Sports
Ballon d’Or Star Ousmane Dembele Rejected Leicester City Transfer
The beauty of football is that you can rarely be sure of how things are going to play out. There are so many examples of the unexpected happening in the beautiful game, but perhaps the best example of this in the modern era is Leicester City football club.
Ahead of the 2025/16 Premier League season, the Foxes were viewed as strong relegation candidates. After all, they finished just six points above the drop zone the season prior. Certainly, nobody was viewing them as title contenders, with the club made out as 5000–1 underdogs before a ball had even been kicked.
Against those remarkable odds, however, Leicester stunned English football to win the Premier League for the first time in their history. Claudio Ranieri was the mastermind, with players like Jamie Vardy, N’Golo Kante and Riyad Mahrez also winning over plaudits.
Highlighting the unexpected nature of football, though, the club have fallen on hard times since. Indeed, now 10 years on from that title-winning campaign, the Foxes have been relegated to League One, the third tier of the English football pyramid.
Perhaps things would be going better if they’d secured one key player in the transfer market directly after their Premier League triumph.
Ballon d’Or 2026 Power Rankings
Tracking the leading contenders to win the prestigious Ballon d’Or award in 2026.
Claudio Ranieri Wanted To Sign Future Ballon d’Or Winner
In May 2016, Leicester were still riding high after their stunning achievement. With Ranieri at the helm, the Italian manager was already looking into the summer window, hoping to strengthen his squad with this newfound reputation.
The club would spend millions on the likes of Islam Slimani, Ahmed Musa, Nampalys Mendy, and Wilfred Ndidi, with most of them failing to prove value for money. One man, however, was personally targeted by Ranieri but turned down his approach.
At the time, Ousmane Dembele was a highly rated France Under-21 international playing for Rennes. Leicester were very keen on signing the winger, but the teenager turned down the approach, explaining:
“I had Claudio Ranieri on the phone. I was surprised to hear from him but I told him I will not be going to Leicester.
“I do hope to be playing Champions League [next season], but I know where I’m going and it’s final.”
Still only 18 at the time, Dembele had scored 12 goals in his debut season in Ligue 1, and was named Young Player of the Year. Liverpool boss Jurgen Klopp also approached the player, but he had already decided to move to Borussia Dortmund instead.
In Germany, the youngster would impress, scoring 10 goals and picking up a tidy sum of 21 assists in 50 games for Dortmund. This is where Barcelona came in, spending 115m on the Frenchman in 2017. Injury issues played their part, and it’s fair to say Dembele struggled to live up to expectations in Spain, although still managing 40 goals and 41 assists in 185 games.
His career finally exploded, however, after he joined Paris Saint-Germain in 2023.
Dembele Could Win Second Ballon d’Or in 2026
Dembele had always been viewed as a top talent, as evidenced by Ranieri’s Leicester interest way back in 2016. But it took Luis Enrique’s arrival at PSG before he finally found a manager who knew how to get the best out of him on a consistent basis.
In 2025, the Parisian club would win the Champions League for the first time in their history, while also getting their hands on Ligue 1, the Coupe de France, the Trophée des Champions, the European Super Cup and the FIFA Intercontinental Cup.
At the very heart of that historic sextuple was Demeble, with the Frenchman bagging 35 goals and 16 assists in 53 games. This was enough to secure him the 2025 Ballon d’Or. The Frenchman humbly accepted the award, saying:
“My teammates have been amazing in 2024 and 2025, they have been with me in the bad moments. It is not an individual trophy, it is for us all to win this.”
While Demeble has shone in the last decade, Leicester have gone from title-winners to serial underachievers. Indeed, they were relegated to the Championship in 2023, before then coming back up to the top-flight, only to be immediately relegated again in 2025. Now they’ve ended up in League One after another dismal campaign.
Demeble, though, could yet get his hands on the 2026 Ballon d’Or. Indeed, the 28-year-old remains very much the beating heart of his team’s attack and has 18 goals and 10 assists in total this term.
If he can lead PSG to Champions League and domestic glory again – with the current club into the semis and leading Ligue 1 – and do well with France in the 2026 World Cup, he could win the game’s biggest individual award for the second year running. He’s currently ranked among the favourites.
Sports
Viral World Cup Trend Explained
Every now and then, a fan trend from the World Cup or European Championship goes viral, spreading further than the stadiums it started in, and Norway’s “Viking Row” is one of the best recent examples.
It’s the sort of celebration that sums up exactly why major tournaments tend to produce these moments in the first place; simple enough for anyone to join in with, yet tied closely enough to a country’s identity that it ends up meaning far more than the average football song.
