Sports
Saudi Crown Prince ‘Considering €10 Billion Barcelona Offer’
Saudi Arabian Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman is reportedly preparing an astronomical €10 billion bid to take over one of European football’s biggest clubs. The Middle Eastern nation has become an increasingly important force in global sport in recent years, and while it appears to have cracked the code in Formula 1 and boxing, the beautiful game remains just out of reach.
Despite the arrival of Cristiano Ronaldo in 2023 – an eye-catching move that set the wheels in motion for a mass exodus of superstars from Europe to Asia, including Karim Benzema, Sadio Mane and N’Golo Kante – the Saudi Pro League has still only just about manages to creep onto a list detailing the 30 best football leagues in the world.
With South America and Europe continuing to dominate the sport, wealthy Saudi suitors have found greater appeal in investing where the foundations are already firmly in place. Salman, who serves as the nation’s prime minister and heir to the throne, is now reportedly turning his attention to taking over a well-known Spanish club.
Saudi Crown Prince Plots €10bn Takeover of European Giant
According to reporter Francois Gallardo of Spanish publication El Chiringuito, the Saudi Crown Prince is considering making an offer worth €10bn to buy current La Liga leaders Barcelona. The Catalan giants are ranked as the third most valuable football club on the planet with an estimated worth of £4.1 billion.
That figure pales in comparison to the wealth of their potential new owner. Salman is often cited as being worth around £18.7bn, while his family’s overall wealth – including vast holdings in Saudi Aramco – is estimated to reach as high as £1 trillion.
Barcelona, by contrast, are largely owned and operated by their fans and members, with club president Joan Laporta himself boasting a net worth of only a few million pounds. As a result, the club has rarely benefited from the kind of financial muscle enjoyed by rivals such as Real Madrid, PSG and Manchester City.
Should Salman decide to step in as Barcelona’s new benefactor, the club would almost instantly become the richest in the world, eclipsing even the likes of Paris FC and Newcastle United’s mega-wealthy backers.
The Complications Salman Would Face at Barcelona
Barcelona also generate some of the highest annual revenues in world football, but those figures are offset by the scale of the club’s debt. The La Liga giants currently owe more than £2.2 billion, a major factor the Saudi Crown Prince would need to consider before making any move for the Camp Nou outfit.
Another significant complication lies in the club’s ownership model. Barcelona are owned by their socios, or members, who would be unlikely to sanction a full foreign takeover or allow day-to-day control by an external entity – such as Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF), which already owns Premier League side Newcastle United.
But with the club’s potential to become a dominant force like they were under Pep Guardiola in the early 2010s being stunted by financial turmoil, now could be the perfect time to reluctantly reassess their structure and seek a route to the very pinnacle of European football once again, with the latest summer transfer window seeing them only manage to fork out £23 million to fund their Champions League-winning mission.
Sports
Arsenal Ready £80M Bid For Bruno Guimaraes
Arsenal are preparing an £80 million bid for a key transfer target this summer, according to TeamTalk, as they ramp up their business in the market.
The Gunners have started to put the pieces into place for their first few arrivals of the window, after securing the Premier League title last season.
A move for Leicester wonderkid Jeremy Monga appears to be close, while talks have been held to sign Christos Tzolis from Club Brugge as a squad option.
Beyond the pair, Arsenal are also looking at those who can make an immediate impact, and have set their sights on Newcastle United midfielder Bruno Guimaraes.
After making an initial bid for the Brazilian, it appears as though the North London club are stepping up their efforts with another offer on the way.
Arsenal Prepare Another Bruno Guimaraes Bid
Arsenal’s initial £55 million bid for Guimaraes wasn’t enough to tempt Newcastle into a deal, as the star enters the final two years of his contract.
Despite that rejected, the Gunners look set to ramp up their efforts to land the Brazilian, as TeamTalk claims an £80 million bid is soon on the way.
It’s unclear whether that will be enough to tempt Newcastle, with no public valuation set on the 28-year-old while the club faces a battle to keep hold of him.
It looks like an increasingly tough prospect, however, as the report adds that Guimaraes has told the Magpies that he has no intention of signing a contract extension that would take his stay beyond the next two years.
That may prompt an exit while the star player, who has been described as “brilliant”, is still able to maximise his value for the club on the transfer market.
It plays a key role behind Arsenal’s pursuit of the midfielder, alongside deals elsewhere that could have a knock-on effect.
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Arsenal Impact From Sandro Tonali Deal
Arsenal’s move for Guimaraes has been accelerated in recent days, which could well be an impact from another Newcastle deal this summer.
Sandro Tonali continues to be linked with an exit from St. James’ Park, as the Italian international has caught the eye of many top clubs in the market.
Arsenal Ready First Bid For ‘One of the World’s Best Players’ Alongside Bruno Guimaraes
Arsenal are preparing their first bid of the transfer window for a Premier League star, after already pushing to sign Bruno Guimaraes.
Tottenham are frontrunners to sign him, with a £100 million valuation set, which could have a major impact on whether Newcastle feel obliged to sell Guimaraes.
It means Arsenal could look to get a deal done before their rivals, to ensure they are able to land their top target to help improve the midfield ranks.
Sports
Causes and Aftermath of Brazil’s shock 7-1 World Cup defeat to Germany
On July 8 2014, in front of 58,141 fans at the Estadio Mineirao in Belo Horizonte, Brazilian football died in a very public humiliation.
Germany tore apart the tournament hosts in a World Cup semi-final that defied all logic, racing into a 5-0 lead after just 29 minutes before eventually running out 7–1 winners.
It wasn’t a football match; it was a demolition. A nation that had spent four years building towards this tournament, the first on Brazilian soil since 1950, was reduced to rubble.
