Europa League draw sets up rematch of 2 European Cup finals, Maccabi trips to Germany

Europa League draw sets up rematch of 2 European Cup finals, Maccabi trips to Germany
AS Roma, FC Porto, Rangers, Aston Villa, Feyenoord, Lille, GNK Dinamo Zagreb, Real Betis and RB Salzburg fixtures are displayed on a screen after being drawn during the UEFA Europa draw Soccer Football — UEFA Europa and Conference League Draw — Grimaldi Forum, Monaco — Aug. 29, 2025. (Reuters)
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Updated 15 min 51 sec ago

Europa League draw sets up rematch of 2 European Cup finals, Maccabi trips to Germany

Europa League draw sets up rematch of 2 European Cup finals, Maccabi trips to Germany
  • Roma will have two trips to Glasgow to play fierce Glasgow rivals Celtic and Rangers
  • Villa’s slate of opponents includes a trip to Fenerbahce

MONACO: The Europa League draw on Friday set up two rematches of European Cup finals and two games in Germany for Israeli club Maccabi Tel-Aviv.

Feyenoord, the 1970 champion of Europe, will host Celtic in one of their league phase games and Nottingham Forest will have a home game against Swedish side Malmo, which were a semi-professional team in 1979 when they lost the European Cup title match to the English club.

Maccabi Tel-Aviv got away games in Germany against Stuttgart and Freiburg, and also will travel to play Aston Villa — in Birmingham, England — and PAOK in Greece.

Israeli clubs have been playing UEFA-organized games in neutral countries for security reasons during the conflict in Gaza, and Maccabi Tel-Aviv have hosted European games this season in Backa Topola, Serbia.

Maccabi Tel-Aviv’s home games are against Dinamo Zagreb, Lyon, Midtjylland and Bologna.

Roma — whose coach Gian Piero Gasperini won the Europa League with Atalanta two season ago — will have two trips to Glasgow to play fierce Glasgow rivals Celtic and Rangers among their eight opponents.

The Europa League uses the same 36-team league format as the Champions League. Teams play eight different opponents during the league phase and are ranked in a single-standings table.

Villa were one of 11 teams in Friday’s draw that played in the Champions League last season, though their coach Unai Emery is a four-time Europa League winner: three times with Sevilla and once with Villarreal.

Villa’s slate of opponents includes a trip to Fenerbahce, which parted ways with coach Jose Mourinho earlier Friday.

Forest are in the second-tier Europa League instead of Crystal Palace, the English FA Cup winner which was demoted by UEFA in a complex case relating to owners having stakes in multiple clubs. Palace will play in the Conference League instead.

Forest and their Portuguese coach Nuno Espirito Santo will play two opponents from Portugal, at home to Porto and away to Braga.

The top eight teams go directly to the round of 16 in March. Teams placed ninth to 24th advance to the knockout playoffs in February. The bottom 12 teams are eliminated.

The 36 Europa League teams will share a prize fund of 565 million euros ($659 million). Each club is guaranteed at least 4.3 million euros ($5 million).


Conference League draw includes two-time finalist Fiorentina and reluctant Crystal Palace

Conference League draw includes two-time finalist Fiorentina and reluctant Crystal Palace
Updated 2 min 19 sec ago

Conference League draw includes two-time finalist Fiorentina and reluctant Crystal Palace

Conference League draw includes two-time finalist Fiorentina and reluctant Crystal Palace
  • Fiorentina’s slate of six opponents through mid-December was completed by Rapid Vienna, AEK Athens, Sigma Olomouc and Lausanne
  • UEFA aims to confirm the fixture schedule by Sunday

MONACO: Fiorentina’s quest to win the Conference League enters a fourth straight season with opponents including Mainz and Dynamo Kyiv from the draw ceremony on Friday.

The Italian club were top ranked in the 36-team draw after being twice a beaten finalist — against West Ham and Olympiakos in back-to-back years — and losing in the semifinals last season.

