Sports
Fans Left Stunned After Seeing Alex Pereira’s Heavyweight Physique
UFC fighter Alex Pereira has shocked fans with his body transformation as he prepares for his first fight as a heavyweight next month.
Pereira moves up to the heavyweight division from the light heavyweight division for his upcoming fight against Ciryl Gane on the 14th June at UFC Freedom 250.
The pair will fight in the co-main event on the historic White House card, which is a one-of-a-kind event taking place on the grounds of the White House, and will see many celebrities in attendance.
Pereira, whose last fight was in a knockout victory against Magomed Ankalaev in October of last year, has upped his weight and changed his whole physique, and a picture of him in training prior to the upcoming fight has got fans talking.
Alex Pereira’s Heavyweight Physique For UFC Freedom 250
One UFC fan said: “Alex Pereira hitting heavyweight and looking like that is insane man. Bro went from lean killer at 185 to straight stacked, that lower body is no joke. Poatan always been a freak, but this bulk up got everybody talking. Hope the power stays with the extra size.”
Another said: “Alex Pereira looking like he was built in a secret UFC laboratory now.”
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An impressed fan said: “He’s going to be the scariest heavyweight to ever walk the earth.”
Another fan said: “Pereira didn’t just move up in weight, he stole the entire division’s muscle.”
One fan was so shocked by the picture that they questioned the validity of it: “If the picture is not modified, he has insane genetics. Other fighters said that he had KO power in both hands. Imagine this dude catching you at HW. I want to see this.”
Some Fans Concerned After Seeing Pereira’s Physique
Although many are impressed by the transformation Pereira has made, some are concerned for him in the upcoming fight against Gane.
Footage of Alex Pereira Sparring UFC Heavyweight Ahead of Debut vs Ciryl Gane on White House Card
Alex Pereira is set for his heavyweight debut next month at the White House, and he’s drafted in some existing big men to spar with.
Some fans have predicted he will struggle to move efficiently when carrying extra weight, with one posting: “Dude is going to be so slow and stiff out there, Gane is going to put the work on him.”
Another voiced their concerns: “He better retain that bounce or else he is gonna be slept.”
Another critic said: “Not good in my opinion, Ciryl is going to beat him. Should’ve stayed at light heavyweight, defended a few more, and then went over to boxing.”
It will be very interesting to see how the Brazilian fares in his new weight division on the upcoming White House card. UFC fans cannot put their finger on whether the increase in weight will be beneficial or not for the 38-year-old.
Sports
Kylian Mbappe Tipped to Sign For Club His Mum Loves, Liverpool
Beyond most notably Arsenal’s Champions League final against Paris Saint-Germain, the domestic season is now over for Real Madrid and most other major European teams. As such, the transfer rumour mill has already started to pick up.
From the Premier League, one big topic is Anthony Gordon’s potential move to Barcelona, which could net Newcastle United around £70m. While one high-profile forward could be heading to La Liga, another could be departing.
Indeed, after two seasons without a league or Champions League title, Kylian Mbappe has been linked with an exit from Madrid this summer. Already, a number of Premier League clubs appear to be in the running for his signature, with few clubs in the world likely to turn down a chance to land the 2026 Ballon d’Or contender.
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Mbappe Tipped for England Move Amid Issues at Madrid
In May, it was reported that Mbappe is becoming ‘increasingly isolated’ at Real Madrid and many of his teammates are ‘frustrated’ with his behaviour. The Frenchman is said to have shown an extremely ‘self-centred’ attitude both on and off the pitch, allegedly disrespected a member of staff during training and once arrived 40 minutes late for a team lunch.
He wasn’t punished for the incidents, which may explain why he reportedly has lost support within the dressing room. It’s claimed he is now only close with Real Madrid’s French players: Ferland Mendy, Aurelien Tchouameni and Eduardo Camavinga.
With rumours of his discontent making plenty of headlines, French journalist Julien Laurens – who is also the author of a definitive biography of Mbappe – has suggested that Liverpool could be an ideal eventual destination for the Frenchman, as his mother loves the Anfield outfit.
Speaking on TalkSport, he said: “I think Real Madrid was always the dream and he’s got long-term contract. He’s 27 going on 28. He will be 28 in December. I think I can see him staying there for a long time but then I don’t think it’s impossible to see him [leave] at some point.
