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    UEFA Plans $7 Billion Pandemic Relief Fund for Soccer Clubs

    European soccer’s governing body will give cash-strapped teams access to their future earnings from club competitions like the Champions League.As European soccer clubs continue to count the costs of a global pandemic that has led teams large and small into financial distress, European soccer’s governing body is preparing to establish a relief fund of as much as $7 billion to help struggling teams manage their growing debts.The plan, according to several officials briefed on the negotiations, would be for the governing body, UEFA, to secure financial relief for cash-strapped teams who play in major European club competitions. The repayments would be tied to the teams’ future payouts from their participation in those tournaments run by UEFA; for the teams involved in the latter stages of the Champions League, Europe’s premier club competition, those paydays can be worth up to 100 million euros a year (almost $120 million).UEFA has for months been in talks with banks and private equity firms about creating the fund. According to the officials, the first relief payments would be made available to clubs that qualify for Europe’s three annual club competitions: the Champions League, the Europa League and the new Europa Conference League.For many European teams, the financial relief is desperately needed. Billions of dollars in revenue has been wiped off team balance sheets since the coronavirus first started to impact the soccer industry in early 2020. Clubs in dozens of countries were forced to play games without spectators for months, and some had to pay rebates to broadcast partners and sponsors. All but a handful of teams have endured significant pain.A.C. Milan players during a Europa League match in an empty arena in December.Vincenzo Pinto/Agence France-Presse — Getty ImagesBarcelona, for instance, was unable to retain the services of its most famous player, Lionel Messi, amid ballooning debts of more than $1.5 billion, and its president said last week that the club was expecting this year’s losses to approach $570 million, a record figure for a soccer club. While many of Barcelona’s financial problems are self-inflicted, the result of years of poor management, red ink has spilled across balance sheets across Europe. The Premier League, soccer’s richest domestic competition, suffered its first drop in revenue since it was first established in 1992.UEFA had been in talks with Centricus, a London-based investment firm that had also been involved in talks with FIFA about financing its enlarged Club World Cup, but it has more recently focused on striking a deal with a group of lenders that includes Citigroup and UniCredit, according to the people with knowledge of the talks. They declined to be identified because discussions with the clubs are continuing, and because no deal has been reached.UEFA declined to comment on the talks or the relief fund. But it has discussed the proposal with the European Club Association, the umbrella body representing about 200 top division European teams.UEFA has asked the E.C.A. to survey its members to understand their financial needs. The most pressing concern is related to tens of millions of dollars in player trading debt. Those obligations, accumulated over several years as teams bought and sold players to one another, are a vital source of revenue to small- and medium-sized clubs. Any default on them risks creating a contagion effect, though, given how interlinked club debts have become.The player trading market — worth $7 billion before the pandemic — has now slowed considerably, with more sellers than buyers and clubs struggling to offload players they can no longer afford. The chief executive of one of Italy’s biggest clubs said the market for middle-tier players — those worth between $5 and $30 million, trades that lubricate the market in the good times — are now few and far between. Instead, teams have become increasingly reliant on loans and free transfers to unload contracts and salaries they can no longer afford.UEFA’s president, Aleksander Ceferin. His organization is planning to roll out new cost-control rules that could include spending caps and a luxury tax for clubs that breach them.Antonio Bronic/ReutersAccording to one of the people familiar with the talks, UEFA’s participation in the relief fund is critical, since it will allow the banks to secure their investment against the future income of its competitions, rather than the balance sheets of individual teams. That arrangement would reduce the risk for the lenders while also ensuring lower than usual rates of interest for clubs. To determine the amounts clubs are eligible to receive, UEFA will create a rating profile for teams based on their likely income from the Champions League, the Europa League and the Conference League, a new third-tier competition that is being launched this season.UEFA’s initiative comes months after a failed effort by a group of 12 leading teams — citing the need for greater financial stability as well as a greater share of soccer’s wealth — to form a breakaway superleague.UEFA is only the latest soccer body to seek outside investment in an effort to mitigate the ongoing effects of the pandemic. Spain’s professional league announced earlier this month that it had struck a deal to sell almost 11 percent of broadcast and commercial income for 50 years to a private equity fund in return for a $3 billion investment. Italy’s league has been negotiating a similar arrangement.UEFA hopes the financing will allow teams to restructure their debts at lower interest rates. At the same time, it is planning to revamp the financial regulations governing the teams in its competitions.The current decade-old arrangement known as financial fair play has run its course, according to UEFA’s president, Aleksander Ceferin, and clubs are now bracing for a new set of cost-control rules. One likely option is a combination of a cap on spending linked to revenues and a luxury tax, similar to one imposed by Major League Baseball on teams that elect to spend far more than their rivals.The move is an effort to inject greater clarity into a process that has often left UEFA unable to enforce its rules on the continent’s biggest-spending teams. Under the new system, UEFA leaders argue, teams will know exactly how much they will have to pay if they overspend. The system, though, is unlikely to have any meaningful impact on growing competitive imbalance between clubs that can spend freely on talent and those that cannot keep up. More

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    Gallery Lures Soccer Fans to Tottenham Stadium for Art

