Tour de France’s new Montmartre climb could be a game changer. It sparks controversy

Tour de France’s new Montmartre climb could be a game changer. It sparks controversy
Cyclists ride past the Sacre Coeur basilica during the men's road cycling event, at the 2024 Summer Olympics, France. (AP)
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Updated 20 May 2025

Tour de France’s new Montmartre climb could be a game changer. It sparks controversy

Tour de France’s new Montmartre climb could be a game changer. It sparks controversy

PARIS: Breaking with tradition at the Tour de France is stirring controversy.
Since race organizers announced plans last week to climb the iconic Montmartre hill in Paris during the final stage in July, the cycling world has been abuzz. Could the climb actually decide the Tour winner? Or disrupt the final sprint by injecting tactical uncertainty into what is usually a celebratory day?
Well, that remains to be seen. But one thing seems certain: The stage will be a spectacle.
At last year’s Olympics, massive crowds lined the streets of Montmartre — the area in the northern part of Paris that is popular among artists and offers grand vistas of the city — to cheer on riders.
Inspired by the frenetic atmosphere and willing to build on the momentum, Tour organizers said this month that riders competing in cycling’s biggest race this summer would climb the Montmartre hill and pass beneath the Sacré-Coeur basilica before “battling it out on a stage that may break from the traditions established over the past 50 years in the heart of the capital.”
Traditionally, the Tour final stage is largely processional until a sprint decides the day’s winner on the Champs-Élysées. Last year’s final stage was held outside Paris for the first time since 1905 because of a clash with the Olympics, moving instead to Nice. The world famous avenue is back on the program this year for the conclusion of the 3,320-kilometer (2,060-mile) race.
The inclusion of the steep Montmartre climb could dramatically change the dynamics of the stage. If the hill features just a few kilometers from the finish line, or is climbed several times, pure sprinters will likely be dropped before they can compete for the stage win. And if the general classification remains tight ahead of the final stage, the yellow jersey itself could be decided in Paris.
Riders not happy
Full details of the route will be presented at a news conference on Wednesday. With a peloton roughly twice as big as it was at the Olympics, organizers are working with Paris authorities and the Prefecture of police to ensure the security of the race on the narrow and cobbled streets of the area. But some top riders have already expressed their lack of enthusiasm about the addition.
“Montmartre was nice to do in the Olympics, it seemed good, a lot of people, a really good atmosphere,” two-time Tour champion Jonas Vingegaard told reporters this week. “But when they came to the Montmartre, there was only 15 riders left in the bunch. And when we do the Tour de France, there will be 150 guys fighting for positions on a very narrow climb. It could end up being more stress than they want to have.”
Even Remco Evenepoel, who won the Olympic men’s road race in Paris last year and the gold medal in the time trial, is also opposed to the idea.
“There will be enough battle for positioning in the first week of the Tour,” he told sports media Sporza. “With Montmartre added, that would mean we have to do the same on the last day. We will be tired enough by then.”
Evenepoel also lamented the fact that sprinters would be robbed of a rare chance to claim a prestigious win on the world famous avenue.
“They get a big chance every year to sprint for a stage win on the Champs-Elysées,” he said. “That chance is then taken away from them. In my opinion, Montmartre is an unnecessary obstacle.”
Marc Madiot, who manages the Groupama-FDJ team, said bad weather on the final day could make the stage more treacherous.
“Imagine a slight rain in Paris; it’s not going to be easy for the riders,” he told RMC Radio. “Do we want a show? Do we want to visit Paris? Do we want to commemorate the Olympics? If we expect a real race, we could be disappointed. And if we do get a real race, we put everything that has happened in the last three weeks in jeopardy.”
The Tour starts from the northern city of Lille on July 5, and the women’s race kicks off on July 26 from the Brittany town of Vannes.


Son Heung-Min’s hat trick carries LAFC past Real Salt Lake

Son Heung-Min’s hat trick carries LAFC past Real Salt Lake
Updated 18 September 2025

Son Heung-Min’s hat trick carries LAFC past Real Salt Lake

Son Heung-Min’s hat trick carries LAFC past Real Salt Lake
  • Win lifts the Black and Gold (13-7-8, 47 points) up to fourth in the Western Conference above the Seattle Sounders