Fiorentina’s slate of six opponents through mid-December was completed by Rapid Vienna, AEK Athens, Sigma Olomouc and Lausanne. UEFA aims to confirm the fixture schedule by Sunday.

Crystal Palace make their European debut only reluctantly in the third-tier Conference League after a complex legal fight with UEFA.

The English FA Cup winner were demoted by UEFA from the Europa League for a breach of rules limiting investors having a significant stake in multiple clubs who qualify for the same competition. Lyon, majority owned by American businessman John Textor, stayed in the Europa League instead of Palace.

Palace get home games against Alkmaar, KuPS Kuopio of Finland and AEK Larnaca from Cyprus. Palace will go to Poland to play Dynamo Kyiv and also visit Strasbourg and Ireland’s Shelbourne.

Four clubs from Poland were in the draw, while Dynamo also has been playing games there — in Lublin — while Ukraine is unable to stage European games during the Russian military invasion.

Rapid Vienna will make two trips to Poland to play at Lech Poznan and Rakow Czestochowa.

Shakhtar Donetsk are having a rare season outside the Champions League, and will have trips to Ireland, Malta and Scotland to play Shamrock Rovers, Hamrun Spartans and Aberdeen.

Hamrun Spartans are the first club from Malta to qualify for the main phase of a European competition and also will host Switzerland’s Lausanne and Gibraltar’s Lincoln Red Imps.

Political football

UEFA kept Lincoln separate in the draw from Rayo Vallecano because of political tensions between Gibraltar and Spain. Drita of Kosovo were kept apart from Zrinjski Mostar of Bosnia-Herzegovina.

All the Polish teams, also including Legia Warsaw and Jagiellonia, were kept apart in the draw and cannot play each other until the knockout stage next year.

Format and prize money

Conference League teams play six different opponents and are ranked in a single-standings format.

The top eight teams go directly to the round of 16 in March. Teams placed ninth to 24th advance to the knockout playoffs in February. The bottom 12 teams are eliminated.

The Conference League has 285 million euros ($333 million) in UEFA prize money with each club getting a starting fee of 3.17 million euros ($3.7 million).


Mourinho leaves Fenerbahce after Champions League failure in latest career blow to the ‘special one’

Mourinho leaves Fenerbahce after Champions League failure in latest career blow to the ‘special one’
Updated 29 August 2025

Mourinho leaves Fenerbahce after Champions League failure in latest career blow to the ‘special one’

Mourinho leaves Fenerbahce after Champions League failure in latest career blow to the ‘special one’
  • His latest short managerial spell leaves the 62-year-old Mourinho’s career at a crossroads
  • Mourinho was considered one of the world’s best coaches