    A new gallery at the stadium of Tottenham Hotspur, a top London club, is presenting contemporary works to visitors, with mixed results.LONDON — Annie Lawrence, 8, was looking excited on Sunday afternoon. She was about to see Tottenham Hotspur, the soccer team she supports, play its first game of the English Premier League season — but her exhilaration wasn’t entirely because of the impending game.Lawrence was standing in OOF, a gallery dedicated to art about soccer that opened last month in a building attached to the club’s stadium gift shop. Some of the works on display seemed to be making her as happy as a Tottenham win.OOF’s opening show, “Balls” (until Nov. 21) features 17 pieces of contemporary art made using soccer balls, or representing them. There’s one made out of concrete, and another in silicon that looks like it’s covered in nipples.Pointing at a huge bronze of a deflated ball by Marcus Harvey, Lawrence said, “I’d like that one in my bedroom.” The artist said in a phone interview that the work might evoke anything from Britain’s decline as an imperial power to the end of childhood.Yet for Lawrence, its appeal was simpler: “It looks like you could sit in it, like a couch,” she said.Fans making their way to Tottenham Hotspur’s stadium on Sunday for the club’s first match of the English Premier League season.Alex Ingram for The New York TimesThe futuristic Tottenham Hotspur stadium viewed from a window of the gallery.Alex Ingram for The New York TimesAnnie Lawrence, 8, posing in front of one of her favorite works in the show: “Kipple #2” by Dominic Watson.Alex Ingram for The New York TimesLawrence then took her father upstairs and looked at a piece called “The Longest Ball in the World,” by the French artist Laurent Perbos. “It’s looks like a sausage!” she said, before grinning for photos in front of another piece that features a papier-mâché soccer ball rotating in a microwave.Not everyone was so enthusiastic about the works on display. Downstairs, Ron Iley, 71, looked at the ball covered in nipples by the Argentine artist Nicola Costantino. “Load of rubbish,” he said, then walked out.The worlds of art and soccer don’t necessarily mix. The most well-known recent work to combine both is a bust of Cristiano Ronaldo, the Portuguese player, that made headlines when it was unveiled in 2017 because it looked nothing like him. Other pieces, like Andy Warhol’s acrylic silk-screens of Pelé, are little more than simple tributes to great sportsmen.Eddy Frankel, an art critic who founded OOF with the gallerists Jennie and Justin Hammond, said he wanted to show that art about football, as soccer is known in Britain, can be exciting, complex and thought-provoking. “We’re using football to express ideas about society,” Frankel said. “If you want to talk about racism, bigotry, homophobia, or if you want to talk community and belief and passion: All of that, you can with football.”A visitor photographs Nicola Costantino’s “Male Nipples Soccer Ball, Chocolate and Peach.”Alex Ingram for The New York TimesFrankel said he used to keep his passion for soccer quiet in Britain’s art world, since “you can’t really get away with being into both.” That changed one night, in 2015, when he was at Sotheby’s to report on an auction of a monumental painting by Gerhard Richter, the German painter. The sale clashed with a game featuring Tottenham Hotspur, the club Frankel supports, so he started watching the match on his phone. Soon, about 15 people behind him were leaning over to get a view, he said.“I just went, ‘Oh, so there are people who care about football in the art world like I do,” Frankel said.In 2018 he launched OOF as a magazine that explored the intersection of his passions. “We thought we’d maybe get away with four issues,” he said. The biannual magazine is now on issue eight.Setting up an exhibition space seemed the logical next step, Frankel said, adding that he initially wanted to open it in a former kebab shop near Tottenham Hotspur’s stadium, which is in an area about eight miles north of London’s traditional gallery districts. But when he and his partners approached the local council for help, they suggested contacting the club instead, which offered a 19th century townhouse that sits incongruously outside the club’s futuristic stadium and is attached to its gift shop.Most of the works on display at OOF are for sale, with some pieces worth up to $120,000, yet the gallery has a much higher footfall than most commercial galleries. More than 60,000 fans come to the stadium on game days, and on Sunday, a few hundred spectators peeled off from the crowds for a look around, many dressed in Tottenham Hotspur’s uniform.OOF is located in a 19th-century townhouse owned by the club that can be reached via the stadium gift shop.Alex Ingram for The New York TimesOOF’s organisers: The art critic Eddy Frankel and the gallerists Jennie and Justin Hammond. “The Longest Ball in the World,” by Laurent Perbos, is on the floor in front of them.Alex Ingram for The New York TimesAbigail Lane’s “Self-Portrait as a Pheasant” is made from a football, bird wings, oil paint, painted wood and glass.Alex Ingram for The New York Times“We’re basically running a museum, without a museum budget,” Frankel said.A tongue-in-cheek sign at the entrance asks visitors not to kick the art, but not everyone had complied, Frankel said: On a recent visit, Ledley King, a former Tottenham Hotspur captain, had given “The Longest Ball in the World” a light boot.Pebros, the artist behind the work, laughed when told about the incident in a telephone interview. “Maybe he doesn’t go to many galleries, so he didn’t know,” he said.The current squad, including its famed striker Harry Kane, had not yet been to visit the gallery, Frankel said. The players were trying to keep social interactions to a minimum during the pandemic.“Obviously, we’re a commercial gallery so it’d be nice to sell some art,” Frankel said. “But the real success is if we can get loads of people through the door, and get them to engage in contemporary art, who normally wouldn’t,” he added.Many of the several hundred visitors on Sunday fit that bill. “We don’t go to galleries if we’re honest,” said Hannah Barnato, 27, there with her partner. “But it’s interesting. It’s different,” she said.Paul Deller’s “A Playground of Bubbleheads’,” a work the artist made in 2020 and 2021.Alex Ingram for The New York TimesSam Rabin, one of three guides in the gallery who talk the fans through the works, said that was a common reaction. “I’ve never heard the phrase, ‘It’s different,’ more than I have working here,” he said.But many visitors, especially children, showed a deep connection with the art on display, he said, adding that this proved soccer and art were not the separate worlds they might seem. “They’re both emotional experiences,” he said. “They’re both worthwhile experiences.” More

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    Inter Milan fans deface ANOTHER Romelu Lukaku mural calling £97.5m Chelsea signing a ‘sell-out traitor’ after transfer

    ROMELU LUKAKU’S move to Chelsea has not gone down well with Inter Milan fans. The Nerazzurri faithful have defaced a second mural of the £97.5million man near San Siro as Inter fans react to his departure.
    Inter fans this time used white graffiti to ruin a mural of Lukaku
    The original image looked like this before it was defacedCredit: AFP
    The latest defaced image shows scribbles across Lukaku’s face, and underneath the words “sell-out traitor” are written in Italian.
    Originally the mural depicted Lukaku clashing heads with AC Milan rival Zlatan Ibrahimovic in a Milan derby clash last season, but now Lukaku’s face has been graffitied on.
    Meanwhile Ibrahimovic, also a former Inter player, has not had any damage done to his image.
    It follows a first mural being defaced last week with black paint and a banner being unfurled that accused the Belgian of ‘breaking their balls’.
    Despite the latest act from the Inter fans, Lukaku still took to Twitter to post a heartfelt message thanking everyone at the club for the two years he spent in Milan.
    The end part of his statement said: “I hope you guys understand my decision to move to Chelsea. It’s the chance of a lifetime for me and I think at this time of my career it is a chance that I have always dreamed of.
    “One thing is for sure and that is that I will always remain a Interista, because without you I wouldn’t be the player or man I am today. Thank you from the bottom of my heart.”
    It’s safe to say the fans don’t understand the 28-year-olds decision to move back to Stamford Bridge.