Son Heung-Min scored his first MLS hat trick and visiting Los Angeles FC earned a 4-1 victory over Real Salt Lake on Wednesday in Sandy, Utah.
Denis Bouanga added his 94th career LAFC goal in all competitions late in the second half to become the club’s all-time leading scorer.
The win lifted the Black and Gold (13-7-8, 47 points) up to fourth in the Western Conference above the Seattle Sounders.
Bouanga now has 19 MLS goals this season, the third-best total in the league. He also assisted Son’s third goal of the night and fifth in six league matches since his August arrival from Tottenham Hotspur.
LAFC got its second hat trick in as many games after Bouanga scored three times in a 4-2 road win over the San Jose Earthquakes on Saturday.
Zavier Gozo cut Real Salt Lake’s deficit to 2-1 on a sensational side volley in the 76th minute.
RSL (10-15-4, 34 points), which has lost four of its past five matches and sits 10th in the West, a point behind San Jose and the last playoff place.
Salt Lake forward Victor Olatunji was sent off deep in second-half stoppage time for violent conduct and will be suspended when these sides convene again Sunday in Southern California.
Son opened the scoring in the third minute.
After players from both sides made tackles on the ball in the center circle, Timothy Tillman won the last of those challenges and directed the ball perfectly into Son’s speculative run down the left.
The 33-year-old had plenty of time to take two settling touches before driving a low finish past RSL goalkeeper Rafael.
Son doubled the visitors’ lead 13 minutes later. Tillman was again involved with a strong run down the left before laying the ball off to Ryan Hollingshead and continuing up field.
Hollingshead played the ball square to Son beyond the top of the box, and Son curled a right-footed, 25-yard strike beyond Rafael’s dive into the bottom right corner.
The hosts had a chance to halve the deficit in the 56th minute, but Rwan Cruz hit the post on a penalty kick.
In the 82nd minute, Bouanga raced from his own half onto an outlet ball down the right. Son joined him on the break and directed a sliding finish of Bouanga’s unselfish cross to complete his best night in MLS so far.
Bouanga got his goal six minutes later on a similar break set up by David Martinez.


Bjorn Borg discusses cocaine, overdoses and quitting tennis in his 20s in a memoir and AP interview

Bjorn Borg discusses cocaine, overdoses and quitting tennis in his 20s in a memoir and AP interview
Updated 18 September 2025

Bjorn Borg discusses cocaine, overdoses and quitting tennis in his 20s in a memoir and AP interview

Bjorn Borg discusses cocaine, overdoses and quitting tennis in his 20s in a memoir and AP interview
  • In his 292-page book, the 11-time Grand Slam champion writes about panic attacks and his drug use, which he says started in 1982
  • Book also contains revelations about his love life, various adventures and regrets, and detailed recollections of particular matches

NEW YORK: Bjorn Borg starts his new memoir, “Heartbeats,” with a story about being rushed to a Dutch hospital in the 1990s after overdosing on “alcohol, drugs, pills — my preferred ways of self-medication,” and the Swedish tennis great closes it by revealing that he was diagnosed with prostate cancer.

“It’s good,” Borg, 69, said in a recent video interview with The Associated Press from his home in Stockholm, “to have a good beginning and a good ending.”

In between, the 292-page book, which will be released in the US by Diversion Books on Sept. 23, contains revelations about his love life, various adventures and regrets, and the 11-time Grand Slam champion’s detailed recollections of particular matches.

Bjorn Borg quit tennis at age 25 because he stopped caring when he lost

Famously private, Borg kept a lot to himself during his days on tour — as well as since he surprisingly retired in his 20s.

He brings readers back to when, having lost the 1981 Wimbledon and US Open finals to rival John McEnroe, Borg realized he was done.

“All I could think was how miserable my life had become,” he writes.

Swedish Bjorn Borg returns a forehand to his opponent French Francois Jauffret during their match at the French Tennis Open in Paris June 7, 1976. (AFP file photo)

He was 25 and, while he would briefly return to tennis, he never competed at another Grand Slam event.

After the 1981 final at the US Open, a tournament he never won, Borg grabbed some beers and sat in the pool at a house on Long Island, where friends planned a party to celebrate a victory.

“I was not upset or sad when I lost the final. And that’s not me as a person. I hate to lose,” he told the AP.

“My head was spinning,” he said, “and I knew I’m going to step away from tennis.”

Bjorn Borg wasn’t always calm on a tennis court

Borg writes about his childhood and his relationships with his parents (and, later, his children).

He writes about earning the nickname “Ice-Borg” for calmness on court — often contrasted by fans to the more fiery McEnroe and Jimmy Connors. And Borg writes that did not come about “organically,” but rather via “the bitter experiences” of a 12-year-old kid.

“I behaved so badly on the tennis court. I was swearing, cheating, behaving the worst you can imagine,” he recalled in the video interview.

He said his hometown tennis club banned him for six months and, when he returned, “I did not open my mouth on the tennis court, because I was scared to get suspended again.”

“Boiling inside? Yes,” Borg told the AP. “I had to control my feelings. ... You cannot do that in one week. It took years to figure out how I should behave on the court.”

Former top seeded Swedish tennis player Bjorn Borg returns the ball during a training session on the central court on April 10, 1992. (AFP file photo)

Borg discusses cocaine and 2 overdoses that landed him in the hospital

Borg writes about panic attacks and his drug use, which he says started in 1982.