“We know that Liverpool is the club that his mum loves. They were the team and the club that they watched the most and they were really loving.
“It’s funny because all those of English teams tried to sign him when he was 12, 14, 15, 17. Some went all the way to Nice and parked the private jet at the airport just waiting in case he was not staying in Monaco and decided to leave.
“They were all there ready to make him an offer. So, maybe one day, I think he would be great in the Premier League. “I think he’s got the game for it and he watches it all.”
Mbappe Has Admitted His Mum ‘Loves’ Liverpool
That the player has actually already been linked with a move to Anfield this summer will only add fuel to the speculation. What’s more, Mbappe has previously gone on the record about how his mother, who also works as his agent, is such a big fan of the Premier League giants. Explaining how he considered a move to Liverpool in 2017, he recalled:
“We talked a little bit, but not too much. We talked a little bit.
“I talked to Liverpool because it’s the favourite club of my mum. My mum loves Liverpool. I don’t know why, you will have to ask her! It’s a good club and we met them five years ago. When I was in Monaco I met them. It’s a big club.”
It remains to be seen if any move is a realistic option to even consider this summer for Mbappe, Madrid and Liverpool. However, the Reds will likely look to the transfer market to help deal with the high-profile exit of Mohamed Salah.
Sports
Champions League Anthem Lyrics & Origin
Summary
- The Champions League anthem has existed since the competition was rebranded from the European Cup in 1992.
- An English composer was hired to modify a piece of classical music which was first written for the coronation of King George II in the 18th century.
- The iconic tune is accompanied by lyrics in three different languages; French, German and English.
Red Bull Salzburg’s captain Andreas Ulmer was strolling through the city centre with his newborn baby one day in 2019 when a car pulled up at the traffic lights with the windows rolled down and music blasting. Rocking along to the iconic orchestral tones of the official Champions League anthem was his teammate Erling Haaland. A few days later, the future Manchester City superstar marked his debut in the competition with a hat-trick.
Haaland continues to use the signature score as his ringtone. There is a long queue of legendary footballers who have gushed about a 40-second burst of music which sweeps around the grounds of Europe’s best teams before each game in the most prestigious club competition on the planet.
Lionel Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo and Gareth Bale have all shown their appreciation for the Champions League anthem. The inspiring melody is world-famous, but the origins behind a song crafted by a Crystal Palace fan are not so familiar.
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Champions League Anthem Lyrics (Plus Translation)
Three languages, but not quite as dramatic as the musical accompaniment
UEFA didn’t know the lyrics they wanted for their new anthem but had decided what languages they wanted it to be in – which was a start. The competition’s signature piece of music would have to incorporate French, German and English – UEFA’s three official languages.
The anthem’s English composer, Tony Britten, “came up with a set of superlatives”, to use his own words. Settling upon ‘the greatest’, ‘the best’, ‘the masters’, ‘the main event’ and ‘the champions’, these painfully vague terms would be translated into the set dialects and blasted out alongside the accompanying hymn.
Ce sont les meilleures equipes
Es sind die allerbesten Mannschaften
Eine grosse sportliche Veranstaltung
The lyrics are lost in the royal swells of the overpowering composition, leaving little more than the words ‘the champions’ audible for most fans and players. The translated version doesn’t offer much more nuance, creating a series of repetitive verses which relentlessly underscore the lofty status of the competition. Ironically, the Champions League rebrand in 1992 coincided with an opening up of the tournament. While only domestic league title winners qualified for the European Cup, a wider pool of non-champions were treated to the new Champions League anthem.
Origin of the Champions League Anthem
Created in 1992 when the tournament was rebranded
Sporting themes and anthems had rarely strayed into the rich realm of classical music before the 1990s. Variations of pop and the chirpy Match of the Day tune were widespread until the BBC made the transformative decision to plump for Luciano Pavarotti’s rendition of ‘Nessun Dorma’ as the accompaniment to the opening credits of the 1990 World Cup, which was held in Italy.
Inspired by this universally acclaimed choice, UEFA wanted their own classical hit for the rebranding of their landmark competition in 1992. “The old European Cup had become a very tired competition,” the anthem’s composer, Tony Britten, told the BBC, “and to UEFA’s credit they wanted to elevate the sport around the time when there was of a lot of hooliganism right across Europe. UEFA wanted this competition to be about the best of football rather than the worst and said they must have an anthem.”