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    That’s despite the Belgian striker helping the Nerazzurri to a first Serie A title in ELEVEN years last season, ending Juventus’ run of nine consecutive Scudettos.
    His transfer came almost two years to the day since he arrived in Milan for a £66million fee from Manchester United.
    In that time he played 95 times for the Serie A side, scoring 64 goals and notching 16 assists.
    He becomes the second most expensive Premier League player of all time, just behind the £100million paid by Manchester City for Jack Grealish.
    And Lukaku arrives at Stamford Bridge with the aim of righting the wrongs from his first spell with the Blues.
    The 94-cap Belgium man played 15 times for Chelsea in a three year spell that included two loans to West Brom and Everton – where he failed to score a goal in a Blues shirt.

    But Lukaku said a return to Chelsea was impossible to turn down, and this time he will be the talisman for Thomas Tuchel’s side.
    He brings guaranteed goals after the Blues’ top scorer last season was Jorginho with seven, all of which came from the penalty spot.
    The 28-year-old is expected to make his second Chelsea debut at the Emirates on Sunday as Chelsea travel to Arsenal on Matchday Two of the Premier League.
    Chelsea officially announce that Romelu Lukaku has returned to the club on £97.5million five-year deal More

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    Tottenham security race to stop pitch invader approaching match-winner Son Heung-Min after Manchester City triumph

    TOTTENHAM got their season off to the perfect start today with a 1-0 win against last season’s champions Manchester City. And one fan thought it would be a good idea to celebrate with the goalscorer Son Heung-Min, although it didn’t quite go to plan for him.
    Son watches on as the pitch invader, with his shirt over his face, tries to evade securityCredit: PA
    Son celebrates firing Spurs in frontCredit: Getty
    Son was in the process of walking off the pitch at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium to a standing ovation from the capacity crowd, with the 29-year-old returning the applause as the suspect ran on to the field.
    As the pitch-invader made his way towards the Spurs star man, he bizarrely pulled his shirt over his face before being stopped by security.
    He was then carted away from the field as Son afforded himself a wry smile.
    Son Heung-Min himself did look momentarily concerned, but quickly returned to applauding the Spurs faithful after they made it FOUR home wins in a row against Manchester City.
    The fact that the invader even managed to get onto the pitch is a cause for concern for Spurs, although the culprit was stopped before he could get close to the match-winner.
    But he was only one of FOUR spectators who forced their way onto the pitch at full time, with Jack Grealish giving his shirt to one young pitch invader after the final whistle.
    It follows concerns over stadium security after England fans forced their way into Wembley to watch the Euro 2020 final without tickets in July.

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    He stepped up in the absence of Harry Kane – who was not in the matchday squad – to fire in an excellent second half strike that was enough for Spurs to seal victory.
    For Tottenham it was the perfect way to kick off Nuno Espirito’s reign as manager – as their fans celebrated by singing: “Are you watching Harry Kane?”
    It was the away side who started the better though, dominating the opening exchanges resulting in chants from the travelling fans of: “Harry Kane, he wants to be blue.”
    But it was Spurs who came out on top, as Son curled home in the 55th minute and held on to claim the three points despite the introduction of Kevin De Bruyne in the second half.
    After a rocky build-up to the game that was dominated by Harry Kane’s possible move to the Etihad, Nunu Espirito Santo’s side showed their fight to beat the most expensive team in Premier League history, with the City team costing a whopping £528.9MILLION.
    The most expensive Premier League starting XI of all time
    But it might yet be City who have the last laugh.
    They’re looking increasingly likely to complete a deal for Tottenham striker Harry Kane in the coming weeks.
    SunSport revealed during the week that the defending champions want to re-open talks over a £120m transfer after a meeting between the two clubs.
    Jack Grealish gives a young fan who ran on to the pitch his match worn shirt before he was taken away by securityCredit: Getty
    Another young fan went up to Hugo Lloris and FernandinhoCredit: AFP
    This pitch invader didn’t get so close, he was caught by security before reaching the playersCredit: Getty
    Nuno reacts to his first win as Tottenham manager as Spurs defeat Man City More

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    Legend Roberto Carlos messages Luke Shaw congratulating him on Man Utd win and reveals England man ‘sent him a shirt’

    MANCHESTER UNITED left-back Luke Shaw has two reasons to be happy after the opening day thrashing over Leeds. Not only did United look like a side capable of challenging for the title, but after the game one of the greatest left-backs of all time congratulated him on the win.
    Brazil legend Roberto Carlos is a huge Luke Shaw fanCredit: Reuters
    Luke Shaw in action against LeedsCredit: Getty

    Carlos commented on Shaw’s Instagram post to continue their new found friendship
    Shaw, 26, took to Instagram to celebrate United’s win, posting a picture with the caption: “What a atmosphere at OT!! The start we wanted” before tagging Manchester United.
    And former Real Madrid and Brazil defender Roberto Carlos left a comment on Shaw’s Instagram post, saying:
    “Congratulations on the victory and thank you very much for the shirt, only the signature was missing but that’s ok next time” before finishing the comment with laughing face and clapping emojis.
    The Manchester United left back has gifted Carlos one of his shirts after the 2002 World Cup winner praised Shaw for his performances at the Euros.
    But it seems the England man forgot to add his signature on the gift, something Carlos was eager for him to include.
    The unlikely friendship began at the Euros where despite struggling with broken ribs, Shaw made three assists in five games to help England reach their first European Championship final, even scoring in the final against Italy.

