Sports
Diego Simeone Pushes Andrea Berta During Arsenal 1-0 Atletico
Arsenal are through to the Champions League final for the first time in 20 years, and the evening ended with the typical knockout-stage drama everyone’s used to seeing in European football’s most prestigious tournament.
Bukayo Saka’s first-half opener proved to be the moment of the night. Leandro Trossard’s effort was palmed out by Jan Oblak, and Saka was first to react, tapping home from close range to give Arsenal a 2-1 aggregate advantage. Atletico did have their moments, though. Their forwards had a handful of chances, and a pair of VAR decisions denied them of two penalties, but Arsenal held firm, and the Emirates erupted at the final whistle.
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Atletico Madrid felt they were ‘robbed’ against Arsenal after being denied a penalty despite Calafiori’s trip on Griezmann.
Tensions Boil Over Between Simeone and Former Colleague
Champions League knockout football has a way of pushing everyone involved to their absolute limit. By the time a semi-final second leg reaches its closing stages, with a place in the final hanging by a thread, the dugouts become a melting pot of emotion. Managers, staff, and officials are all operating on the rawest of nerves, and it takes very little to ignite something.
Add Diego Simeone into that environment and the stakes rise considerably. The Argentine has never been a manager who keeps his emotions at a safe distance from proceedings. On a night when his side were being eliminated from the Champions League at the semi-final stage, the intensity had nowhere left to go once he noticed something that got under his skin.
As the clock ticked into the final minute of stoppage time, with Atletico still searching desperately for an equaliser, Arsenal sporting director Andrea Berta, who spent more than 11 years working alongside Simeone at Atleti, gestured towards German referee Daniel Siebert from the sideline, seemingly attempting to draw his attention to the time by pointing to his watch. It didn’t go unnoticed by his former colleague.
Simeone came charging across from his technical area to confront Berta, and what followed was a push that sent the Arsenal sporting director stumbling back towards the tunnel. Staff from both clubs moved quickly to separate the two, with the fourth official also stepping in to defuse the situation. Simeone returned to his dugout and continued directing his players as they chased a goal that never came.
Watch the full incident below:
Arsenal will head to Budapest on the 30th of May to face the winner of Bayern Munich and Paris Saint-Germain’s semi-final, which takes place tomorrow, with PSG taking a one-goal advantage to the Allianz Arena after one of the best matches in Champions League history ended 5-4 to PSG.
For Simeone, the fallout from those closing seconds might have further consequences, which would only add to his reputation as one of the most frequently sanctioned managers in Europe.
Sports
Man Utd Working on Emotional Deal to Bring 6 ft 4 Star Back to Old Trafford
Manchester United have a new goalkeeper target, and it is a familiar face. The Red Devils have a few key needs this summer as they look to build on the momentum built up with their third-place finish last season. Michael Carrick is being given money to spend, and he has made a start with the capture of Ederson, but the search for a Casemiro replacement is proving a frustrating one so far.
United came up short in the race to sign West Ham star Mateus Fernandes, who is to join Tottenham, and that particular search will now go on. But outside of that, Carrick is searching for a versatile attacker and a new back-up goalkeeper.
Onana to leave Man Utd this summer
United are set to offload Andre Onana on a loan deal, with BBC Sport reporting that the stopper is close to joining Turkish club Trabzonspor on a season-long loan deal. They claim the deal is 90% done at this stage, with the former Old Trafford number one going elsewhere for regular football. Onana was signed by United as a number one, costing £47.2million, but while he was capable of top-end saves, he made mistakes too often and showed struggles in reading the game.
Senne Lammens has won the number one spot having proven himself a safe pair of hands, but United will reshuffle the goalkeeping department with a new number two. According to TalkSport, United would prefer a homegrown option, given it satisfies matchday squad rules.