The new tournament ditched the European Cup tag which had existed since the 1950s in place of the Champions League branding. The executives at European football’s governing body had been sent a series of tapes for inspiration by Britten and requested something similar to Handel’s ‘Zadok the Priest’ – which was originally used for the coronation of Great Britain’s King George II in 1727.
I never pretend that it’s great art, but it’s good craft – it did exactly what the client wanted.
Britten is a Crystal Palace fan born and raised in south London who described himself as “a hired hand, a composer for rent”. The task of conjuring a unique spin on a piece of music from the 18th century had to be juggled alongside his work on Amstrad computer adverts and TV dramas. Britten found enough time to gather the choir of the Academy of St Martin in the Fields and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra at a studio in north London for a historic – and lucrative – recording session.
“The PRS [royalties] from that help me to fund all the other things!” Britten told M Magazine in 2011, allowing him to embark upon a career creating his own films and musical scores. The gig has also afforded the Norfolk-based composer numerous trips to some of the greatest Champions League finals ever contested. Such a lofty legacy was not what Britten was expecting when he reluctantly shelved his commercial work back in 1992. “If everyone is totally honest,” Britten later reflected, “at the time we made this we had no idea it was going to become as big as it has.”
|
Every Champions League Winner Since 1992 |
||
|---|---|---|
|
Team |
Titles |
Winning Years |
|
Real Madrid |
9 |
1997/98, 1999/00, 2001/02, 2013/14, 2015/16, 2016/17, 2017/18, 2021/22, 2023/24 |
|
Barcelona |
4 |
2005/06, 2008/09, 2010/11, 2014/15 |
|
AC Milan |
3 |
1993/94, 2002/03, 2006/07 |
|
Bayern Munich |
3 |
2000/01, 2012/13, 2019/20 |
|
Manchester United |
2 |
1998/99, 2007/08 |
|
Liverpool |
2 |
2004/05, 2018/19 |
|
Chelsea |
2 |
2011/12, 2020/21 |
|
Marseille |
1 |
1992/93 |
|
Ajax |
1 |
1994/95 |
|
Juventus |
1 |
1995/96 |
|
Borussia Dortmund |
1 |
1996/97 |
|
Porto |
1 |
2003/04 |
|
Inter Milan |
1 |
2009/10 |
|
Manchester City |
1 |
2022/23 |
|
Paris Saint-Germain |
1 |
2024/25 |
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Changes to the Champions League Anthem
There was some refinement in 2024/25
Many composers would be wary of tampering with their masterpiece but not Britten. As the English artist once admitted, he doesn’t even consider it to be his greatest contribution to the arts. “Of course, I’m proud of its popularity,” he shrugged, “but I don’t think it’s necessarily the best thing I’ve ever written.” While Britten regards the 2016 film ‘ChickLit’ which he wrote and directed as his magnus opus – The Guardian review derided it as a “groanworthy bonkbuster” – he had no hesitation in tweaking the Champions League anthem.
We have tried messing around with it a bit. We did a funk version and a beats version, and it worked really well. We sent it to the broadcasters, and they all said it was great, but they would stick to the original.
It wasn’t until the 2024/25 campaign, that a new version of the anthem was belatedly released. In the same season that a dramatic format change was unveiled, the musical alterations were relatively minor. There are no synthesizers or dubstep beats and neither the lyrics nor vocals have been touched. The instrumental section of the original anthem is slightly richer than the new, accentuated version, but the powerful impact of an iconic hymn is still in full effect.
How it compares to Handel’s Zadok the Priest
Each deals with coronation
As noted, Handel’s ‘Zadok the Priest’ served as the sonic underpinning for Britten’s Champions League Anthem and, though one can certainly hear the foundational inspiration, they remain very different songs. For one, Handel’s anthem runs to over six minutes long, as opposed to the 40-second burst of Britten’s effort.
Nevertheless, they both deal with coronations – Zadok with the anointing of King George II and the Champions League Anthem with the crowning of the European champions.
If you are a fan of Britten’s Champions League Anthem, it is very much worth taking the time to familiarise oneself with the song that served as its artistic bedrock.
Stats via UEFA.
Sports
The Killers to Raise Curtain on Arsenal vs PSG
In the past decade, fans attending the UEFA Champions League final have been treated to a warm-up show ahead of the action in the form of an elaborate opening ceremony.
As the European club football season nears its crescendo, the occasion is now marked by a live musical performance from a stellar act.