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    Shaw’s performances had led to him being dubbed ‘Shawberto Carlos’ by his teammates, comparing him with the great Brazilian left-back.
    And when asked by GQ about the nickname, Carlos himself laughed before urging the defender to carry his Euros form into next season.
    He said: “He [Shaw] was the best player in the tournament. He has to keep it up; he has to continue playing like that. That’s important.”
    Shaw certainly has picked up where he left off at Euro 2020, with a typically marauding performance from left-back in Saturday’s 5-1 demolition of bitter rivals Leeds United.

    He made countless darting runs in the final third, and nearly scored a goal for himself after firing a fierce effort into the side netting when space opened up inside the box for him to shoot.
    Next up for Shaw and co. are two away fixtures in the Premier League, as Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s side travel to Southampton and then Wolves.
    And with no games against any of the ‘Big Six’ until October, United will be confident that they can make the early running in the title race.
    Solskjaer reacts to Man Utd’s huge victory over Leeds More

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    Premier League is back… and with it comes new wave of top-tier Wags

    THE Premier League is back – and with it comes a new wave of Wags.Already, almost HALF A BILLION POUNDS has gone on new players. And as there are still two weeks to go until the transfer window closes, that figure will continue to rise.
    As the Premier League is back, we introduce the new wave of WagsCredit: AP
    Man City’s signing of Jack Grealish from Aston Villa for £100million saw him become the most expensive Premier League player ever.
    And behind many big signings there is a very glamorous woman with the latest Hermes handbag. Today, former Wag Suzi Walker, 50, the ex-wife of England and Tottenham goalkeeper Ian, runs the rule over ladies who are about to take the Premier League by storm.
    She said: “Being a Wag is a big job. Not only are you supporting your player but your fortunes can be interlinked with their career. For example, if they are on the bench for a long stint or out of the team, you might get left out of lunches with other Wags or not invited to parties.
    “When I was in that world, I knew Victoria Beckham, Cheryl, Coleen Rooney and Carly Cole. But there is extra pressure today with social media. There might be a lot of money in football but you are constantly keeping up with the other players and their partners.
    “My advice would be to be yourself and be as nice as you can to others. I hope the new Wags are given help to adjust and get to know people. Having said that, I’m quite happy to be away from it now in all honesty.”
    We introduce the new Wags whose other halves have arrived in the Premier League this season and those who are top targets by our big clubs. Suzi gives her opinion and marks them out of ten.

    Agustina Gandolfo
    Girlfriend of Lautaro Martinez
    Partner: Lautaro Martinez (Tottenham target, valued at £60million)
    Age: 25
    Argentinian Agustina Gandolfo, 25, is Lautaro Martinez’s girlfriendCredit: Refer to Caption
    From: Mendoza, Argentina
    Job: Model and Influencer
    Instagram followers: 842k
    Interesting fact: The pair were introduced by Martinez’s Inter Milan teammate Mauro Icardi’s wife Wanda Nara
    Suzi says: “She is stunning. Maybe the reason her hubby’s value is so high.”
    Wag rating: 10
    Tottenham target Lautaro, valued at £60million, met the stunner through Milan teammate Mauro Icardi’s wife Wanda NaraCredit: Rex
    Marrion Areola
    Wife of Alphonse Areola
    Partner: Alphonse Areola (West Ham, on loan from Paris Saint-Germain)
    Age: 33
    Model Marrion Areola, 33, is Alphonse Areola’s wife
    From: Philippines/Lebanon
    Job: Model
    Instagram followers: 113k
    Interesting fact: Has three daughters with the goalkeeper
    Suzi says: “She reminds me of Susie Amy who played Chardonnay in TV show Footballers’ Wives. She looks very motherly in some pictures I’ve seen but has a look of real class. Clearly a natural beauty.”
    Wag rating: 8
    The West Ham goalkeeper has three daughters with MarrionCredit: Rex
    Karen Cavaller
    Girlfriend of Cristian Romero
    Partner: Cristian Romero (Tottenham, on loan from Atalanta)
    Age: 23
    Argentinian Karen Cavaller, 23, is Cristian Romero’s girlfriend
    From: Argentina
    Job: Model
    Instagram followers: 4.6k
    Interesting fact: The pair married in 2016 in a private ceremony before breaking the news of it on Instagram
    Suzi says: “Karen appears born to be a Wag. She looks great fun to be with. I can imagine her spending time in the players’ lounge talking about where she’s been shopping, rather than the game.”
    Wag rating: 9
    The Tottenham star married the model in 2016 in a private ceremonyCredit: Getty
    Emma Hickman
    Girlfriend of Demarai Gray
    Partner: Demarai Gray (Everton, £1.7million signing from Bayer Leverkusen)
    Age: 24
    English Emma Hickman, 24, is Demarai Gray’s girlfriend
    From: England
    Job: Model
    Instagram followers: n/a
    Interesting fact: Emma is no stranger to life in the Premier League. Before moving to Germany with her man, they lived in Worcestershire, when Demarai played for Leicester
    Suzi says: “She doesn’t look like your standard Wag. She looks very down to earth. She might get asked to show her ID when trying to get into the players’ lounge.”
    Wag rating: 6
    The Everton footie lived in Worcestershire with the model when he played for LeicesterCredit: Colorsport
    Claudia Buendia
    Wife of Emi Buendia
    Partner: Emi Buendia ( Villa, £30million from Norwich City)
    Age: 24
    Stay-at-home mum Claudia Buendia, 24, is Emi Buendia’s wifeCredit: Instagram @greengagew
    From: Argentina
    Job: Stay-at-home mum
    Instagram followers: 10k
    Interesting fact: They love working out together
    Suzi says: “Could’ve walked straight out of Footballers’ Wives. He wears the shorts but I reckon she wears the trousers.”
    Wag rating: 7
    The Aston Villa ace loves working out with his partnerCredit: Getty
    Cecilie Porsdal
    Girlfriend of Joachim Andersen
    Partner: Joachim Andersen (Crystal Palace, £15million signing from Lyon)
    Age: 24
    Danish Cecilie Porsdal, 24, is Joachim Andersen’s girlfriend
    From: Denmark
    Job: Influencer
    Instagram followers: 2.5k
    Interesting fact: Enjoyed a party holiday in Greece, before Joachim signed for Palace
    Suzi says: “I could see Cecilie in posh London restaurant Scott’s having lunch most weeks. She’s a natural beauty – no fillers, no work. ”
    Wag rating: 9
    The influencer enjoyed a party holiday in Greece before the player signed for Crystal PalaceCredit: Getty
    Kera Rashica
    Wife of Milot Rashica
    Partner: Milot Rashica (Norwich, £9.4million signing from Werder Bremen)
    Age: 25
    Kera Rashica, 25, is Milot Rashica’s wife
    From: Kosovo
    Job: Model
    Instagram followers: 59k
    Interesting fact: The pair announced they were expecting their second son in May
    Suzi says: “Oozes glamour. Might be the Prem’s answer to Kim Kardashian. She looks high maintenance, not very girl-next-door. Could be a regular in Norwich’s high-end shops.”
    Wag rating: 7
    The Norwich footie announced he was expecting their second son in MayCredit: Getty – Contributor
    Camille Tytgat
    Wife of Rafa Varane
    Partner: Rafa Varane (Man United paid £41million for the Real Madrid star)
    Age: 28
    French Camille Tytgat, 28, is married to Rafa VaraneCredit: AFP
    From: France
    Job: Lawyer
    Instagram followers: 1.2k
    Interesting fact: The childhood sweethearts married in Le Touquet, France, in 2015
    Suzi says: “She looks like she’ll become a regular at the high-end Neville’s hairdressers and will be seen out with the latest Birkin bag. Clearly has the brains and looks, very chic.”
    Wag rating: 9
    The Man United ace met the lawyer when they were just kidsCredit: AFP
    Say ciao to Italy’s wags ahead of huge Euro 2020 final More

