Monaco down Villa to boost Champions League qualification hopes

Monaco down Villa to boost Champions League qualification hopes
Monaco’s French midfielder Maghnes Akliouche fights for the ball with Aston Villa’s Argentinian midfielder Emiliano Buendia during their UEFA Champions League match at the Louis II Stadium (Stade Louis II) in Monaco on Jan. 21, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 22 January 2025

Monaco down Villa to boost Champions League qualification hopes

Monaco down Villa to boost Champions League qualification hopes
  • Wilfried Singo’s early header was the difference between the teams as Villa tasted defeat for the first time in six outings in all competitions
  • The defeat dropped Villa from fifth to seventh provisionally. They can qualify automatically for the last-16 with a top-eight finish

MONACO: Monaco ground out a 1-0 home win against Aston Villa in the Champions League on Tuesday, denying the Premier League side the chance to all but book their spot in the round of 16.
Wilfried Singo’s early header was the difference between the teams as Villa tasted defeat for the first time in six outings in all competitions.
Monaco had only won two of their last 11 matches, including back-to-back defeats in the Champions League, but now have their eyes on securing progress to the knock-outs.
The defeat dropped Villa from fifth to seventh provisionally. They can qualify automatically for the last-16 with a top-eight finish.
“We started the Champions League not being favorites to finish in the top eight, and we still aren’t. Tonight we are disappointed,” said Villa manager Unai Emery.
Emery’s side host 21st-placed Celtic in their final league phase match next week.
Villa and Monaco are among nine teams on 13 points, ahead of the rest of this week’s matches, a pack headed by Arsenal in fourth place in the table with Monaco in ninth
Monaco conclude their league phase campaign with a visit to Italian champions Inter Milan — also on 13 points ahead of a visit to Prague on Wednesday — knowing nothing but a win will do to avoid a play-off spot.
“We have one match remaining which will be very difficult. We are going to go to Milan next week with a lot of ambition and to win,” said Singo.
Villa goalkeeper Emiliano Martinez’s every touch was booed by the home support in the early stages — the crowd had not forgotten his role in Argentina’s 2022 World Cup final victory over France.
To the delight of their fans, Monaco’s opener came after the Argentinian parried Thilo Kehrer’s header from a corner up into the air. Singo pounced to nod home from close range on eight minutes.
Martinez showed his class with a sprawling dive to claw away Maghnes Akliouche’s whipped effort shortly afterwards.
Villa came within inches of levelling in first-half added time following excellent build-up play by Emiliano Buendia, but Radoslaw Majecki got down quickly to deny Ollie Watkins.
At the start of the second period, Morgan Rogers flashed a strike narrowly wide, before Akliouche had a strike disallowed for offside.
Emery turned to Jhon Duran from the bench to give his side a spark, sending on the Colombian 11 minutes after the interval in place of winger Bailey.
With Watkins and Duran on the pitch together, Villa boasted a striking duo with 22 goals between in all competitions this term.
Rogers and Matty Cash combined to create Villa’s next chance, the right-back dragging his effort across goal and wide on 69 minutes.
Monaco looked the more likely to score in the final 20 minutes.
Aleksandr Golovin rippled the side netting from a tight angle in the 88th minute.
Duran then attempted a bicycle-kick in the crowded box in the 92nd minute, but his ambitious effort flew well over the bar as Monaco held firm.
“It was an important win,” said Monaco coach Adi Huetter. “I give compliments and praise to my team for how they fought.”


Errani, Vavassori retain US Open mixed doubles title in revamped event

Errani, Vavassori retain US Open mixed doubles title in revamped event
Updated 1 min 5 sec ago

Errani, Vavassori retain US Open mixed doubles title in revamped event

Errani, Vavassori retain US Open mixed doubles title in revamped event
  • The star names drew big crowds but the chemistry between Italians Errani and Vavassori, cultivated over a two-year on-court partnership that also saw them win the French Open title this year, proved decisive
  • Vavassori admitted he and Errani were on a “mission” to prove themselves against the singles stars

NEW YORK CITY : Sara Errani and Andrea Vavassori retained their US Open mixed doubles title on Wednesday, beating Iga Swiatek and Casper Ruud to claim the $1 million top prize in the new-look competition that kicked off action at the last Grand Slam of the year.