Opening ceremonies have long been a feature of major sporting events, most notably the Olympics, and they have become a more common feature of football events in recent years.
Here is all you need to know about the 2026 Champions League Opening Ceremony.
Champions League Final 2026 – Date, Kick-Off Time & TV Channel
|
Date: |
Saturday, May 30, 2026 |
|---|---|
|
Kick-off time: |
5pm BST / 12 noon ET |
|
Venue: |
Puskas Arena, Budapest, Hungary |
The 2026 Champions League final takes place on Saturday May 30, 2026. It will be contested by English Premier League team Arsenal and French Ligue 1 side Paris Saint-Germain. The game is being played at the Puskas Arena, a 67,215-seater stadium in Budapest, Hungary.
Kick-off time is set for 5pm BST (12 noon ET) and the opening ceremony is scheduled to begin 15 minutes earlier at 7:45pm BST (2:45pm ET).
In the United Kingdom, the game will be broadcast live on TNT Sports 1 and available to stream live on HBO Max. In the United States, fans will be able to watch it live on CBS, Paramount+, DAZN, TUDN and Univision.
The Killers to Play 2026 Champions League Final ‘Kick-Off Show’
UEFA announced back in March 2026 that American rock band The Killers would headline their Champions League final opening ceremony – or ‘Kick-Off Show’, as it is being marketed by the European football governing body and their sponsor, Pepsi.
Fronted by singer Brandon Flowers, The Killers have enjoyed global success since their breakthrough 2004 album ‘Hot Fuss’, which featured the hit single ‘Mr Brightside’.
UEFA and Pepsi revealed that The Killers would play in a playful video featuring the band and David Beckham as they raced towards the venue in various modes of transport. Flowers takes a sports car, while Beckham zooms by on a motorbike and the band takes an airplane.
The band explained that they had no hesitation when asked if they would be interested in performing ahead of the Champions League final. “Some stages speak for themselves,” they said in a statement. “We’re honoured to celebrate the incredible teams and players at what will undoubtedly be an epic match.”
As well as The Killers, internationally renowned concert pianist Adam Gyorgy will perform the world-famous Champions League Anthem ahead of the game.
Gyorgy previously played the anthem ahead of the 2023 Champions League final and will do so now in 2026 in native Hungary.
With the Premier League title secured, ardent Gunners supporters will be eager to join the celebrations
Previous Champions League Opening Ceremony Acts
|
Year |
Artist |
Venue |
|---|---|---|
|
2026 |
The Killers |
Puskas Arena, Budapest, Hungary |
|
2025 |
Linkin Park |
Allianz Arena, Munich, Germany |
|
2024 |
Lenny Kravitz |
Wembley Stadium, London, England |
|
2023 |
Alesso, Burna Boy, Anitta |
Ataturk Olympic Stadium, Istanbul, Turkey |
|
2022 |
Camila Cabello |
Stade de France, Paris, France |
|
2021 |
Marshmello, Selena Gomez, Khalid |
Estadio do Dragao, Porto, Portugal |
|
2020 |
None |
Estadio da Luz, Lisbon, Portugal |
|
2019 |
Imagine Dragons |
Estadio Metropolitano, Madrid, Spain |
|
2018 |
Dua Lipa, Sean Paul |
Olimpiskiy, Kyiv, Ukraine |
|
2017 |
Black Eyed Peas |
Millennium Stadium, Cardiff, Wales |
|
2016 |
Alicia Keys |
San Siro, Milan, Italy |
UEFA first began incorporating a live music opening ceremony as part of the Champions League final in 2016. On that occasion, American singer Alicia Keys was the headline act.
Since then, the biggest match in the European club football calendar has had the curtain raised by the likes of the Black Eyed Peas, Dua Lipa (whose song ‘One Kiss’ became something of a Liverpool anthem) and Imagine Dragons.
Restrictions imposed due to the Covid-19 pandemic meant that there was no opening ceremony in 2020, but there was a virtual one in 2021, with Marshmello, Selena Gomez and Khalid performing.
Camila Cabello was the headline act in 2022, followed by Alesso, Burna Boy and Anitta in 2023. American pop sensation Lenny Kravitz was the opening ceremony act in 2024, with the rock band Linkin Park doing the honours in 2025.
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GIVEMESPORT ranks the 9 best Champions League final opening ceremonies.
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