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    Manchester City Chases New Trophies With an Old Friend: Money

    Manchester City’s winning formula has delivered trophies. But to win the Champions League, it may need to make a few expensive changes.All these years on, it is hard to identify the exact straw that broke the camel’s back. Perhaps it was the night when Carlos Tévez, in the thick of a Champions League game against Bayern Munich, seemed to refuse to come on as a substitute. Maybe it was the evening Mario Balotelli spent setting off fireworks in, and setting fire to, his own bathroom.Ideally, really, as a way of illustrating the mounting absurdity of it all, it would be what became known as the Birthday Cake Incident: the time that Manchester City either did or did not buy Yaya Touré a birthday cake, but most definitely did not buy him a Bugatti, a decision that prompted Touré’s agent at the time to declare that one of the club’s greatest ever players wanted to leave.Most likely, of course, the last straw was all of them and none of them. It was their weight, taken together, the apparently endless stream of minor problems blown out of proportion, that persuaded City — at some indistinct point, six or seven years ago — that buying the biggest and the brightest stars was more trouble than it was worth. That the club would, instead, take a different tack.Where that led was cast, most clearly, when Pep Guardiola’s team encountered, and overcame, Paris St.-Germain in last season’s Champions League semifinals. City and P.S.G. are often presented as two sides of the same coin, the twin vanguard of soccer’s new order: both soaringly ambitious, both unimaginably wealthy, both bankrolled by private individuals who are definitely not acting with the backing of Gulf states.For all that they have in common, though, their approaches have been starkly different. Their squads for those two games in the spring made that abundantly clear. In the second leg, as P.S.G. searched in vain for a way back, Mauricio Pochettino had to throw on the on-loan Moise Kean, the unheralded Mitchel Bakker and the unremarkable Colin Dagba.In recent years, City has generally had a star and a spare at every position.Carl Recine/ReutersAs Guardiola looked to see the game out, he could introduce Raheem Sterling, Sergio Agüero and Gabriel Jésus. That left Aymeric Laporte, Rodri, Ferran Torres and João Cancelo all waiting on the bench. P.S.G. might have had the greater star power — even before its signing of Lionel Messi this week — in Neymar and Kylian Mbappé, but its resources seemed much shallower than City’s.Where P.S.G. had concentrated its wealth on acquiring a handful of superstars, City had spent the previous few years gathering a squad of unrivaled and unprecedented depth.City was not shy of big names, of course — including Kevin De Bruyne, Agüero and Riyad Mahrez — but only a handful, like Raheem Sterling, might have been considered major stars before they arrived at the club. There was no sense of a divide between the headline acts and the supporting cast. Instead, City’s team seemed to have two $70 million players for every outfield position.The policy that built Guardiola’s squad had been instituted painstakingly, deliberately, with the club investing substantially more time and energy than before on making sure it was recruiting players who were humble, hard-working and unlikely to cause any reputational damage on or off the field. There had been quite enough drama in the years of Tévez, Balotelli and Emmanuel Adebayor.A decade ago, City’s stars sometimes offered more headlines than goals.Kerim Okten/European Pressphoto AgencyCity took great pride in its approach, regularly defending itself against accusations that it had spent its way to success by pointing out that most of its rivals had more expensive acquisitions within their ranks: Manchester United had spent more on Paul Pogba, Liverpool more on Virgil Van Dijk and Chelsea more on Kepa Arrizabalaga than City had on its (then) record signing, the defender Rúben Dias. In some cases, quite a lot more.Besides, the approach worked. The Champions League title might continue to elude City — like P.S.G., it has played, and lost, one final in the competition it desires to win above all others since its reinvention — but City now stands as the pre-eminent Premier League team of its era; champion in three of the last four seasons, five times in the last decade, and a favorite to add to that tally this year.Last season, as City marched to the domestic league title, Guardiola regularly rotated as many as half a dozen players in and out of his team every few days. His side retained a freshness, an energy, that nobody else — not even in the money-soaked, recession-resistant heights in which City operates — could match. City’s success is rooted not in the brilliance of its strongest player, but in the competence of its weakest.And yet, this summer, all that has changed. City has already broken the British transfer record to sign Jack Grealish from Aston Villa. It remains quietly confident of having the chance to do so again: It would cost, most likely, $200 million or so to pry Harry Kane, the England captain, from Tottenham, but City appears prepared to do it. It will, alas, no longer be possible for the club to claim that its spending power is no greater than anyone else’s.Is Harry Kane the final item in City’s shopping cart this summer?Pool photo by Shaun BotterillQuite what has prompted this significant, and costly, sea change in approach appears — on the surface — to be obvious. City is desperate to win the Champions League. It came closer than ever last season, strangely acquiescent in defeat in the final against Chelsea, and its executives and its manager are united in their desire to take that one last step.City has been richer than Croesus for 13 years; its patience is wearing thin. Guardiola has not won the trophy that means the most to him since 2011, when he was at Barcelona; so is his. Grealish was, by some measures, the most dangerous player in the Premier League last season, and second in Europe only to Messi. Kane is among the world’s finest strikers, a position where City, following Agüero’s departure, is noticeably light. There is no mystery here: This is a club pursuing the exact two players it thinks it needs to achieve its mission.And yet a couple of questions linger. Grealish is a brilliant player, imaginative and courageous and tirelessly inventive, but he has never played in the Champions League. He cannot, then, be a surefire guarantee of success in it. Kane has made a final, of course, but he is both more expensive and substantially more difficult to extract from his current club than, say, Romelu Lukaku proved to be.Grealish and Kane would, doubtless, make Manchester City even better than it already was. Whether they make it $300 million better, though, is a more taxing question. Whether City had to spend quite that much for a similar effect is a more compelling one. That both questions can be posed suggests that it is not inconceivable that there are other, off-field considerations at play.It may be, for example, that City feels it needs just a little more star power, not only to help it over the line both in England — where Guardiola has said it will take a haul of 90 points or more to win the title once more — and in Europe, but also to increase its commercial reach. Kane is the captain of England. Grealish, this summer during Euro 2020, became his country’s darling. City has learned to its cost, previously, that headline names can mean headline trouble; perhaps, as soccer continues its gradual lurch from competitive sport to content farm, that is not quite so unappealing.City’s first outing, the Community Shield against Leicester, produced a defeat. Don’t expect too many more.Pool photo by Tim KeetonA squad devoid of fixed reference points — big names who demand inclusion in specific positions — is ideal, of course, for Guardiola; his Platonic