The Italians capped two days of intense work in the 16-team event with a 6-3, 5-7, 10-6 victory over Swiatek and Ruud — who were among a slew of singles stars drawn not only by the big purse but also by the chance to contest mixed doubles before singles action begins on Sunday.

Poland’s Swiatek, a six-time Grand Slam champion ranked second in the world, battled through a two-hour tussle with Jasmine Paolini to win the Cincinnati Open on Monday then hot-footed it to New York to team up with Norway’s Ruud in the revamped competition.

Carlos Alcaraz, men’s champion in Cincinnati, also turned out but he and British playing partner Emma Raducanu were eliminated on Tuesday, as was superstar Novak Djokovic, who teamed with fellow Serb Olga Danilovic.

The star names drew big crowds but the chemistry between Italians Errani and Vavassori, cultivated over a two-year on-court partnership that also saw them win the French Open title this year, proved decisive.

Errani hoped it showed that committed doubles teams — many of whom were shut out of the field — have plenty to offer.

“I think this one is also for all the doubles players that couldn’t play this tournament,” Errani said as she and Vavassori accepted the trophy. “I think this one is also for them.”

Errani and Vavassori roared to a 4-1 lead in the opening set of the championship match and after Swiatek and Ruud regained one break, closed it on a confident hold from Vavassori.

Down a break at 4-5 in the second, Swiatek and Ruud won three straight games to force the 10-point match tiebreaker.

The Italians grabbed a 4-0 lead in the tiebreaker and held on.

“Congratulations,” Swiatek said at the trophy presentation. “You proved that, I guess, mixed doubles players are smarter tactically than singles players.

“But we pushed until the end. We tried to make it competitive.”

The first three rounds — including the semifinals on Wednesday night — were played with short sets with no-advantage scoring and a 10-point match tiebreak in lieu of a third set, before the final reverted to traditional sets with a 10-point match tiebreak.

Swiatek and Ruud had clawed their way past top seeds Jessica Pegula and Jack Draper with a 3-5, 5-3, 10-8 semifinal victory, winning the last six points to advance.

Errani and Vavassori romped past the American duo Danielle Collins and Christian Harrison 4-2, 4-2 to reach the final.

Vavassori admitted he and Errani were on a “mission” to prove themselves against the singles stars.

But both relished the electric atmosphere under the lights on the jam-packed Arthur Ashe Stadium Court.

“It’s the court where I feel goosebumps every time here,” Errani said.

Vavassori also enjoyed the “amazing atmosphere” and thanked organizers for putting mixed doubles in the spotlight.

“I have to say that we showed today that doubles is a great product,” he said. “I think it was amazing to play on this court with so many people and I have to say thanks from the bottom of my heart for the atmosphere.”
 


Japan’s Akie Iwai grabs opening-round lead at CPKC Women’s Open

Japan’s Akie Iwai grabs opening-round lead at CPKC Women’s Open
Updated 7 min ago

Japan’s Akie Iwai grabs opening-round lead at CPKC Women’s Open

Japan’s Akie Iwai grabs opening-round lead at CPKC Women’s Open
  • Fifteen-year-old phenom Aphrodite Deng, a Canadian national, is also sitting at 5 under
  • World No. 1 Jeeno Thitikul of Thailand, looking for her second win of the season, recorded four birdies across Nos. 1-6 to put herself in contention

MISSISSAUGA, Ontario: Getting her first career win has not stopped Japan’s Akie Iwai from going for another, at least judging by her opening round at the CPKC Women’s Open in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada.

Fresh off a victory at the Standard Portland Classic last week, Iwai clearly wasn’t bothered by distractions as she raced to a 7-under-par 64 Thursday at Mississaugua Golf and Country Club, giving her a two-stroke advantage over the rest of the field.

The 23-year-old Iwai sank birdies on her first two holes of the tournament, played on the back nine. She followed up with birdies on Nos. 18, 4, 6, 8 and 9 to provide herself a reasonable margin for error going into Friday.

“So last week I won, but already it’s in the past, already past,” Iwai said. “That’s why I was change the mind (for) good focus this week.”

The rookie shot out of the gate earlier this year, grabbing second-place finishes at Honda LPGA Thailand in February and the JM Eagle LA Championship in April.

Five golfers are tied for second at 5 under, including Megan Khang, who is back at the old stomping grounds in Canada, where she won her first LPGA title in 2023.