“The first time I tried cocaine,” he says in the book, “I got the same kind of rush I used to get from tennis.”

He also writes about “the worst shame of all,” which he says came when he looked up from a hospital bed in Holland to see his father. Borg also clarifies that an earlier overdose, in 1989 in Italy, was accidental, not a suicide attempt.

“Stupid decision to be involved with this kind of thing. It really destroys you,” he told the AP about drugs. “I was happy to get away from tennis, to get away from that life. But I had no plan what to do. ... I had no people behind me to guide me in the right direction.”

Borg name-drops Trump, Arafat, Warhol, Hefner, Tina Turner in his memoir

In all, Borg paints the picture of quite a life.

There was a water-skiing shoulder injury before 1977 US Open. Death threats during the 1981 US Open. Getting paid in cash ... and getting robbed at gunpoint. A woman claiming he was the father of her son. Coin-throwing by spectators in Rome that led him to never return.

This is not the typical sports autobiography: There is a reference to getting a message to Yasser Arafat and, five pages later, the phrase ”Andy Warhol was someone easy to like” appears. There are name-drops of Donald Trump, Nelson Mandela, Tina Turner and “my old friend Hugh Hefner,” among many, many others.

“People will be very surprised what really happened,” Borg told the AP. “For me to come out (after) all these years, all I went through — I went through some difficult times — (it’s) a relief for me to do this book. I feel so much better. ... No secrets anymore.”
 


PSG cruises, Liverpool wins late yet again, Bayern and Inter also start well in Champions League

PSG cruises, Liverpool wins late yet again, Bayern and Inter also start well in Champions League
Updated 18 September 2025

PSG cruises, Liverpool wins late yet again, Bayern and Inter also start well in Champions League

PSG cruises, Liverpool wins late yet again, Bayern and Inter also start well in Champions League
  • Bayern Munich and Inter Milan both won rematches of past finals

Title holder Paris Saint-Germain roared to victory in the Champions League on Wednesday, and Liverpool found yet another late winning goal in its stunning start to the season.
Liverpool captain Virgil van Dijk soared to score with a header in the second minute of stoppage time to seal a 3-2 win over Atletico Madrid when it seemed his team was going to waste a two-goal lead seized after just six minutes.
Bayern Munich and Inter Milan both won rematches of past finals — against Chelsea and Ajax, respectively — to start their eight-game league-phase programs, and newcomers Bodo/Glimt and Pafos impressed with hard-earned draws on the road.
PSG cruised to a 4-0 win at home over Atalanta and had the luxury of a penalty miss by Bradley Barcola not mattering much in the end.
“It’s a joy to see such a performance. I think our fans can be happy,” PSG coach Luis Enrique said.
Liverpool seemed to be sailing with early goals from Andy Robertson and a typically fine strike by Mohamed Salah but was pegged back by Marcos Llorente’s goals in first-half stoppage time and the 81st.
Llorente also scored twice at Anfield in 2020 when Atletico eliminated the then-defending champion in the round of 16.
Bayern held off Chelsea 3-1 with two goals from Harry Kane, whose England teammate Cole Palmer scored an impressive goal for the visitors. It was a very belated revenge for Bayern losing the 2012 final to Chelsea in its home stadium.
Inter got two powerful headed goals from Marcus Thuram in its 2-0 win at Ajax, which beat the Italians in the 1972 European Cup final.
Norway’s champion Bodo/Glimt had a second-half penalty kick saved and trailed by two goals late at Slavia Prague, before rallying to level at 2-2 in the 90th.
Pafos grinded out a 0-0 draw at Olympiakos after playing with 10 men from the 26th minute. Journeyman Brazilian midfielder Bruno Felipe was sent off for a second yellow-card foul.
Russian-owned Pafos is the first Cypriot team in the Champions League main phase since 2017, and Bodo/Glimt ended Norway’s 18-year absence.
Ballon d’Or in Paris
The Ballon d’Or trophy is surely staying in Paris after the annual awards ceremony in the city on Monday.
PSG has campaigned for its currently injured striker Ousmane Dembélé to get the prize for his standout season, though full-backs Nuno Mendes and Achraf Hakimi also would be worthy winners.
Both were attacking threats against Atalanta — which is adapting to life without inspirational coach Gian Piero Gasperini, now at Roma — and Mendes scored in the 51st to make the score 3-0.
The standout goal was Khvicha Kvaratskhelia’s rising shot after a dancing run minutes before halftime.
Late, late Liverpool
Liverpool has won all four of its Premier League games this season with winning goals after the 80th minute, and twice in the last minute of stoppage time.
So when Atletico Madrid leveled late at Anfield, there was ample time for coach Arne Slot’s team to find the goal it needed. Dominik Szoboszlai swung in a corner from the right, and Virgil van Dijk wrestled away from his marker and steered a strong header back inside the near post.
Slot acknowledged “we should have made it easier for ourselves.”
Unbeaten newcomers
The new kids on the Champions League block are fast learners.
Three of the four debutants — an unusually high number this season — have played so far, all on the road and all are unbeaten. Belgian champion Union Saint-Gilloise started it Tuesday winning 3-1 at PSV Eindhoven.
Bodo/Glimt and Pafos did not panic when events went against them Wednesday.
The champion of Norway trailed by two goals at Slavia Prague, having had Kasper Høgh’s 54th-minute penalty kick saved, before cutting the deficit in the 78th.
A stunning volley in the 90th by substitute Sondre Brunstad Fet rattled the crossbar and bounced down over the goalline to earn a point preserved by goalkeeper Nikita Haikin’s smart save deep in stoppage time.
Pafos lost both of its Brazilian veterans before halftime, with 38-year-old David Luiz lasting just 33 minutes before going off injured in his first start for the club.
The fourth debutant, Kairat Almaty, plays Thursday at Sporting Lisbon. That meant a 7,000-kilometer (4,350-mile) trip for players and fans from eastern Kazakhstan across four time zones to Portugal’s capital — one of the longest possible in European soccer.
Three-day Champions League week
The Champions League stretches into a third day just for the opening round which is completed Thursday with six more games, including 2023 winner Manchester City welcoming back Kevin De Bruyne with Napoli. Barcelona goes to Newcastle without the injured Lamine Yamal.
A stoppage-time comeback by Juventus to draw 4-4 with Borussia Dortmund was the standout game of the first six played Tuesday while Kylian Mbappé converted two penalties and 10-man Real Madrid came back to beat visiting Marseille 2-1.