ideal of a team is 10 midfielders, interchanging positions at will. Both Grealish and Kane are more versatile than is perhaps realized, but their cost — if the latter joins the former — dictates that Guardiola must build around their strengths, at least to some extent, rather than deploying them as transferable cogs in his machine.That, too, offers a glimpse of another possible rationale for their arrival. Guardiola has regularly complained that his players do not win all of the individual awards for which they might be considered contenders. That they do not is rather less to do with some insidious campaign against his club among the news media and more centered on the fact that no star, at City, shines quite so brightly as the manager.No matter how many games De Bruyne dominates, no matter how many positions Sterling masters, no matter how many goals Ilkay Gundogan suddenly and inexplicably scores, their success is always subsumed by Guardiola’s; their brilliance always sits downstream from his. (Guardiola, and his entourage, are not displeased with this.)City’s squad had been built in Guardiola’s image. In many ways, the club has been shaping itself to suit his needs ever since its first title victory. That has proved devastatingly effective, but it also carries with it a distant cost: At some point, when he goes, a squad of players acquired by him, crafted by him and loyal to him will have to adapt to life without him.Not so, of course, Grealish or Kane. Both would, doubtless, thrive under Guardiola. More important, both — ready-made, plug and play stars — would continue to thrive after he is gone. That may not be next summer, or even the summer after that, but it will come at some point in the span of their contracts.They are both, first and foremost, signings for today: proof that this is a club desperate, urgent in its intent to thrive in the immediate. But their cost, their age and their profile suggest that they are something else, too: evidence that City is thinking not only about how to win even more under Guardiola, but how to keep winning once the brightest star it has ever known has gone.Game OnBayern Munich and its new manager, Julian Nagelsmann, open the Bundesliga season on Friday.Christof Stache/Agence France-Presse — Getty ImagesStrictly speaking, this is not the weekend when soccer is back, since soccer never really went away. The early rounds of the Champions League were being played during the European Championship. The Gold Cup carried on until late July. And it is only a week since the French season started, right as the Brazilian men and the Canadian women won gold medals at the Olympics.But this is the weekend when the major European (men’s) leagues kick off, and thus this is officially The Weekend When Soccer Is Back. With fans, too: full stadiums in England, increasingly full ones in Spain and Italy, half-full ones (mostly, for now) in Germany. Soccer’s ghost era, with any luck, is nearing its end.The prospect of noise, color and life is not the only reason to greet the new season. The Bundesliga has a suite of managers in new roles, led by Julian Nagelsmann at Bayern Munich and Marco Rose at Borussia Dortmund. In Spain, the demise of Real Madrid and Barcelona may yet open the door for Sevilla to join the title chase. Juventus has a crown to regain in Italy.Erik Lamela will strengthen a Sevilla team with title hopes in La Liga.Cristina Quicler/Agence France-Presse — Getty ImagesIt is England, though, where all of the ingredients are in place for a vintage campaign (after what was, if we are all completely honest, a fairly dull one last time around). Manchester City will start as the title favorite as it seeks to retain its championship, but Chelsea — bolstered by Romelu Lukaku, and buoyed by its status as European champion — carries considerable menace, too. So does Manchester United, newly embroidered by Raphaël Varane and Jadon Sancho.Better still, there is a pack of clubs gearing up to try to close the gap on the league’s great powers, a group containing not just the obvious names — the likes of Tottenham and Arsenal — but a smartly improved Leicester, a revamped Aston Villa, an engaging Leeds United and, possibly, Rafael Benítez’s Everton, a team that will, whatever happens, be one of the most compelling stories of the year. For those back in the stands, for those still afar, there is plenty to savor.P.S.G. Has Already WonLionel Messi was greeted by the masses in Paris on Wednesday.Yves Herman/ReutersThere were thousands of fans outside the Parc des Princes, clutching flags and burning flares and waiting for a glimpse, however fleeting, of the man who had made their dreams come true. There were hundreds more outside Paris St.-Germain’s shop in the center of the French capital, patiently waiting for their chance to get a jersey emblazoned with a name they never thought they would see.In a sense, of course, the story of Lionel Messi and P.S.G. is only just beginning: The club, as its president, Nasser al-Khelaifi rather oddly said at the news conference held to unveil the greatest player of all time, has “won nothing yet.” Still, nice to know that he doesn’t think that stream of French titles mean a vast amount, either.But in a way, too, it is over. The point of signing Messi, for P.S.G., is not what comes after: It is not the games he plays or the trophies he wins. It was the theater of the day itself: the crowd at the airport, the congregation at the stadium, the countless news crews, the endless content.No victory — perhaps with the one exception of the Champions League, but not necessarily — will attract quite so much attention, will compel as many eyeballs, will engender in fans the same feelings of excitement and awe as the piece of performance theater that captivated the planet over the course of last weekend. A transfer is not a means to an end, any more. It is the end in itself.CorrespondenceIt would appear that Brendan O’Connor has been gifted with just a touch of clairvoyance. “Why did Harry Kane sign a six-year contract? There is obviously huge benefit for Spurs in tying down their star player for six years in his prime,” he wrote. “But what’s in it for the player? He has no bargaining power or leverage in trying to engineer a move away.”I can’t give a definitive answer, sadly, but my reasonably educated guess would be that his reasoning was a blend of security — as a rule, players assume that longer contracts are safer and therefore better — and belief, three years ago, that he could fulfill his ambitions at Tottenham. The club, then, was coming off the back of two seasons of genuinely contending for the Premier League title, remember; a year later, it would make the Champions League final.As a rule, though, contracts of that length are likely to become less and less common, particularly for the game’s best and brightest: partly because the financial commitment for the clubs is too onerous, and partly because players (and their agents) know that the way to maximize earning potential is to keep transfer fees comparatively low. Players need leverage. Kane may yet come to stand as a warning of what happens when they do not have it.And, from Gavin MacPhee, an excellent theory on what it is that makes Lionel Messi so special. “Messi just about passes the test as coming from the Latin American street soccer development school. Yet he just happened to move [to Barcelona] at the point where the industrialization of player development by Western European countries was really starting to kick into gear. Messi is unique as a combination of the two great development environments.”That just about holds water to me, Gavin. So I suppose the question, now, is whether that blueprint can be repeated? Not to the same level as Messi, of course — his talent is what truly differentiates him — but can European teams use South America as a forge of very young talent, or (and better) can South American teams become as adept at polishing players as their counterparts across the Atlantic? More