Man Utd work on Johnstone return
With that in mind, TalkSport report that United are working on bringing Sam Johnstone back to the club after eight years. The 33-year-old came through at United before leaving in 2018 having never made a Premier League appearance, spending the best part of seven years out on loan.
The 6ft4″ keeper has since spent four years at West Brom’s number one, then making 29 league appearances over two years for Crystal Palace and most recently making 19 league appearances for Wolves since 2024.
The report claims Johnstone is keen to leave Wolves after their relegation from the Premier League, but he is under contract until 2028.
Ability-wise, Johnstone is realistically a bottom-half Premier League goalkeeper, but many clubs are now opting for a big drop-off between their number one and number two to have a clear number one and save money on their alternative. Arsenal, for instance, have carried Kepa as their number two, well aware that the drop from David Raya is a significant one.
Johnstone could go elsewhere and be a starter in all likelihood, especially in the Championship, but he may settle for a back-up spot on the Man Utd bench to return to his home club and enjoy a taste of top-end football. He may also want to give himself a chance of finally landing an Old Trafford Premier League start, which is not out of the question in a long season when injuries and suspensions inevitably happen, even for goalkeepers.
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Man Utd are already busy ahead of the summer window.
Sports
Harry Kane Points Out ‘Huge Advantage’ Mexico Have vs England
Harry Kane has fired a warning shot ahead of England’s last-16 date with Mexico, admitting there is nothing the Three Lions can do to counter one huge disadvantage awaiting them in Mexico City.
England’s captain was speaking after another dramatic night in the World Cup, rescuing Thomas Tuchel’s side from a shock defeat to DR Congo with a five-minute double that also saw him move above Pele on the all-time World Cup scoring charts.
England trailed DR Congo for over an hour, thanks to Brian Cipenga’s early strike, until Kane’s intervention turned the game on its head, but the celebrations were short-lived once talk turned to what comes next.
Mexico await in the last 16, and this one comes with a built-in obstacle no amount of quality can fix.
Kane Fears England Can’t Overcome Azteca Altitude
That obstacle is the Estadio Azteca, sitting roughly 2,240 metres above sea level and previously the stage for the 1970 and 1986 World Cup finals.
Mexico have lost just twice in 89 competitive matches there, and Kane fears his side simply won’t have time to adjust to conditions before kickoff. Kane said after his latest goalscoring heroics:
“My understanding is we cannot adapt to the altitude.
It’s a huge advantage Mexico have. There’s not enough time.”
Sports scientists generally suggest a week or two of acclimatisation is needed for the body to adjust to an altitude of that magnitude, something England have no chance of replicating given they only have four days between fixtures.
Thomas Tuchel Accepts England Won’t Be Ready in Time
Tuchel was just as candid, admitting there’s no getting around the physical reality his players face. Speaking to talkSPORT, he said: “We will not be ready; we will arrive one day early, but we will not be ready because you cannot be ready in terms of adaptation. The body cannot adapt in three days’ time; it’s just impossible.
“We need 12 days’ time, 14 days’ time. We don’t have it, so it is a big disadvantage, of course.”
England, who are based in Kansas City, won’t touch down in Mexico until the weekend, while El Tri arrive unbeaten in 26 games at the Azteca after seeing off Ecuador.
Thunderstorms are forecast for kickoff, and Mexican supporters have already shown their willingness to disrupt opposition preparations, with fireworks set off outside Ecuador’s team hotel before their own visit to the stadium.
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England would have an unstoppable starting line-up if these players had chosen to represent the Three Lions
Tuchel, though, insists his players won’t use any of it as an excuse. “Bring it on,” he said. “It’s a very beautiful and exciting fixture. There will be lots of obstacles, but this team will be ready, whatever it takes.”
Sports
Henry Winter: Kane Saved England, But Problems Remain

Henry Winter joins Market Madness to react to England’s nervy 2-1 comeback win over DR Congo, Harry Kane’s rescue act and Thomas Tuchel’s biggest issues before Mexico.
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