Performed by the country’s supporters, it made its way onto escalators, into city squares, and even inside Norway’s own parliament during the 2026 World Cup, turning a routine match day tradition into a repetitively viral moment.
What is the ‘Viking Row’ in Soccer?
The Viking Row is a synchronised chant and movement performed by groups of fans, designed to mimic the action of rowing a longship.
It starts with supporters sitting down together, before building into a rhythmic chant of the word “ro,” which simply translates to “row.”
As the chant builds, fans begin moving their arms back and forth in unison, exactly as if they were pulling on oars.
The motion gradually speeds up, before the whole group rises together at the climax, arms thrown up, roaring in celebration. It can take fans a little while to get fully in sync, but once it clicks, it’s an incredible sight.
It’s not limited to the stands either. Fans have been known to take the routine outside the stadium, performing it on moving escalators, in train stations, and on city streets.
Origin of the ‘Viking Row’ Trend
The tradition is taken from Norway’s seafaring history, with the rowing motion inspired by the longships that once carried Viking warriors and explorers across the seas centuries ago. It ties their support of the national side directly back to a piece of national heritage Norwegians have long taken pride in.
It’s also not the first time a national fanbase has turned a slice of cultural history into a football chant. Iceland did something similar with their famous “Viking Clap” at Euro 2016. A slow, building clap performed above the head became a viral sensation. Dutch fans also have an equally viral trend. Their simple dance, from left to right to the song Snollebollekes, have seen crowds of more than 25,000 participate in the street. The Viking Row follows a similar idea, giving supporters something simple and easy to join in with.
Brazil & Man Utd star Matheus Cunha’s ‘Samba Surfer’ Celebration Explained
It’s a rather unique celebration to say the least.
Reaction to the ‘Viking Row’ at World Cup 2026
The trend went well beyond football stadiums and areas close by. Norwegian politicians even paused proceedings to perform the row inside parliament itself, with the chamber’s speaker setting the rhythm before everyone pulled on their imaginary oars. Clips of the moment spread quickly online, with people amused to see politicians briefly swap debate for a bit of choreography.
Beyond the politicians and the impromptu street performances, the reaction online was just as telling. Clips of the celebration racked up millions of views across social media, with supporters of other countries admitting they wished their own fanbase had something similar. Pundits and former players also weighed in during broadcasts, often praising the tradition as one of the more original pieces of fan culture, rather than just another viral clip that fades within days.
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Sports
Brazil & Man Utd star Matheus Cunha’s ‘Samba Surfer’ Celebration Explained
Whenever Matheus Cunha finds the net, be that for Manchester United or Brazil, one thing is near enough guaranteed to happen: the surfing celebration.
The forward marks his goals by crouching low and riding an imaginary wave in front of the cameras. Coming out for the first time in 2025 when playing for Wolverhampton Wanderers in the Premier League, it’s now a routine that has become one of the more recognisable celebrations in football, and has even made it as far as the World Cup.
Behind the playful gesture, though, is a story rooted in something much more personal than most fans probably realise, tying back to where Cunha grew up and how he switches off from the pressures of football.
What is Matheus Cunha’s Surfing Celebration?
The celebration follows a familiar pattern every time. Cunha drops to the ground as if diving onto a surfboard, paddles briefly with both arms, then pops up to his feet and rides an imaginary wave, exactly as a surfer would when catching one out at sea.
Watch: Matheus Cunha explains his surfing celebration:
What began as a fairly simple gesture of pretending to balance on a surfboard has turned into something closer to a full performance, even if it only lasts a handful of seconds. It’s become one of the most talked-about parts of his game, regularly clipped and shared across social media every time he finds the net.
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What is Matheus Cunha’s Surfing Celebration About?
Speaking about the celebration, Cunha made it clear that it isn’t just for show.
“Now I’m considered a surfer guy.”
He explained that the sport is a part of his life rather than a gimmick invented for the cameras.
He’s detailed where the love of surfing comes from, growing up in Joao Pessoa in northeastern Brazil before learning to ride waves in Baia Formosa, the hometown of his close friend Italo Ferreira, the 2019 World Surf League champion and Tokyo 2020 Olympic gold medallist.
“Surfing has become a big part of my life, a way to relax,” Cunha said, adding that he follows the sport almost as closely as football itself and considers Ferreira one of his best friends.
For anyone new to football and unfamiliar with the gesture, it’s essentially Cunha bringing a piece of home onto the pitch, using surfing as both an escape from the pressures of professional sport and a way to express his personality once the ball hits the net.
It also explains why this celebration carries far more weight for him than a standard goal celebration would, given how much time he actually spends on the sport away from football, to the point where he’s even sampled it in the cold waters of Bristol.