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    How Facebook Failed to Stem Racist Abuse of England’s Soccer Players

    In May 2019, Facebook asked the organizing bodies of English soccer to its London offices off Regent’s Park. On the agenda: what to do about the growing racist abuse on the social network against Black soccer players.At the meeting, Facebook gave representatives from four of England’s main soccer organizations — the Football Association, the Premier League, the English Football League and the Professional Footballers’ Association — what they felt was a brushoff, two people with knowledge of the conversation said. Company executives told the group that they had many issues to deal with, including content about terrorism and child sex abuse.A few months later, Facebook provided soccer representatives with an athlete safety guide, including directions on how players could shield themselves from bigotry using its tools. The message was clear: It was up to the players and the clubs to protect themselves online.The interactions were the start of what became a more than two-year campaign by English soccer to pressure Facebook and other social media companies to rein in online hate speech against their players. Soccer officials have since met numerous times with the platforms, sent an open letter calling for change and organized social media boycotts. Facebook’s employees have joined in, demanding that it to do more to stop the harassment.The pressure intensified after the European Championship last month, when three of England’s Black players were subjected to torrents of racial epithets on social media for missing penalty kicks in the final game’s decisive shootout. Prince William condemned the hate, and the British prime minister, Boris Johnson, threatened regulation and fines for companies that continued to permit racist abuse. Inside Facebook, the incident was escalated to a “Site Event 1,” the equivalent of a companywide five-alarm fire.Jadon Sancho, who missed a penalty kick during England’s loss in the European Championship final last month, was embraced by the team’s manager, Gareth Southgate.Pool photo by Laurence GriffithsYet as the Premier League, England’s top division, opens its season on Friday, soccer officials said that the social media companies — especially Facebook, the largest — hadn’t taken the issue seriously enough and that players were again steeling themselves for online hate.“Football is a growing global market that includes clubs, brands, sponsors and fans who are all tired of the obvious lack of desire from the tech giants to develop in-platform solutions for the issues we are dealing with daily,” said Simone Pound, head of equality, diversity and inclusion for the Professional Footballers’ Association, the players’ union.The impasse with English soccer is another instance of Facebook’s failing to solve speech problems on its platform, even after it was made aware of the level of abuse. While Facebook has introduced some measures to mitigate the harassment, soccer officials said they were insufficient.Social media companies aren’t doing enough “because the pain hasn’t become enough for them,” said Sanjay Bhandari, the chair of Kick It Out, an organization that supports equality in soccer.This season, Facebook is trying again. Its Instagram photo-sharing app rolled out new features on Wednesday to make racist material harder to view, according to a blog post. Among them, one will let users hide potentially harassing comments and messages from accounts that either don’t follow or recently followed them.“The unfortunate reality is that tackling racism on social media, much like tackling racism in society, is complex,” Karina Newton, Instagram’s global head of public policy, said in a statement. “We’ve made important strides, many of which have been driven by our discussions with groups being targeted with abuse, like the U.K. football community.”But Facebook executives also privately acknowledge that racist speech against English soccer players is likely to continue. “No one thing will fix this challenge overnight,” Steve Hatch, Facebook’s director for Britain and Ireland, wrote last month in an internal note that The Times reviewed.Some players appear resigned to the abuse. Four days after the European Championship final, Bukayo Saka, 19, one of the Black players who missed penalty kicks for England, posted on Twitter and Instagram that the “powerful platforms are not doing enough to stop these messages” and called it a “sad reality.”Around the same time, Facebook employees continued to report hateful comments to their employer on Mr. Saka’s posts in an effort to get them taken down. One that was reported — an Instagram comment that read, “Bro stay in Africa” — apparently did not violate the platform’s rules, according to the automated moderation system. It stayed up.#EnoughMuch of the racist abuse in English soccer has been directed at Black superstars in the Premier League, such as Raheem Sterling and Marcus Rashford. About 30 percent of players in the Premier League are Black, Mr. Bhandari said.Over time, these players have been harassed at soccer stadiums and on Facebook, where users are asked to provide their real names, and on Instagram and Twitter, which allows users to be anonymous. In April 2019, fed up with the behavior, some players and two former captains of the national team, David Beckham and Wayne Rooney, took part in a 24-hour social media boycott, posting red badges on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook with the hashtag #Enough.A month later, English soccer officials held their first meeting with Facebook — and came away disappointed. Facebook said that “feedback from the meeting was taken on board and influenced further policy, product and enforcement efforts.”Tensions ratcheted up last year after the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis. When the Premier League restarted in June 2020 after a 100-day coronavirus hiatus, athletes from all 20 clubs began each match by taking a knee. Players continued the symbolic act last season and said they would also kneel this season.That has stoked more online abuse. In January, Mr. Rashford used Twitter to call out “humanity and social media at its worst” for the bigoted messages he had received. Two of his Manchester United teammates, who are also Black, were targeted on Instagram with monkey emojis — which are meant to dehumanize — after a loss.Inside Facebook, employees