first four fixtures in League C of the 2022 UEFA Nations League and helping Greece earn promotion to League B, but he was unable to steer them to Euro 2024 after losing to Georgia on penalties in the final qualifier. He spent nine months out of work before taking the reins at Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors and leading them to the two biggest trophies in South Korea—the K League 1 and the Korea Cup—before departing after a year. He’s spent the past four months in the upscale London neighborhood of Battersea, and whilst he’s enjoyed his time off, he’s more than ready to dive back into management. “I’ve been taking advantage of my time off to do many different things. The first month, I came back to Uruguay in December after winning the Cup and spent time with my mom and my granddaughter, and then I came back to England and I started watching football and talking to people around football. I started a master’s online class on data and intelligence in football and in sports. Why? Because I want to be prepared, just in case. The future is all about numbers: I use the data, but I’m not crazy about the data. I use it to confirm things. I’m still thinking that football is much simpler than a number, but I want to have the information. “I went to see a few training sessions of Getafe and Atlético Madrid thanks to coaches like José Bordalás and Diego Simeone, who allowed me to watch. I went to see a Real Madrid match live, I saw Tottenham-Arsenal live, I’ve been doing a little bit of press and podcasts, and I’ve been watching a lot of football. I’ve already received one offer and will probably receive another in the next week or so: I’m making decisions, and I’m ready to come back as soon as possible.”

Arsenal Are Keeping A Keen Eye On This La Liga Winger: What Will He Add To Arteta’s Side?

In a recent post on X, journalist Graeme Bailey revealed that Arsenal are keeping a keen eye on Athletic Bilbao winger Nico Williams. It has been mentioned that the Gunners are eyeing a move to secure the services of the Spanish wide player this off-season. Williams’ Impressive Form In La Liga Williams has enjoyed a […] The post Arsenal Are Keeping A Keen Eye On This La Liga Winger: What Will He Add To Arteta’s Side? appeared first on The 4th Official - A view from the sideline.

Arsenal now want to replace Martinelli with £78m star who Berta absolutely loves

The Gunners' sporting director is a huge fan of a winger, who could be brought in as a replacement for Gabriel Martinelli this summer.

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