Does Matheus Cunha Have Other Celebrations?
The surfing routine isn’t the only trick up Cunha’s sleeve, even if it’s become the one most associated with him. He’s also been known to mix in more traditional celebrations, depending on the occasion, be them solo celebrations or with teammates.
Earlier in his time with the Red Devils, Cunha experimented with a handful of other gestures, like a point to the sky, kneeslides and kisses blown in the direction of adoring fans, before settling on the surfing routine as his go-to celebration, and his teammates have got in on the act too, with multiple United and Brazil players performing it with him.
It’s now reached the point where fans actively expect to see it whenever he scores, adding extra anticipation to his goals beyond just the strike itself, regardless of the competition or occasion.
Sports
Confirmed Registration Periods & Deadline Days
Transfer windows are important periods in the football calendar and people at every top club in the world have the relevant dates in the back of their minds at all times.
From a director of football seeking to rejuvenate the panel to a manager who needs to plug a gap mid-way through a season or an unsettled player mulling over their future with an eager agent, they are all keenly aware of the fact that transfers can only happen during very specific timeframes. Fans, too, look forward to the window with a mixture of anticipation and trepidation, while transfer news and rumours swirl mercurially through their orbit day by day.
They are technically known as transfer registration periods – basically, the windows when clubs can officially register new recruits – and they occur at two different times during a season, depending on the country. Broadly speaking, they tend to be referred to as the summer transfer window and the winter transfer window.
Here, GIVEMESPORT outlines the various upcoming summer 2026 transfer window dates for your convenience.
When the Summer 2026 Transfer Window Opens & Closes
Premier League, Ligue 1, Serie A, La Liga and Bundesliga
|
League |
Window Opens |
Window Closes |
|---|---|---|
|
Premier League |
June 15, 2026 |
September 1, 2026 |
|
Ligue 1 |
June 15, 2026 |
September 1, 2026 |
|
Serie A |
June 29, 2026 |
September 1, 2026 |
|
La Liga |
July 1, 2026 |
September 1, 2026 |
|
Bundesliga |
July 1, 2026 |
September 1, 2026 |
There is relative uniformity among the top European leagues when it comes to transfer windows, but there are variations to note, which can be seen in the table above.
England’s Premier League and the French Ligue 1 each saw their summer 2026 transfer window open on June 15, 2026, while the transfer window for Serie A clubs in Italy opens slightly later on June 29. La Liga and Bundesliga clubs will only be able to transfer players from July 1, 2026.
Despite the fact that the leagues have a number of different transfer window opening dates, they will all have to conclude their business by September 1, 2026, with windows closing for all of them at that date.
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Every new Manchester United signing and departure in the 2026/26 season so far
MLS and Liga MX
|
League |
Window Opens |
Window Closes |
|---|---|---|
|
MLS |
July 13, 2026 |
September 2, 2026 |
|
Liga MX |
July 2, 2026 |
September 11, 2026 |
|
Canadian Premier League |
July 17, 2026 |
August 20, 2026 |
MLS adheres to a different calendar than its European counterparts and thus the competition is in the middle of its 2026 season and looking towards its second transfer window, which opens on July 13, 2026 and closes on September 2, 2026.
To the south, Liga MX‘s summer transfer window will open on July 2, 2026 and close on September 11, 2026. For Canadian Premier League clubs, the transfer window opens on July 17 and closes relatively early on August 20.
Saudi Pro League, Eredivisie & Select Competitions
|
League |
Window Opens |
Window Closes |
|---|---|---|
|
Saudi Pro League |
July 22, 2026 |
October 12, 2026 |
|
Eredivisie |
June 22, 2026 |
September 2, 2026 |
|
Liga Portugal |
July 1, 2026 |
September 15, 2026 |
|
Scottish Premiership |
June 15, 2026 |
August 31, 2026 |
|
Turkish Super Lig |
June 22, 2026 |
September 4, 2026 |
|
Argentine Liga Profesional |
July 9, 2026 |
September 2, 2026 |
|
Brazilian Serie A |
July 20, 2026 |
September 11, 2026 |
The Saudi Pro League has been a destination for some of the biggest names in football ever since Cristiano Ronaldo signed for Al Nassr in 2023. With many clubs still boasting formidable buying power, it remains an intriguing potential destination for players seeking to boost their earnings.
This summer the Saudi Pro League’s transfer window opens on July 22 and closes on October 12 – meaning the deadline extends way beyond the one observed by most European leagues.
Dates taken from FIFA’s official transfer window calendar – correct as of 22/06/26
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