took note of the surge in racist speech. In one internal forum meant for flagging negative press to the communications department, one employee started cataloging articles about English soccer players who had been abused on Facebook’s platforms. By February, the list had grown to about 20 different news clips in a single month, according to a company document seen by The Times.Marcus Rashford kneeling in support of the Black Lives Matter movement before a Manchester United match in March.Pool photo by Peter PowellEnglish soccer organizations continued meeting with Facebook. This year, organizers also brought Twitter into the conversations, forming what became known as the Online Hate Working Group.But soccer officials grew frustrated at the lack of progress, they said. There was no indication that Facebook’s and Twitter’s top leaders were aware of the abuse, said Edleen John, who heads international relations and corporate affairs for the Football Association, England’s governing body for the sport. She and others began discussing writing an open letter to Mark Zuckerberg and Jack Dorsey, the chief executives of Facebook and Twitter.“Why don’t we try to communicate and get meetings with individuals right at the top of the organization and see if that will make change?” Ms. John said in an interview, explaining the thinking.In February, the chief executives of the Premier League, the Football Association and other groups published a 580-word letter to Mr. Zuckerberg and Mr. Dorsey accusing them of “inaction” against racial abuse. They demanded that the companies block racist and discriminatory content before it was sent or posted. They also pushed for user identity verification so offenders could be rooted out.But, Ms. John said, “we didn’t get a response” from Mr. Zuckerberg or Mr. Dorsey. In April, English soccer organizations, players and brands held a four-day boycott of social media.Twitter, which declined to comment, said in a blog post about racism on Tuesday that it had been “appalled by those who targeted players from the England football team with racist abuse following the Euro 2020 Final.”Messages of support adorning a mural of Mr. Rashford that was defaced after Italy defeated England for the European championship.Lindsey Parnaby/Agence France-Presse — Getty ImagesAt Facebook, members of the policy team, which sets the rules around what content stays up or comes down, pushed back against the demands from soccer officials, three people with knowledge of the conversations said.They argued that terms or symbols used for racist abuse — such as a monkey emoji — could have different meanings depending on the context and should not be banned completely. Identity verification could also undermine anonymity on Instagram and create new problems for users, they argued.In April, Facebook announced a privacy setting called Hidden Words to automatically filter out messages and comments containing offensive words, phrases and emojis. Those comments cannot then be easily seen by the account user and will be hidden from those who follow the account. A month later, Instagram also began a test that allowed a slice of its users in the United States, South Africa, Brazil, Australia and Britain to flag “racist language or activity,” according to documents reviewed by The Times.The test generated hundreds of reports. One internal spreadsheet outlining the results included a tab titled “Dehumanization_Monkey/Primate.” It had more than 30 examples of comments using bigoted terms and emojis of monkeys, gorillas and bananas in connection with Black people.‘The Onus Is on Them’In the hours after England lost the European Championship final to Italy on July 11, racist comments against the players who missed penalty kicks — Mr. Saka, Mr. Rashford and Jadon Sancho — escalated. That set off a “site event” at Facebook, eventually triggering the kind of emergency associated with a major system outage of the site.Facebook employees rushed to internal forums to say they had reported monkey emojis or other degrading stereotypes. Some workers asked if they could volunteer to help sort through content or moderate comments for high-profile accounts.“We get this stream of utter bile every match, and it’s even worse when someone black misses,” one employee wrote on an internal forum.Gianluigi Donnarumma of Italy stopping Mr. Sancho’s penalty kick. England missed three of five penalty kicks, giving Italy the victory after play ended with the score tied.Laurence Griffiths/Getty ImagesBut the employees’ reports of racist speech were often met with automated messages saying the posts did not violate the company’s guidelines. Executives also provided talking points to employees that said Facebook had worked “swiftly to remove comments and accounts directing abuse at England’s footballers.”In one internal comment, Jerry Newman, Facebook’s director of sports partnerships for Europe, the Middle East and Africa, reminded workers that the company had introduced the Hidden Words feature so users could filter out offensive words or symbols. It was the players’ responsibility to use the feature, he wrote.“Ultimately the onus is on them to go into Instagram and input which emojis/words they don’t want to feature,” Mr. Newman said. Other Facebook executives said monkey emojis were not typically used negatively. If the company filtered certain terms out for everyone, they added, people might miss important messages.Adam Mosseri, Instagram’s chief executive, later said the platform could have done better, tweeting in response to a BBC reporter that the app “mistakenly” marked some of the racist comments as “benign.”Adam Mosseri, head of Instagram, told the BBC that the app had “mistakenly” marked some racist comments as “benign.”Ricky Rhodes for The New York TimesBut Facebook also defended itself in a blog post. The company said it had removed 25 million pieces of hate content in the first three months of the year, while Instagram took down 6.3 million pieces, or 93 percent before a user reported it.Kelly Hogarth, who helps manage Mr. Rashford’s off-field activities, said he had no plans to leave social media, which serves as an important channel to fans. Still, she questioned how much of the burden should be on athletes to monitor abuse.“At what point does responsibility come off the player?” she wondered. She added, “I wouldn’t be under any illusions we will be in exactly the same place, having exactly the same conversation next season.” More