Khang shook off a bogey on the par-3 third to record six birdies, including back-to-back on the 12th and 13th.

“It’s always nerve-wracking coming back to a tournament you have won. Obviously, you would like to do it again,” Khang said. “It’s definitely a little cool coming in and still seeing some spots where my face is. Still catches me off guard.”

Fifteen-year-old phenom Aphrodite Deng, a Canadian national, is also sitting at 5 under.

The amateur closed her round with back-to-back birdies on Nos. 17 and 18 and pointed to her short game as being the reason for her strong start.

“Today my putting was really good,” she said.

World No. 1 Jeeno Thitikul of Thailand, looking for her second win of the season, recorded four birdies across Nos. 1-6 to put herself in contention.

She acknowledged that playing in first tournament as No. 1 was on her mind.

“I’m not going to lie saying I’m not thinking about that,” Thitikul said. “But like to be honest, I just told myself like, you can think about it. You can be worry. You can be nerves. But like at the end of the day, you got to pass this as well.”

She, Khang and Deng are joined by Ireland’s Leona Maguire and Mexico’s Gaby Lopez in the tie for second.

Alone in seventh place is South Korea’s Soo Bin Joo (67). Five golfers are a stroke behind her in a tie for eighth at 3 under: South Korea’s Jeongeun Lee5, Taiwan’s Peiyun Chien, Thailand’s Ariya Jutanugarn, Japan’s Mao Saigo and Jenny Bae.

World No. 2 Nelly Korda is 2 under (T13), and 2024 winner Lauren Coughlin in a tie for 109th at 3 over.
 


Russell Henley birdies last 3 holes for a 61 to lead Tour Championship over Scheffler

Russell Henley birdies last 3 holes for a 61 to lead Tour Championship over Scheffler
Updated 12 min 10 sec ago

Russell Henley birdies last 3 holes for a 61 to lead Tour Championship over Scheffler

Russell Henley birdies last 3 holes for a 61 to lead Tour Championship over Scheffler
  • Henley one-putted six of his last seven holes and made three birdie putts from 40 feet or longer
  • Rain hammered East Lake on Wednesday leaving the course soft enough that players could lift, clean and place their golf balls in the short grass

ATLANTA: Russell Henley hardly missed a putt. Scottie Scheffler hardly missed a fairway. They led a parade of players who seized on the soft conditions at East Lake to begin the race for the Tour Championship and the season-ending FedEx Cup title.

Henley one-putted six of his last seven holes and made three birdie putts from 40 feet or longer and, with three straight birdies at the end, had a 9-under 61 to build a two-shot lead over the world’s No. 1 player.

Scheffler didn’t miss a beat from last week — really the last five months — and finished with a 25-foot par save on the 16th and two birdies for a 63. That’s his lowest round by two shots in his six appearances at East Lake.

The entertainment came from Rory McIlroy, who bladed a bunker shot on the par-5 18th hole over the green and off the grandstands, and then back onto the green. He made an 18-foot putt for a most unlikely birdie.

Scheffler was rooting hard for McIlroy, not so much for the birdie but so they could avoid a length ruling to finish. Seconds after Scheffler holed his 4-foot birdie putt, the horn sounded to stop play because of approaching storms that led to East Lake being evacuated.

Left behind was a leaderboard filled with red numbers in a tournament that has a $40 million purse in official money for the top 30 players, all of them with an equal chance. Only two players were over par.

Rain hammered East Lake on Wednesday — and again after the first round ended — leaving the course soft enough that players could lift, clean and place their golf balls in the short grass.

“I felt like with it being lift, clean and place and somewhat soft compared to last year when the greens were brand new, it was a little bit softer, so it was just a little bit more gettable,” Henley said.

There was also that no-so-small matter of putting. Henley already has a great reputation with the putter, and on this day he holed some 207 feet worth of putts.

“Probably the most I’ve ever made,” he said.

Three of the five players who got in at 64 was enough to wonder which cup was on their minds. Justin Thomas, Collin Morikawa and Patrick Cantlay all finished outside the top six who qualified for the Ryder Cup and have to wait on being one of six captain’s picks.

All three are seen as likely picks.

“I don’t think you’re ever comfortable until you get that call and you’re on the team,” Morikawa said. “Look, I hope I’ve done enough. We’ll have to wait and see. But I think, yeah, my focus right now is to try and go out and win this golf tournament. I think if I do that, then hopefully that’s enough, and we’ll see how everything plays out.”