Jose Mourinho’s fall from grace in elite football accelerated Friday when the charismatic Portuguese coach left Turkish club Fenerbahce, two days after failing to get back into the Champions League after a long absence.
His latest short managerial spell – this one lasted barely a year, in a second-tier European league – leaves the 62-year-old Mourinho’s career at a crossroads, with top teams potentially no longer wanting to take a chance on a coach whose best days might be behind him.
Fenerbahce’s elimination at the hands of Benfica in a Champions League qualifying playoff on Wednesday was another blow to the status of Mourinho, who once was considered one of the world’s best coaches and famously had a heated rivalry with Pep Guardiola during their time in Spain with Real Madrid and Barcelona, respectively.
A Champions League winner with Porto and Inter Milan, Mourinho has not coached in the main stage of the marquee competition for six seasons. He won the third-tier Conference League with Roma in 2022 but his time at the Italian club from 2021-24 was pock-marked with squabbles that resurfaced in his brief and chaotic spell in Turkiye.
Turbulent times in Turkiye
There was an incident in April when he grabbed the nose of Galatasaray coach Okan Buruk in the Istanbul derby, earning a three-match ban and a fine.
Indeed, the fiery matches between the two local rivals brought out the worst in Mourinho. Two months earlier, he was handed a four-match ban after making an incendiary comment in the aftermath of a league match against Galatasaray, which announced its intention to start legal proceedings against Mourinho.
Mourinho, who often railed against what he perceived to be poor refereeing in Turkiye, wore the look of a frustrated and unhappy man during his time with Fenerbahce.
Gone was the charm and self-confidence that oozed out of the self-styled “Special One” during the peak years at his first spell at Chelsea from 2004-07, for example.
In October, he even said: “I think the best thing I have to do is when I leave Fenerbahce I go to a club that doesn’t play UEFA competitions. So you find a club in England from the bottom of the table, needs a coach in two years, I am ready to go.”
Who knows, that might be where Mourinho ends up after his departure from Fenerbahce, whose own absence from the Champions League now stretches to 17 seasons.
“We have parted ways with Jose Mourinho,” Fenerbahce posted to its millions of followers in a short statement on its X and Instagram accounts. “We thank him for his efforts for our team and wish him success in his future career.”
There was no immediate statement on the club’s official website.
What next for Mourinho?
Mourinho was once a serial trophy winner, a guarantee of silverware.
Yet that’s now two clubs – Tottenham (from 2019-21) and Fenerbahce – where he hasn’t guided his team to a title. His career trajectory, meanwhile, is heading downwards: from Real Madrid, to Manchester United, to Tottenham, to Roma and then to Fenerbahce.
Coaching the national team of his native Portugal might be one future option for Mourinho, who established a strong reputation for being a pragmatic, tactically astute manager with an uncanny ability to win one-off matches. Those attributes might serve him well in international football.
The days of him leading teams to success in the Champions League or in the top European leagues seem a long way away, however.
Solskjaer also out in Turkiye
It hasn’t been a good couple of days for former Man United managers in Turkiye.
On Thursday, Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, who replaced Mourinho in charge of United in 2018, was fired by Besiktas hours after a loss to Swiss team Lausanne in the Conference League playoffs.
Solskjaer had been in charge since January.


Turki Alalshikh tops Boxing News’ list of the sport’s most powerful figures

Turki Alalshikh tops Boxing News’ list of the sport’s most powerful figures
Updated 29 August 2025

Turki Alalshikh tops Boxing News’ list of the sport’s most powerful figures

Turki Alalshikh tops Boxing News’ list of the sport’s most powerful figures
  • Second successive year that chairman of ’s General Entertainment Authority has claimed award

RIYADH: Turki Alalshikh, the chairman of ’s General Entertainment Authority, has claimed the No. 1 spot on Boxing News magazine’s annual ranking of the 50 most powerful and influential figures in the sport.

It is the second successive year that Alalshikh has claimed the accolade after also topping the list last year.

Boxing News, the UK’s oldest boxing publication, highlighted Alalshikh’s selection as part of its annual ranking of the “50 most influential in global boxing.”

The achievement of the Saudi official, who also serves as an adviser at the Royal Court, underscores his growing impact on the international sports stage.

The recognition is also an acknowledgment of the strides that boxing has taken as part of the Kingdom’s Vision 2030 plan to diversify the economy through sports and entertainment.

The Kingdom has increasingly been seen as a global boxing force in recent years and has hosted events which have included Tyson Fury’s heavyweight showdown with Oleksandr Usyk, and Riyadh’s “Day of Reckoning” in 2023.


Pakistan, Afghanistan, UAE to play T20I tri-series from today

Pakistan, Afghanistan, UAE to play T20I tri-series from today
Updated 29 August 2025

Pakistan, Afghanistan, UAE to play T20I tri-series from today

Pakistan, Afghanistan, UAE to play T20I tri-series from today
  • Pakistan, Afghanistan will play tri-series tournament from Aug. 29 to Sept. 7
  • Tournament to help teams prepare for Asian Cricket Council’s T20 Asia Cup

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan, Afghanistan and the United Arab Emirates will participate in a tri-series of Twenty20 international matches, starting today, Friday, to tune up for next month’s Asia Cup followed by the World Cup next year.

The T20I tournament will serve as a launching pad for the teams to prepare for the Asian Cricket Council’s T20 Asia Cup, scheduled to take place in the UAE from September 9 to 28, it added.