Italian Super Cup returns to

Italian Super Cup returns to
Updated 17 September 2025

Italian Super Cup returns to

Italian Super Cup returns to

ROME: The Italian Super Cup is to be held in in December, the Italian football league announced on Wednesday.
“For the sixth time the Italian Super Cup will be held in . This 38th edition will be staged in Riyadh ,” a federation statement confirmed.
Since 2023 the competition has featured four teams, the Serie A champions , the league runners-up , and the Italian Cup winners  and Cup runners-up .
Serie A’s plans to stage the league match between AC Milan and Como on February 6 in Perth, Australia, to avoid a clash with the 2026 Winter Olympics opening ceremony at Milan’s San Siro stadium, was criticized by European supporters groups this month.
La Liga’s green light for Spanish champions Barcelona’s league game against Villarreal to be moved to Miami, Florida on December 20 also came under fire.
While various Super Cups like the Italian edition are staged abroad, those two fixtures would represent a first for European leagues.


Man United post record revenues but are still making losses

Man United post record revenues but are still making losses
Updated 17 September 2025

Man United post record revenues but are still making losses

Man United post record revenues but are still making losses
  • Despite revenues of $910m the 20-time English champion still reported losses of $45m
  • Losses fell from 113.2 million pounds to 33 million

MANCHESTER: Manchester United posted record revenues in their latest annual accounts despite missing out on Champions League soccer and enduring their its worst-ever Premier League campaign.
But despite revenues of 666.5 million pounds ($910 million) the 20-time English champion still reported losses of 33 million pounds ($45 million).
“To have generated record revenues during such a challenging year for the club demonstrate the resilience which is a hallmark of Manchester United,” chief executive Omar Berrada said.
The accounts for the year ending June 30, 2025, came after minority owner Jim Ratcliffe embarked on cost-cutting measures, which have seen two rounds of job cuts with an estimated reduction of more than 400 members of staff, as well as ticket price hikes.
United told fans in January they could not sustain their losses and Ratcliffe later said the club were in danger of running out of money by the end of the year.
Losses fell from 113.2 million pounds to 33 million.
United’s commercial strength comes despite their ongoing troubles on the field, which have seen them struggle to keep pace with Premier League rivals like Liverpool, Manchester City and Arsenal.
They did not play in the lucrative Champions League last season and finished 15th in England’s 20-team top division — their lowest since the inception of the Premier League in 1992.
They also recorded their lowest points total and highest number of losses, which led to them failing to qualify for any European soccer competition this season.
United have not won the league title since Alex Ferguson retired in 2013.
This season has not started well either, with Ruben Amorim’s team only winning one of four games and having been eliminated from the English League Cup by fourth-tier Grimsby Town.
“As we settle into the 2025-26 season, we are working hard to improve the club in all areas,” Berrada said. “As we start to feel the benefits of our cost-reduction program, there is significant potential for improved financial performance, which will, in turn, support our overriding priority: success on the pitch.”
United said costs of 36.6 million ($50 million) included the departure of former manager Erik ten Hag, who was fired last October.
United’s principal debt remains at $650 million.