Scheffler is coming off his fifth victory of the season last week at the BMW Championship and didn’t miss a step. All that slowed him was some swirling wind as the storm approached, making it a little tougher to get close for birdie chances with a wedge in hand.

The only fairway he missed — except for No. 18, in which the ball rolled through the middle into the first cut — was at the 16th, and that left him in his biggest predicament. From the rough he went down a deep swale to the right, the one place he knew to avoid.

“I knew going down there right of 16 was a huge penalty. We had talked about it in the practice rounds,” he said. “And our job was just to get the ball back on the green, which I did, and it was nice to hole that long putt.

But it was a reminder of how key it was to keep the ball in play.

“I missed one (fairway) on 16 and all of a sudden I’m almost playing for bogey,” he said. “It’s pretty important around this place.”

Tommy Fleetwood, who keeps giving himself chances at his first win on the PGA Tour, also was at 66, along with BMW Championship runner-up Robert MacIntyre, who is ready for a return to Scotland given how hot has been in Memphis, Baltimore and Atlanta.

“I wear as much sun cream as I possibly can. I look like Casper the Ghost out there, to be honest. I get a lot of shouts about my sun cream,” MacIntire said.

It beats the shouts he got last week at Caves Valley when he lost a four-shot lead to Scheffler in the final round and was hearing from the pro-American crowd along the way. MacIntire was as upset about how he handled the crowd as he was his golf, but figures it will be a great teaching moment for him at Bethpage Black for the Ryder Cup next month.

“There’s a couple of things that I know that I’m going to change, but do you know what it’s really going to help me for? Bethpage,” he said. “I’m always going to be fiery, I’m always going to yell, swear, yell, get angry.

“But just the way I interacted with the crowd, I was trying to keep them out of the way, but instead of doing what I did on Saturday and bringing them into it.”
 


Why fan violence still sullies Latin American football

Why fan violence still sullies Latin American football
Updated 22 August 2025

Why fan violence still sullies Latin American football

Why fan violence still sullies Latin American football

Santiago — CHL
Santiago, Aug 21, 2025 : Images of a fan jumping from the stands to escape a beating as bottles, rocks and seats fly through the air at a game between Chilean and Argentine clubs in Buenos Aires on Wednesday highlight the enduring problem of violence in Latin American football.
Over 100 people were arrested over the bloody battles between supporters of Universidad de Chile and Argentina’s Independiente, which left 19 people injured, three seriously.
From Mexico to Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Chile and Ecuador, stadium violence continues to mar the beautiful game in football-mad Latin America.
Here is a quick overview of the situation:
Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Honduras, Ecuador, Peru and Uruguay have all enacted laws over the past two decades to tackle hooliganism, including, in some cases, with prison sentences.
But the violence continues unabated.
So far this year in Chile, twelve matches were suspended due to violence, according to the players’ union.
In April, two fans died during a stampede outside a Santiago stadium before a Copa Libertadores match between local side Colo Colo and Brazil’s Fortaleza.
In Argentina, more than 100 people have died in the last 20 years, 157 in Brazil between 2009 and 2019, and 170 died in Colombia between 2001 and 2019, according to academic and NGO studies.
There’s an idea “that stadiums are spaces where it’s legitimate to commit acts of violence, not just physical violence, but also racism and homophobia,” Argentine sociologist Diego Murze, author of the book “Football, Violence, and the State,” told AFP.
According to Murze, there’s a “tribal logic that has always prevailed in football,” including a culture of provocation between fans that has “re-emerged in recent years.”
For many fans, “football is a channel for frustration,” says Colombian sociologist German Gomez, author of the book “Football and Hooligans, an Urban Phenomenon.”
Gomez attributed it to “a poeticization of what a team’s victory means in the lives of these fans, which leads to that loss of emotional control when a match is won, and even when it is lost.”
Security has been stepped up at stadiums around the continent, with some requiring biometric identification for entry and installing video surveillance of the stands.
“In Argentina, they monitor you more in a soccer stadium than at the airport,” Murze said,
But the technology, while useful to identify banned offenders, is often powerless to prevent violence by hitherto unknown individuals with masked faces.
The Colombian sociologist accused Conmebol, South America’s football governing body, of being lax on violence, saying it doesn’t “issue exemplary sanctions against soccer clubs because... closing a soccer club can mean significant financial losses.”
In Argentina, visiting fans are not allowed at local first division games.
Several clubs in the World Cup title holder, as well as in Chile and Uruguay, were forced to play behind closed doors last year as punishment for fan violence.
Murze argued that clubs need to professionalize their security apparatus, as they currently “rely entirely on what the state and the police can do.”
Following the deaths of the two fans in Chile in April, the Chilean government ended the “Safe Stadium” program, an initiative created in 2011 to combat football violence, without success.
The program prohibited drums and banners from stadiums and left stadium security in the hands of private individuals.
The government has pledged to replace it with new rules for all mass events.
“Mitigating football violence in South America must be driven by actions that promote education and football culture,” said Gomez.
 