India and Sri Lanka will co-host the Twenty20 World Cup in February-March next year.

“The tri-series will feature teams from Pakistan, Afghanistan and the UAE from 29 August to 7 September at the Sharjah Cricket Stadium,” the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) said.

The opening match of the tri-series tournament will be played between Afghanistan and Pakistan on August 29.

Each team will play the others twice, giving all sides at least four matches before the top two teams qualify for the final, scheduled on September 7.

Tournament schedule (all matches at Sharjah Cricket Stadium):

29 August — Afghanistan v Pakistan
30 August — UAE v Pakistan
1 September — UAE v Afghanistan
2 September — Pakistan v Afghanistan
4 September — Pakistan v UAE
5 September — Afghanistan v UAE
7 September — Final
 


Allizen Corpuz finally sees results and shares Boston lead on LPGA

Allizen Corpuz finally sees results and shares Boston lead on LPGA
Updated 29 August 2025

Allizen Corpuz finally sees results and shares Boston lead on LPGA

Allizen Corpuz finally sees results and shares Boston lead on LPGA
  • Corpuz had four birdies on her last six holes at the TPC Boston, holing a 10-foot birdie putt on the par-4 ninth to catch Kim, who played in calmer conditions in the morning
  • Shadoff was the last to finish, and she did so in style with four straight birdies

NORTON, Mass.: Allizen Corpuz kept her patience while spinning her wheels for so much of the year and finally saw some good results Thursday when she opened the FM Championship with a 7-under 65 to share the first-round lead with Sei Young Kim and fast-closing Jodi Ewart Shadoff.

Corpuz had four birdies on her last six holes at the TPC Boston, holing a 10-foot birdie putt on the par-4 ninth to catch Kim, who played in calmer conditions in the morning.

Shadoff was the last to finish, and she did so in style with four straight birdies.

“Holed a lot of putts outside 20 feet, so that definitely helps. And then the last four just good ball striking and some really nice putts,” Ewart Shadoff said.

Nelly Korda switched putters to more of a blade and saw it pay off with seven birdies in a round of 67 in her debut on the TPC Boston course that previously hosted one of the four PGA Tour postseason events.

Corpuz has only one LPGA victory and it was a big one — the US Women’s Open at Pebble Beach two years ago. She had a pair of top 10s early in the year, including a third in the Ford Championship in Phoenix in late March. That was her last top 10.

“Just feel like golf is such a funny game,” Corpuz said. “Even if it hasn’t been the results that I wanted to see, it’s just felt really, really close all season. It was a good start to the season and kind of just feel like things are starting to turn the corner a bit.”

Kim played in the morning when the weather was slightly cooler and she wondered if that would make the course play longer with the golf ball not flying as much. But she birdied three of the par 5s until having to settle for a par on the closing hole that has a large ditch in front of the green and big swales around it.

That’s what tripped up Jeeno Thitikul of Thailand in her second week since returning to No. 1 in the women’s world ranking. She blasted a tee shot down the right side, but her approach on the par-5 18th missed left and went down that steep slope. Her first pitch came up short and rolled back to her feet, and the Thai took a bogey for a 69.

Two stories have been in play all year on the LPGA — 22 consecutive tournaments to start the year with different winners at each one, and Korda not winning any of them. Korda is coming off a seven-win 2024 and only two weeks ago lost the No. 1 ranking to Thitikul.

Her 67 left her in a log jam of players tied for third that included Women’s PGA champion Minjee Lee, Celine Boutier, Andrea Lee and Gurleen Kaur, the LPGA rookie who had to go through Monday qualifying to get into the field.

Korda said the Florida courses where she lives aren’t in the best shape in the hot summer, so she wasn’t sure what she thought of the putter at home. But she took it to Canada, liked how it felt and kept it in the bag. It’s a similar model to the one she was using last year.

“Just something new,” Korda said, who also went with a different grip on the putter. “I knew I had so much success with that kind of putter and felt confident with it. Just needed to feel something different.”