Thomas Müller opened the scoring after just 11 minutes, and the Germans didn’t stop. Miroslav Klose, Toni Kroos (twice) and Sami Khedira added four more in an eight-minute spell before the game had even hit the half-hour mark. André Schürrle added two further goals in the second half before Oscar gave the shell-shocked crowd a last-minute consolation. By then, Brazil had long since ceased to exist as a competitive football team.
A Perfect Storm: Why Brazil Fell Apart
The seeds of disaster had been planted long before kick-off. Brazil arrived at the semi-final without Neymar, their talisman and the tournament’s standout player, who had fractured a vertebrae in the quarter-final after a reckless knee from Colombia’s Juan Zuniga. His absence removed not just Brazil’s best player, but their entire creative identity. Neymar had scored four goals and provided two assists in the group stages alone; there was no plan B without him.
Captain Thiago Silva was also suspended, leaving Brazil without both their defensive leader and their most composed presence under pressure. Manager Luiz Felipe Scolari had run out of ideas, handing the armband to David Luiz and trusting a makeshift defensive unit to hold one of Europe’s most technical sides. The decision proved catastrophic. Brazil was carved open again and again.
Scolari’s approach had been to build everything around Neymar rather than produce a collective quality side. So when Neymar gets taken out, the plan goes to waste.
Brazil’s midfield was overrun from the first whistle, and there was a wider sense of complacency, a belief born from home-crowd pressure that tournament destiny would carry them through. Germany didn’t cater to that opinion; they pressed high, moved the ball quickly, and exploited every single yard of space.
The Mineiraco: The wound that would not close
Brazil had a history of heartbreak on the world stage, but nothing had prepared the country for this. The defeat was immediately compared to the Maracanzo — the 1950 World Cup final loss to Uruguay on home soil, widely regarded as the greatest trauma in Brazilian sports history. Where the Maracanazo had been a narrow defeat, this was something a lot more damming.
Journalists and pundits scrambled for new vocabulary, and they found it in Mineiraco, using the suffix often used in journalism to describe a devastating, catastrophic defeat, the same one used for the 1950 defeat. Within hours, it had entered the Brazilian vocabulary permanently.
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The images from inside the Mineirao told the full story. Grown men wept openly in the stands. Children buried their teary faces in their hands. The Brazil players stood motionless, some in tears, as the scoreboard ticked all the way up to seven. The emotional weight of hosting a World Cup, a tournament Brazil had won five times, collapsed under the scale of the defeat. The sense of shame was immediate.
The internet had its own response. Such was the volume of video highlights uploaded to Pornhub in the hours after the final whistle that the platform was forced to issue a public statement asking users to stop — its sports category had been flooded.
The episode, as darkly comic as it was, underscored the extent to which Brazil’s humiliation had transcended football and become a cultural event. Even the world’s largest adult content site was not immune to fallout.
12 Most Shocking Moments in World Cup History [Ranked]
Some of these will stay in the minds of fans forever.
Scolari resigned within days, and a 3-0 third-place playoff defeat to the Netherlands compounded the misery. The Mineiraco didn’t just end a tournament; it ended an era, exposed structural rot within Brazilian football, and forced a long-overdue reckoning with a culture that had coasted too long on individual quality.
12 years on, it remains the benchmark for sporting catastrophe. Some wounds never fully heal. Brazil haven’t won the World Cup since 2002, with the Mineiraco being the closest they have got to lifting the trophy. The humiliating defeat set them back years, and it still lingers on the country, who are desperate to return to glory.
Sports
£325k-a-week Star Turns Down Tottenham Move Despite Mega Salary Offer
Tottenham have been handed a major blow in their efforts to sign Marcus Rashford this summer, according to the i Paper, as the Manchester United ace is not currently open to join the club.
It comes as Spurs have been linked with the winger as a potential option to improve the forward ranks, as talks continue over the signing of some key players up front.
Savinho has emerged as a top target once again, after last summer’s interest, with talks being held over a potential £60 million deal for the Brazilian.
There is also interest in Cody Gakpo, who offers slightly more experience. Then there’s Rashford, who is available on the market, but he has seemingly made his mind up over a deal in North London.
Marcus Rashford Makes Tottenham Decision
While Tottenham have outlined Rashford as a transfer target for this summer, a deal for the forward appears tough, as the i Paper reports that the England international isn’t keen on a move to the club.
It’s stated that the 28-year-old doesn’t want to join another Premier League club, despite his previous success in the division, as he looks for an exit outside of England.
It follows on from Rashford’s successful loan spell at Barcelona, which saw him become a useful squad option for the club, where he could enjoy his football once again.
However, the Blaugrana opted against a permanent deal to sign the Man United star, who had a permanent clause in his loan move, with a move for Anthony Gordon going through instead.
Barcelona are claimed to be open to another loan move for Rashford, though the Red Devils prefer an exit in the region of £40 million, which could drop to £25 million in the coming weeks.
It means Tottenham will miss out on a move, unless the player’s stance changes in the near future. That said, it will save the club on wages.
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Rashford Wage Boost
Tottenham’s move for Rashford would’ve been expensive in the long-term, not due to the transfer fee, but due to the likely wages the club would have to take on.
The Man United star earns £325,000-a-week, according to reports, and Tottenham are seemingly willing to pay that wage if they can get a deal over the line.
Wants to Join: Tottenham Make £100m Bid to Sign Star With ‘Incredible Pace’
Tottenham are pushing to sign the midfielder.
It’s a monumental amount that would smash through the current wage structure for the Lilywhites, as they look to invest even more in the market.
However, with Rashford seemingly turning down the possibility of moving to Tottenham and other Premier League clubs, that may save the club a huge amount that can be invested elsewhere in the squad.
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