Taif Derby to headline weekend racing at King Khalid Racecourse

Taif Derby to headline weekend racing at King Khalid Racecourse
Updated 21 August 2025

Taif Derby to headline weekend racing at King Khalid Racecourse

Taif Derby to headline weekend racing at King Khalid Racecourse
  • 2000 Guineas winner Mhally will be chasing Classic double on Saturday
  • Trainer Mustafa Al-Mosa’s Wared Al-Sengar (KSA) is top-rated in the Taif Arabian Derby

TAIF: King Khalid Racecourse is set for a packed weekend of racing with 2000 Guineas winner Mhally (GB) facing several familiar rivals in a field of 12 assembled for the $106,000 Taif Derby on Saturday.

A significant purse is on offer for the final two events, with another $106,000 prize purse attached to the concluding Taif Arabian Derby for Purebred Arabians, which sees prep winner Wared Al-Sengar (KSA) take on nine opponents over 1600m.

Mhally, trained by the in-form Thamer Al-Daihani for Sheikh Abdullah Homoud Al-Malek Al-Sabah, will be making his seasonal debut having beaten several of the field in last season’s 2000 Guineas held in Riyadh on Jan. 25, an effort which was franked by his third to Golden Vekoma (USA) in the Saudi Derby the following month.

Jaarif (USA) was just a half-length behind Mhally in the 2000 Guineas and will be making his first start under Khaled Al-Mimoni for trainer Abdullah Al-Monif, with the fourth home that day, Faal Khair (USA), also in the lineup for the White Stables of King Abdullah Bin Abdulaziz and Sons.

Camilo Ospina, who blitzed his rivals in the Taif Jockey Championship with six winners last weekend, will again be aboard for trainer Ahmed Mohamoud following their comeback second in the trial for this at the beginning of the month, with the Mohammed Al-Daham-ridden Mhalhal (USA) third on that occasion and a second representative for Al-Daihani.

A fascinating addition to the field is Prince Faisal Bin Khaled Bin Abdulaziz’s Bernard Shaw (USA) after his debut in the country last weekend for the Red Stable.

A $1.8 million yearling, the mount of Fahad Al-Fouraidi for trainer Hadi Gharawi was sixth on his first outing and joined connections having won one of his four starts for the legendary Aidan O’Brien in Ireland.

Trainer Mustafa Al-Mosa’s Wared Al-Sengar (KSA) is top-rated in the Taif Arabian Derby under Mohammad Al-Hubail and clashes again with the placed horses from the trial — runner-up Abdulaziz Al-Mosa’s Wasib (FR) and third home HM Al-Nasserallah (FR) for Bassim Al-Mousa.

Also in the field is Lacy Des Vialettes (FR), winner of the King Faisal Cup last season, but bidding to improve on her comeback seventh earlier this month. She goes post under Al-Mimoni for Al-Mosa.

The four-year-old won the first four races of her career before finding the company too hot on Saudi Cup day and running down the field in the Group 1 Obaiyah Arabian Classic.

Sixteen runners have been declared for the Taif University Cup Local Bred Horses Open over 1400m and they include four for the Red Stable headed by Riyadh Dirt Sprint fifth Saodad (KSA), who has worked his way back into form in two Taif outings this campaign.

Friday’s feature is the 1600m Makkah Al-Mokarramah Reg. Gov. Cup in which Al-Daihani has a strong hand with Tuwaiq Cup fourth Final Destination (GB) and Uncle (GB), who does battle once again with Nicolas Bachalard’s Henry Q (USA) after they fought out the finish for the prep here on Aug. 1.